Archive for July, 2008

Danger is you’ll stop breathing

July 29, 2008

Since I know a lot of pople that use weed, pain killers, and alcohol I found this article interesting.

Toxic mix of pills, alcohol fuels spike in deaths

Study finds a 3,000 percent hike in lethal overdoses at home

By JoNel Aleccia

More procedures are now performed on an outpatient basis and busy doctors are apt to prescribe more drugs with fewer follow-ups, the researchers theorized. During the study period, the number of per capita prescriptions issued jumped by nearly 74 percent, researchers noted.

“In an effort to save money, more and more of the burden of quality control has been placed on the shoulders of the patient,” he said.

Increasingly, that burden has become fatal, according to the study by Phillips and his colleagues published in the latest issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine.

In 1983, only 92 people died at home from the combination of medications, street drugs and/or alcohol. By 2004, that number had grown to 3,792, an increase of nearly 3,200 percent.

“The medications we have now are more hazardous,” said Anne Burns, vice president for professional affairs for the American Pharmacists Association. “It has been a serious concern for us for some time.”

More drugs that once required prescriptions are now issued over the counter, and greater numbers of medications such as painkillers and antidepressants are available on the street. That increases the opportunity for mistakes — and misuse, said Phillips.

“We don’t know how much of it is the result of carelessness and how much is the result of abuse,” he said.

The study was the first large-scale effort to quantify medication error deaths that occur at home, where professional oversight is least likely, Phillips noted. It was also an effort to understand the impact of combining prescription medications with other intoxicants.

Deaths rise in unsupervised settings
Researchers divided the medication deaths into four categories: Those that occurred at home and involved street drugs and/or alcohol; those that occurred at home and involved only medications; those that occurred away from home and involved prescription drugs, street drugs and alcohol; and those that occurred away from home and involved only medications.

They were shocked to discover a more than fivefold increase in deaths that occurred in situations least likely to be supervised. They logged a 564 percent spike in deaths from prescription drugs alone at home, and a 555 percent rise in deaths away from home from the combination of prescription medications, street drugs and/or alcohol.

The smallest jump, only about 5 percent, was in medication errors that occurred away from home and did not involve street drugs or alcohol.

Overall, the number of fatal medication errors rose by 360 percent, from 3,954 in 1983 to 22,770 in 2004, the study said. All told, more than 200,000 people died from accidental medication mistakes during that time.

“The increase is very, very steep compared with almost any other cause of death,” said Phillips.

Only motor vehicle crashes continue to outpace medication errors as the nation’s leading cause of accidental death.

Increases in deaths from medication mistakes occurred among all races and ages of people except children younger than 10, but middle-aged white men were most likely to succumb, Phillips said. He theorized that they might be more likely to take risks with prescription drugs and other substances.

The study was not designed to identify which medications were responsible for the deaths, nor which street drugs might be most common. Phillips said he expected future research to show that drugs such as marijuana and, perhaps, methamphetamine were often used with prescription medications.

From previous research, however, Phillips said it’s likely that the spike is due to an alarming increase in the use of prescription painkillers such as Vicodin and OxyContin.

“There is a serious question as to how much of this is being driven by opiates,” he said.

Danger is you’ll stop breathing
those highly addictive drugs have been a growing worry for years. One reason they’re so dangerous is that the drugs slow down respiration, sometimes substantially. When a person takes too many drugs, or combines them with other depressants such as alcohol, breathing may stop entirely.

Like other powerful medications, the painkillers keep people out of the hospital, but they also present a greater possibility of misuse by patients, said Burns, of the American Pharmacists Association.

“There seems to be a mindset that medications are treated like other consumer goods,” she said. “It’s not like buying a loaf of bread.”

Phillips’ study calls for better screening of patients for possible drug and alcohol use; extra precautions when prescribing medications that have known interactions with street drugs and alcohol; and better advice for patients about the potential dangers of mixing medications and other substances.

“Patients have to realize how much more careful they have to be and how much more educated they have to be,” he said.

“It’s an epidemic, “People need to know.”

Should we Drill For Oil in the ANWR?

