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In a message dated 7/16/2003 12:43:05 PM Eastern Daylight Time, dustiejones@... writes:

the author was right on with his very last sentence of the article

Dustie-

true, but you'd never know it looking at that poor kid's face! It is harder on us parents, but that picture makes him look miserable!

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GO CINDY GO!!!! I see that you saw it too! I would like to say that

the author was right on with his very last sentence of the article.

I have sent my picture of in her wonderful, happy face band.

Thanks for being so passionate.

Dustie, *has grumpy face now*

> Please read this article and notice the unhappy, clunky helmeted

child in the

> drawn picture. Please let the Wall Street Journal know that your

child's

> helmet was not:

>

> A.  An unsafe item to put on a baby's head (the strap can cause

baby to

> choke- I know some of you have used them, but it can pose a choking

hazard as

> I'm sure you've had to watch out for that- as I did with the tot

collar)

>

> B.  covering his ears- how is a baby supposed to hear with its ears

covered

> by the helmet? That's not ideal for a child learning to speak!

>

> Inform them that YOUR child wore a corrective device that looked

NOTHING

> like the drawing. And send some smiley helmet pics so that artist

can turn

> that frown upside down on his next rendition! Send your emails to

> aches@w...

> Thanks!

>

> 'mom

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Hey there ,3e

Wow, I did not see the picture yesterday. That is pretty pathetic.

WSJ Article

Please read this article and notice the unhappy, clunky helmeted child in the drawn picture. Please let the Wall Street Journal know that your child's helmet was not:A. An unsafe item to put on a baby's head (the strap can cause baby tochoke- I know some of you have used them, but it can pose a choking hazard as I'm sure you've had to watch out for that- as I did with the tot collar)B. covering his ears- how is a baby supposed to hear with its ears covered by the helmet? That's not ideal for a child learning to speak!Inform them that YOUR child wore a corrective device that looked NOTHINGlike the drawing. And send some smiley helmet pics so that artist can turn that frown upside down on his next rendition! Send your emails to aches@...Thanks!'momFor more plagio info

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OPPS!!!!

, my little sweet heart was banging on my computer. I did not know this was sent. SORRY.

What I was saying is that the picture makes it look like the poor child is being tortured. I am going to send an e-mail later. I hope people do not get scared off by that.

Lou

WSJ Article

Please read this article and notice the unhappy, clunky helmeted child in the drawn picture. Please let the Wall Street Journal know that your child's helmet was not:A. An unsafe item to put on a baby's head (the strap can cause baby tochoke- I know some of you have used them, but it can pose a choking hazard as I'm sure you've had to watch out for that- as I did with the tot collar)B. covering his ears- how is a baby supposed to hear with its ears covered by the helmet? That's not ideal for a child learning to speak!Inform them that YOUR child wore a corrective device that looked NOTHINGlike the drawing. And send some smiley helmet pics so that artist can turn that frown upside down on his next rendition! Send your emails to aches@...Thanks!'momFor more plagio info

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  • 1 year later...
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http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05187/533690.stm

Cancer survival gap: Progress stalls for young adults

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

By Amy Dockser Marcus, The Wall Street Journal

In the past 30 years, new drugs and better treatments have helped many

cancer patients survive longer. But one group hasn't benefited as much from

these changes, leading some oncologists to focus increasingly on the role

age plays in surviving cancer.

While children and older adults are surviving longer than they have in the

past, rates for young people between the ages of 15 and 40 have barely

budged. In the 25- to 35-year-old age group, a recent analysis of National

Cancer Institute statistics showed that survival rates have not increased at

all since 1975.

The perplexing stall in survival rates for this age group is generating a

fresh round of research and treatment efforts. This year new clinical trials

are opening, run by the Children's Oncology Group and others, that will

explore issues surrounding cancer in young adults. In addition, major cancer

centers, including the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and M.D. Cancer

Center, are creating programs to address a range of issues in treating young

adults. And co-operative efforts involving private groups such as the Lance

Armstrong Foundation are looking to identify new approaches and areas of

research to fund.

Already, the latest research is providing valuable information for young

cancer patients. Where a patient is treated can matter -- in studies of some

cancers, young adults have done better at pediatric clinics, or on pediatric

treatment regimens, than with the adult protocols. A number of clinical

trials are raising or lowering their age requirements to include young

adults and adolescents, who have been little studied. And there is a growing

realization that young adults have unique psychosocial issues that often

aren't addressed at either pediatric or adult centers, and that doing so

will improve the quality of their lives during treatment.

