Re: Antibiotic Rights




"~Rita" <deuman04@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:4Y6dnSOTxPoInJ3eRVn-ug@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
> "Skeptic" <bcs002b@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> >
> > "~Rita" <deuman04@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> > news:MfednU938PeOJmPfRVn-tw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > >
> > > "Skeptic" <bcs002b@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> > >>
> > >> "~Rita" <deuman04@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> > >>
> > >> > I'm not looking for free antibiotics. I would like the right to
> > >> > purchase
> > >> > the antibiotics of my choice!
> > >> > Bleomycin, Doxorubicin, streptomycin and a few others, along with
the
> > >> > BCG tuberculosis vaccine, which I asked for several years ago.
> > >>
> > >> You have not answered the question - should you and other non-medical
> > >> American citizens be allowed to purchase such medications as
bleomycin
> > >> without medical approval?
> > >> This is a yes or no question.
> >
> > > The answer would be YES.
> > > Hubby should have had the right to request an antitumor antibiotic.
> >
> > He did have the right. As an American, you can request it. You can
> >request a trip to the moon in hope that zero gravity will cause
> >cancer regression. But NASA will say no.
> The right to be healthy, would be like a trip to the moon.
> In December 1979, a dream stated that Hubby had Hodgkin's disease.
>
> In 1981, Hubby's job forced him to go to the doctors to have his neck
tumor
> fixed.
>
> If the antitumor antibiotics, Adriamycin were available before the human
> tissue turned malignant, the neck tumor would have been fixed. An
> antibiotic fights the pathogen that caused the tumor. That's why it's
known
> as an antitumor antibiotic. So after two years of doctors, hospitals, and
> biopsies, Hubby's hematologist was working on a new disease called
> Castleman-Iverson, and she was treating it with prednisone. By this time
> in1983, AIDS was making the news. The three diseases, AIDS,
> Castleman-Iverson, and Hodgkin's disease have similar symptoms,
> one of which is a visible tumor. Hubby asked the hematologist,
> "Could this be Hodgkin's disease?"
> "No," hematologist replied.
> Hubby then asked, "Is it AIDS?"
> The hematologist chuckled while saying,
> "You have to be a homosexual to get that!"
>
> Again prednisone was used instead of antitumor antibiotics, and Hubby
ended
> up with bone fractures. The PDR states bone fractures as a side effect of
> prednisone. Hubby asked the hematologist about the prednisone causing his
> bone fractures. The hematologist replied, "Not necessarily".
> Hubby said, "You should re-read your PDR."
> So after the hematologist-checked blood transfusions, Hubby ended up with
> enough infection to disintegrate bones!
> When you talk back to the specialist, the specialist can kill you.
>
> Hubby changed doctors and hospital in 1983 where he received chemotherapy.
> The first treatment was with an antitumor antibiotic. In about four hours,
> the tumors began to shrink. Antitumor antibiotics shrink tumors. It would
be
> common sense to call an antitumor antibiotic "an antitumor antibiotic".
>
> After Hubby's 1983 Blood transfusions where each unit had to contain +DAT,
> I wrote all over the world to ask the meaning of the blood antibodies.
> Professor Coombs, who at that time was the head pathologist at the
> University of Cambridge in England, discovered the +DAT factor. Professor
> Mourant had written a clear and interesting article. The Professor
replied.
>
> As I read the article, the feeling that Professor Coombs prayed for
> inspiration to discover something that would benefit humanity.
> I have heard of a heaven-sent-gift called "a feather". Adriamycin was not
as
> well known as the antibiotic Streptomycin. Selman Waksman won a Nobel
> Prize for his antibiotic discovery.
>
> Adriamycin was patented in 1968 and place in what the dream called
> "The Humanity-in-Reverse cabinet" the antibiotic had a copyright date of
> 1974, which made it 9-years-old in 1983.
> Adriamycin/Doxorubicin was placed in the TOXNET N.L.M.'s toxicology
> Date Network under the Hazardous Substances Data Bank.
> Copyright 1974, MICROMEDEX, Inc.".
>
> In 1983, my question was "What kind of Humanity does the withholding
> of antitumor antibiotics offer?"
>
> My first guess was that since Adriamycin was made from a mutant germ,
> the research for future mutations and new antibiotics that could be
> discovered would cease.
>
> I have found the tuberculosis bacterial infections interesting.
> Hubby's father was sent to a TB sanatorium in 1966.
> That was back when the sanatoriums offered jobs.
> I have not heard of any one receiving a Tuberculosis Test
> since 1982. The test is NOT done until the process of
> elemination removed any other possibility
> and there is nothing left to test for.
>
> You know my favorite cliche is "God said ask your drug prescriber for
> Streptomycin."

> Streptomycin wasn't a cancer drug in 1994, is it now?
I feel that the United States of America has a flawed Tuberculosis testing
method, so if the people living in the USA had a Tuberculosis test, a
million tests would be positive. Once the large amount of TB infection is
noticed, it would probably be blamed on the terrorists




.