July 29, 2008

When President Eisenhower was pres in the early 50 s, he created a wildlife preserve area in the north east section of Alaska. They called it ANWR . Alaska National Wildlife Preserve. In that, drilling was allowed in a small section at any later date. The total of the ANWR is from about Moses Lake to the Idaho border and from Canada to Oregon, so that gives you an idea of the size of ANWR. In that section, 2,000 acres approx was alocated a long time ago for drilling. Its along the coast of the Artic Sea, and makes for ez shipping out of the northern sea. Supposedly, there is enough oil underneath that section, that could support at least the west coast in oil for 30 years or so. I want to see it drilled in, but a national interest should be proclaimed, whereby, no part could be shipped overseas for a trade item. Our use only. I guess there is a lot of natural gas up there as well. The Caribou herds park under the pipelines right now from Prudoe Bay to Valdez a long way away. The Porkupine herd gets away from Mosquitoes by standing in the shade of the pipeline. Mosquitoes dont like the cold shade. So many mosquitoes on the tundra that they actually have been known to kill caribou themselves in swarms. Tundra ids perma frost and gets soggy in the summer, but never melts in past the frozen ground beneath it. It gets 50-60 BELOW in the winter. BRRR

SR Censors Bloggers

July 28, 2008

No talk of the police is allowed on the SR blogs. Apparently the SR blogs administrators are in bed with the Spokane Police Department, most likely to stay on their good side. Spokane police recently showed how much power they really have in Spokane, by holding up the hiring of a independent ombudsman for 18 months. They finally voted OK for the ombudsman but he will not be independent instead his crib will be in the Mayors office in case his diapers need changing.

Pot Shrinks Tumors; Government Knew in ‘74

July 28, 2008

In 1974 researchers learned that THC, the active chemical in marijuana, shrank or destroyed brain tumors in test mice. But the DEA quickly shut down the study and destroyed its results, which were never replicated — until now.
http://www.alternet.org/story/9257?page=1

Dr. Kim Thorburn for County Commissioner

July 22, 2008

She is running against Todd Mielke for County Commish.
First candidate to come by and visit. Nice lady. I may not agree with everything, but I may vote for her. (Shock). I am still upset over Mielke not asking for a new contract for services on janitorial, as well as the raceway park deal. I also told her about the police pension deal . She was shocked to hear that. Her staff would never have had that luxury of retirement options. I doubt she will forget . Hard to tell what she can do. She says she is a fiscal conservative money wise.
Interesting and a very pleasant visit.

Unfair police pension system for taxpayers

July 18, 2008

It was recently reported in the Spokesman Review how a Spokane Police officer can go out and work part time and;

Under rules of the police pension system, an officer’s retirement is based on the “final average salary” from the last five years of employment. According to an analysis of city payroll records, many of the Spokane officers who earn the most off-duty pay is in the final five years of their careers. The money they add to their pensions is often called their “freedom fund,” according to one officer.
I’m not bothered by it. The public policy questions I’ve never really thought of,” Chief Kirkpatrick said when asked about the ability of officers to boost their pensions and compete with the private sector.
For example, now-retired Officer Jerome Mertens made $10,654 in off-duty work in 2003. That was added to his regular pay of $66,795 and $24,419 in overtime, for an annual gross income of $101,867 in 2003.
In 2004, Mertens made $9,070 in off-duty work, bumping his gross income to $115,354.
The following year, Mertens pulled in $4,815 in off-duty work, pushing his 2005 income to $102,288. He retired in September 2006 after earning $89,853 from off-duty work, his regular pay and overtime, city payroll records show.
Based on those figures, his monthly LEOFF II retirement check is estimated to be $4,498. State retirement experts acknowledge his monthly retirement check would be substantially less if he hadn’t been given credit for about $10,000 a year in off-duty work, although they couldn’t immediately provide an exact amount.

Does your full time employer pay money into your 401K for you, when have to go out and work a second job?

Blocking out my freedoms

July 14, 2008

Fines, fines,

Everywhere there’s fines blocking out my freedoms and making me whine.

Do this don’t do that or you’ll pay the fine.

Imagine all the people

July 14, 2008

Imagine if you were more then just a human. Imagine if you were an all powerful being. If you had this belief about yourself you would most likely have the same belief for others.

Imagine that you appear to others as a white orb of light, and all the people and animals you see, are this same orb of light. Imagine has you get further away the individual orbs of light seem to blend together making one bright light.

If we looked at ourselves as all the same, would we have racism or war?

Of course not because we would understand that we are all one.

I challenge you to try it for a day and enjoy the freedom it brings from prejudice, judgment and ignorance.