The possible reasons for the survival gap are wide-ranging. Some cancers may

be biologically different in young adults, and less responsive to

chemotherapy. Some aspect of the cancer treatment itself may be a factor,

such as the kind or the dose of drugs or the way the drugs are given. Other

obstacles young people face include a lack of insurance, and a later

diagnosis because they don't always seek help for symptoms right away, and

much lower participation in clinical trials that offer cutting-edge

therapies.

Improving the survival rate for young adults would have an enormous impact.

Cancer is the leading disease killer in people age 20 to 39. And while most

people who get cancer are still over 65, more than 70,000 young adults

between 19 and 40 get cancer every year, eight times as many as the number

of patients under the age of 15. There is also an expectation that if

scientists understand why this age group overall does worse, it could lead

to the discovery of new genetic mutations, new mechanisms for the way cancer

develops, or even new drugs that might apply as well to people in other age

groups.

" By studying young adults, we hope to find key scientific insights into the

disease that no one has ever looked at, " says D. Demetri, director of

the Center for Sarcoma and Bone Oncology at Dana-Farber, who will help lead

a trial later this year to study gastrointestinal stromal tumors in patients

age 15-30.

Doug Ulman, director of survivorship at the Lance Armstrong Foundation and

one of the driving forces behind the new focus on young adults, knows about

some of the key issues from his own experience. Diagnosed in 1996 at age 19

with chondrosarcoma, a rare cancer, then twice with malignant melanoma

within the year, he said it was hard to find other people his own age to

share his fears. He had just completed his freshman year at Brown University

and was feeling more independent when suddenly he found himself relying

heavily on his parents and family again. Back at school, instead of

socializing or studying, he found himself obsessed with learning everything

he could about cancer. " I didn't have the typical behavior of a

19-year-old, " he says.

Mr. Ulman says that those age 15-40 with cancer often find themselves caught

between two worlds -- feeling out of place in either a children's hospital

with rooms decorated with Disney characters or in adult cancer centers

surrounded in waiting rooms and support groups by people closer in age to

their grandparents.

Essentially, young adults are a sandwich generation, with lower survival

rates than children for cancers that primarily affect the very young, such

as acute lymphoblastic leukemia and a soft-tissue cancer called

rhabdomyosarcoma. And they do worse than those over 40 when they get cancers

that are more common in older adults, like breast or colorectal cancer,

according to the analysis of NCI data, by Archie Bleyer, an oncologist and

medical adviser to the cancer-treatment center at St. Medical Center

in Bend, Ore.

New programs are being launched that aim to change that. Dana-Farber in

Boston created a new adolescent and young adult oncology program that will

do clinical research and provide cancer care and psychosocial programs for

patients age 15-40. Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York is

developing a young-adult survivor program for those in their 20s, 30s and

40s when people are at high risk for " late effects " of cancer therapies that

arise years after treatment, such as heart attacks. And in January, M.D.

Cancer Center in Houston opened the Beth Young Breast

Cancer Survivors Program for women under 45 with breast cancer, who

typically have more-aggressive types of cancer than older women who get the

disease.

The National Cancer Institute and the Lance Armstrong Foundation are also

launching a progress review group that will study the issues of cancer in

young adults. The yearlong project is expected to identify new directions in

research, which the Lance Armstrong Foundation has committed to help fund.

The foundation also helped establish the Live Strong Young Adult Alliance --

which includes groups like Planet Cancer, the Ulman Cancer Fund for Young

Adults (which Mr. Ulman helped to found) and others -- in order to set a

national agenda for young-adult cancer and help implement the

recommendations of the progress review group.

In the past, young adults had particularly low rates of participation in

clinical trials compared with other age groups, in part because fewer trials

have been aimed at them. Efforts are now under way to make clinical trials

more accessible. Trials run by the Children's Oncology Group, the major

cooperative group of pediatric cancer institutions in North America, will

now enroll patients up to age 40 in trials for osteosarcoma, Ewing's

sarcoma, medulloblastoma and other cancers that have traditionally been

studied almost exclusively in pediatric centers. And some cooperative groups

of cancer centers that treat adults have lowered the age of eligibility for

some of their trials in cancers that are more prevalent in older adults --

such as melanoma -- to age 10 from age 18, to allow adolescents to enroll.

