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Florida (but it's not JUST about Florida )
posted at July 13, 2012 9:40 AM EDT
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Posts: 12549
First: February 29, 2008 Last: June 16, 2013 |
In April Florida experienced one of the worst tuberculosis outbreaks in twenty years, but thanks in part to Gov. Rick Scott’s (R) bill that shrank the Department of Health and closed the state’s primary hospital for treating TB, the news was kept secret. According to the Palm Beach Post, 3,000 people in the past two years may have had close contact with contagious people at Jacksonville’s homeless shelters, an outpatient mental health clinic and area jails. Yet investigators learned that only 253 people had been found and evaluated for TB infection. That means the outbreak is far from contained. In fact, the public wouldn’t learn anything until June and state health officials seem oblivious to the impending public health crisis afoot. Three months after the Centers for Disease Control contacted the state of Florida and told them to deal with this crisis the report still has not been widely circulated. In the report, the CDC makes it clear that other health officials throughout the state and nation have reason to be concerned: Of the fraction of the sick people’s contacts reached, one-third tested positive for TB exposure in areas like the homeless shelter. Furthermore, only two-thirds of the active cases could be traced to people and places in Jacksonville where the homeless and mentally ill had congregated. That suggested the TB strain had spread beyond the city’s underclass and into the general population. Departments of Health and Social Services are easy targets for Republicans like Scott to target for pillage. Thanks to those policies Floridians now face a TB outbreak in a state insufficient medical staff and facilities to treat it. If the Scott administration either won’t acknowledge or doesn’t understand the crisis on its hand, how can it be trusted to treat and contain it? Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/tb-outbreak-in-florida-made-worse-thanks-to-gov-scott.html#ixzz20GISO2Lv BESIDES TB----Its not all about being GENEROUS to illegals or pandering to the people who can't afford to see a doctor.... who we brush up against everyday or wait on us in stores or restaurants......People who move from one place to another.... There are three major groups which include protozoans (organisms having only one cell), nematodes (roundworms), and cestodes (tapeworms). When reading through a list you will find more than 10 human parasites, but the most common are those that infect the intestinal track. Some even migrate into the brain, lungs, and other parts of the body. and life threatening. |
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Re: Florida (but it's not JUST about Florida )
posted at July 13, 2012 11:33 AM EDT
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Posts: 543
First: August 9, 2011 Last: June 18, 2013 |
Jan, Same here in Louisiana, with the poverty level above the national average the State continues to elect Republican politicians. Jindal our Republican governor has his sights on National Republican goals and cuts where the cutting hurts the most and that is the Dept. of Health. Our coast continues to wash away, with sea levels rising and we have politicians that don't believe or believe but won't admit that soon we will be losing whole communities and a way of life. Instead of planning for the future they rather play politics. I will tell you if Rommey is elected and the senate is taken over by Republicans, it will be the biggest wake up call our history. Maybe then people will demand that the rich pay their fair share, they will demand that our social services be restored once again. They will demand clean air and good working conditions after the Republicans toss out all of the regulations that keep big business under control. And then again it may be too late for a lot of us. n Response to Florida (but it's not JUST about Florida ): In April Florida experienced one of the worst tuberculosis outbreaks in twenty years, but thanks in part to Gov. Rick Scott’s (R) bill that shrank the Department of Health and closed the state’s primary hospital for treating TB, the news was kept secret. According to the Palm Beach Post, 3,000 people in the past two years may have had close contact with contagious people at Jacksonville’s homeless shelters, an outpatient mental health clinic and area jails. Yet investigators learned that only 253 people had been found and evaluated for TB infection. That means the outbreak is far from contained. In fact, the public wouldn’t learn anything until June and state health officials seem oblivious to the impending public health crisis afoot. Three months after the Centers for Disease Control contacted the state of Florida and told them to deal with this crisis the report still has not been widely circulated. In the report, the CDC makes it clear that other health officials throughout the state and nation have reason to be concerned: Of the fraction of the sick people’s contacts reached, one-third tested positive for TB exposure in areas like the homeless shelter. Furthermore, only two-thirds of the active cases could be traced to people and places in Jacksonville where the homeless and mentally ill had congregated. That suggested the TB strain had spread beyond the city’s underclass and into the general population. Departments of Health and Social Services are easy targets for Republicans like Scott to target for pillage. Thanks to those policies Floridians now face a TB outbreak in a state insufficient medical staff and facilities to treat it. If the Scott administration either won’t acknowledge or doesn’t understand the crisis on its hand, how can it be trusted to treat and contain it? Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/tb-outbreak-in-florida-made-worse-thanks-to-gov-scott.html#ixzz20GISO2Lv BESIDES TB---- Its not all about being GENEROUS to illegals or pandering to the people who can't afford to see a doctor.... who we brush up against everyday or wait on us in stores or restaurants......People who move from one place to another.... http://www.healthynewage.com/AntiPara.html There are three major groups which include protozoans (organisms having only one cell), nematodes (roundworms), and cestodes (tapeworms). When reading through a list you will find more than 10 human parasites, but the most common are those that infect the intestinal track. Some even migrate into the brain, lungs, and other parts of the body. and life threatening. Posted by JANMB |
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Re: Florida (but it's not JUST about Florida )
posted at July 14, 2012 10:22 AM EDT
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Posts: 12549
First: February 29, 2008 Last: June 16, 2013 |
In Response to Re: Florida (but it's not JUST about Florida ): Jan, Same here in Louisiana, with the poverty level above the national average the State continues to elect Republican politicians. Jindal our Republican governor has his sights on National Republican goals and cuts where the cutting hurts the most and that is the Dept. of Health. Our coast continues to wash away, with sea levels rising and we have politicians that don't believe or believe but won't admit that soon we will be losing whole communities and a way of life. Instead of planning for the future they rather play politics. I will tell you if Rommey is elected and the senate is taken over by Republicans, it will be the biggest wake up call our history. Maybe then people will demand that the rich pay their fair share, they will demand that our social services be restored once again. They will demand clean air and good working conditions after the Republicans toss out all of the regulations that keep big business under control. And then again it may be too late for a lot of us. n Response to Florida (but it's not JUST about Florida ) : Posted by creppelrm And while regulations would be expensive to comply with, EPA officials say they will save billions of dollars in avoided health care costs each year by reducing asthma and other illnesses, such as cancer. In some cases, the cost savings are greater than the upfront expense, according to EPA figures.
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Re: Florida (but it's not JUST about Florida )
posted at July 16, 2012 1:44 PM EDT
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