At Dana-Farber, the upcoming GIST trial co-led by Dr. Demetri will explore

how a particular cancer may be fundamentally different in different age

groups. The disease in young adults " goes by the same name but is clearly a

different disease, " he says, noting that in older adults with GIST, around

95 percent have a certain kind of genetic mutation that responds well to a

targeted therapy, Gleevec. But in those age 15-30, " a sizable proportion do

not have that particular mutation, " so Gleevec isn't as effective, Dr.

Demetri says.

Still, this age group also more frequently gets a less-aggressive form of

the disease. If scientists can figure out why GIST in this age group behaves

differently, it could lead to the development of drugs that could turn

cancer in older people into " that same kind of kinder, gentler tumor, " says

Dr. Demetri.

One of the most disturbing findings of the emerging research into young

adults is that where someone gets treated can make a dramatic difference in

survival in some cancers. In a German study presented in 2003, young adults

with Ewing's sarcoma did better when they were treated at pediatric centers

than adult centers, even when they got the same drug regimen, leading some

doctors to question whether psychosocial factors are also at work in

addition to biology.

Larson, a professor of medicine at the University of Chicago who is

helping develop a trial for young adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia

(ALL), says young adults treated at pediatric centers may be more likely to

benefit from what he calls the " mother factor, " where patients are more

compliant with their treatment regimens because their care is directed by

their parents. He says some oncologists have also suggested that pediatric

centers may be better at implementing chemotherapy regimens meant for

primarily pediatric cancers, even when the same protocols are used in both

children and young adults.

In three separate studies recently by groups in the U.S., Holland and

France, significantly more 15- to 21-year-olds with ALL were alive five

years after diagnosis when they were treated with a more-intensive pediatric

drug regimen than when they got the adult protocol, said Albritton,

who heads the adolescent and young adult oncology program at Dana-Farber.

She said that the adult protocol used less-intense doses of chemotherapy

drugs because it was geared toward older adults, who often have a poor

tolerance for high doses. But that meant many young adults were probably

undertreated. A new trial being launched this year will examine survival

rates of young adults age 15-30 with ALL, compared with other age groups who

receive the same pediatric regimen, and with different age groups from

previous studies.

" There are some young adults with cancer who should be getting different

treatments than they are now, " says Dr. Albritton. " Lives are being lost

that shouldn't be. "

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  • 1 year later...

THE ARTICLE WAS ABSOLUTELY FABULOUS, IMMPRESSIVE, HONEST AND EXACTLY WHAT WE NEEDED! GREAT JOB, NANCY, LORIE! LOVE THE "SERIOUS NURSE" PHOTO!! THIS IS A GREAT STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION, I CANNOT WAIT TO SEE WHAT HAPPENS IN MY HEARING NOW WITH THIS "OUT OF THE CLOSET",,,,,,SUPERB!! JOYnautiques5 <nautiques5@...> wrote: I think the article was incredibly insightful on the issues about Etg and may have a HUGE impact on the way this

test is currently being used! There have been so many already that have been hurt drasticly while in recovery and still maintaining sobriety. I am hopefull that this will be a INCREDIBLE step in the right direction for those of us wrongfully accused!! I would LOVE to hear some discussion on thoughts about this article. To me...the faith we have had for 2 years is now being manifested! THANK GOD!!!! nancy __________________________________________________

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agree with joy...super article that laid the issue out beautifully including severe harm caused by false claims to sell etg as something it is not by labs...great job lorie and nancy...nancy there is an attorney in pa named donald haviland who you might want to have an em or chat with...you guys would be super plaintiffs for class action against labs...they are the logical choice because of their deceptive and harmful marketing in bad faith....regards,robinJoy <joyous1_1210@...> wrote: THE ARTICLE WAS ABSOLUTELY FABULOUS, IMMPRESSIVE, HONEST AND EXACTLY WHAT WE NEEDED! GREAT JOB, NANCY, LORIE! LOVE THE "SERIOUS NURSE" PHOTO!! THIS IS A GREAT STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION, I CANNOT WAIT TO SEE WHAT HAPPENS IN MY HEARING NOW WITH THIS "OUT OF THE CLOSET",,,,,,SUPERB!! JOYnautiques5 <nautiques5 > wrote: I think the article was incredibly insightful on the issues about Etg and may have a HUGE impact on the way this test is currently being used! There have been so many already that have been hurt drasticly while in recovery and still maintaining sobriety. I am hopefull that this will be a INCREDIBLE step in the right direction for those of us wrongfully accused!!

I would LOVE to hear some discussion on thoughts about this article. To me...the faith we have had for 2 years is now being manifested! THANK GOD!!!! nancy __________________________________________________

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Bravo Lorie and ! You both (we) were heard, great job!

Keeping the faith!

Isanah

I think the article was

incredibly insightful on the issues about Etg

> and may have a HUGE impact on the way this test is currently being

> used! There have been so many already that have been hurt

drasticly

> while in recovery and still maintaining sobriety. I am hopefull

that

> this will be a INCREDIBLE step in the right direction for those of

us

> wrongfully accused!! I would LOVE to hear some discussion on

thoughts

> about this article. To me...the faith we have had for 2 years is

now

> being manifested! THANK GOD!!!! nancy

>

>

>

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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Where is the " serious " nurse photo?

I think the article was

incredibly insightful on the issues about Etg

> and may have a HUGE impact on the way this test is currently

being

> used! There have been so many already that have been hurt

drasticly

> while in recovery and still maintaining sobriety. I am hopefull

that

> this will be a INCREDIBLE step in the right direction for those

of us

> wrongfully accused!! I would LOVE to hear some discussion on

thoughts

> about this article. To me...the faith we have had for 2 years is

now

> being manifested! THANK GOD!!!! nancy

>

>

>

>

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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I've had the same problem finding the WSJ August 12th issue in my

area. My husband went to pick up a copy last night at 10:45pm for

me after I confirmed by phone that Albertson's had copy (many

copies,per the call), then he returned without one! I called the

store again and they claimed that the Sat WTJ was removed from the

vendor and replaced with the next days issue right before my husband

arrived! Then my husband claims there wasn't any WSJ at all in the

store! How strange that was, I thought for a momont someone went

and bought all the issues for some purpose! Anyway I have now

ordered an issue on line through the WSJ web site, they charge $5.50

a back issue copy.

> >

> > I think the article was incredibly insightful on the issues

about

> Etg

> > and may have a HUGE impact on the way this test is currently

being

> > used! There have been so many already that have been hurt

drasticly

> > while in recovery and still maintaining sobriety. I am hopefull

> that

> > this will be a INCREDIBLE step in the right direction for those

of

> us

> > wrongfully accused!! I would LOVE to hear some discussion on

> thoughts

> > about this article. To me...the faith we have had for 2 years

is

> now

> > being manifested! THANK GOD!!!! nancy

> >

> how do I get a copie of the paper ..I went to all the stores I

could

> around here couldnt find it..and I know the judge will want the

> original..I also have been very busy at another site getting the

word

> out I was hoping that some would have got in touch for the letter

> thing to SAMHSA...?????

>

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lol, that explains my husband's declaration that there weren't ANY

copies left in th bin! I don't understand why the vendor has the

need to take the current copies around 10:45pm, around a half hour

after I had called and they confirmed having copies! Ticked me off

since my husband had gone throught the trouble to go get me a

copy!

> > > >

> > > > I think the article was incredibly insightful on the issues

> > about

> > > Etg

> > > > and may have a HUGE impact on the way this test is currently

> > being

> > > > used! There have been so many already that have been hurt

> > drasticly

> > > > while in recovery and still maintaining sobriety. I am

> hopefull

> > > that

> > > > this will be a INCREDIBLE step in the right direction for

those

> > of

> > > us

> > > > wrongfully accused!! I would LOVE to hear some discussion

on

> > > thoughts

> > > > about this article. To me...the faith we have had for 2

years

> > is

> > > now

> > > > being manifested! THANK GOD!!!! nancy

> > > >

> > > how do I get a copie of the paper ..I went to all the stores I

> > could

> > > around here couldnt find it..and I know the judge will want

the

> > > original..I also have been very busy at another site getting

the

> > word

> > > out I was hoping that some would have got in touch for the

letter

> > > thing to SAMHSA...?????

> > >

> >

>

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