Olokuntogun Ifasehun

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Oct 3, 2008

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Gender: Male
Status: Married
Age: 36
Sign: Taurus

City: St. Louis
State: Missouri
Country: US

Signup Date: 12/14/05

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Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Kwanzaa is a Time to Reflect

Kwanzaa is a Time to Reflect <- Read the Newspaper Article

Last year a local newspaper ran an article about my family celebrating Kwanzaa. This year we convinced them to make it a bit broader and include other people. They ended up interviewing my co-worker and including some pictures of my son's drum class, which performed at the local Better Family Life Kwanzaa Expo.

I am SO tired after celebrating Kwanzaa this year. We did so much this year I need a vacation to recoup. lol We threw a family Kwanzaa party that had about 5-6 families in attendance and we went to several other Kwanzaa events. (And I helped work the Kwanzaa Expo.) My six year old made paper cut outs of everyone's favorite animal for Kwanzaa gifts. Very cute. I will take pic soon and post it. lol

The Ancestors ought to be pleased. Lots of  not-so cultural folks got involved with Kwanzaa this year. Pouring libation and everything! Black folks always run to the culture when the economy is bad. lol Don't worry, we're waiting for you when all that bling-bling wears off.

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Thursday, December 20, 2007

African Religion is Too Much Work?

Practicing a traditional African religion or spiritual system is extremely hard work. There is always something to do, get, remember, stop doing, memorize, contemplate etc. It's not that unusual that some of us get tired and think we "need a break." (One day that we don't have to great multiple shrines or one week when we don't have to make sacrifice for the Ancestors. I concede that Traditional African religion can be laborous.

Most often we find ourselves asking "what's so great about my life that I can attribute to the Abosum, Orisa, Neteru, etc. that I need to keep doing all of this stuff." It's not until we stop our spiritual practice that we discover it's worth. When crisis arrives we return to our shrines, dust off our Ileke, re-memorize our mantras and start talking to our Ancestors again.

I see spiritual practice usefulness as three-fold - (1) to remind us that we are spiritual beings having a physical experience. (2) as a way to orchestrate spiritual awareness. (3) to maintain balance in our daily lives. Sustained practice is the only way to guarantee that you get the most out of the experience. After all, how connected can we be to spirit when we refuse to fellowship with Spirit? How much we become more spiritually aware when we operate exclusively as physical beings? Most importantly, if our connections to Spirit are weak, how successful will we be in maintaining balance and dealing with sudden challenges?


I agree. This is hard work. But you know the old saying - "you never know what you got, until you lose it."

12:18 PM - 6 Comments - 14 Kudos - Add Comment

Friday, November 16, 2007

Book Cover Contest - Win $150
Current mood: chipper
Category: Writing and Poetry

Roots and Rooted will be publishing a book on Ancestral Communication in early 2008. We are seeking original artwork to be used as the book cover. After nearly a year of struggling to find the right artist we've decided that a contest will be the best way of getting the right artwork.

THE PRIZE

The winning submission will earn the artist $150 in cash, one copy of the book and the admiration of all your friends and loved ones.

DEADLINES

Submissions must be in no later than December 17, 2007 @ 12AM central time (USA). A winner will be announced on www.myspace.com and www.rootsandrooted.org on Umoja Day (December 26, 2007).

FOR COMPLETE CONTEST RULES AND DETAILS

Please READ the blog entitled "Book Cover Contest".

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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Can nutrition have an impact on our spirituality and vice versa?
Current mood: busy

Can nutrition have an impact on our spirituality and vice versa? In a word – yes. The foods we eat have a tremendous impact our ability to concentrate, gradually repair or impair our genetic material and reward us with karmic rewards or debt, based on the source of the foods we eat. If we eat poorly, we think poorly, we ritualize poorly, we focus poorly, we block the physical places where Ase (kundalini, or whatever you may know it as) grows and rises and we take on the weight of incorrectly butchered animals, heavily processed foods and highly synthesized ingredients.

 
Our spirituality can also impair our physical health. If we tend to our spiritual duties sloppily, sporadically and casually we starve our spiritual selves and rob our bodies of the needed boost and sustenance that can only come from spiritual energy. The hope, the will, the discipline and the strength that we need to plan, envision, cope and achieve usually comes from our spiritual food – prayer, meditation, sacrifice and ritual.

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We Don’t Die (Short Story)

We Don't Die - A short story about Divination

Bandele sat with the others in the living room, reminiscing about his Uncle Theodore. He had passed away in his sleep at 76 years old, having worked 40 years of that time on the railroads of the Old South. Even in retirement, he woke up at the crack of sunrise to tend his garden, and do odd jobs around the house with his wife up until three months ago, when his health began to fail. It was as if his Spirit sighed in relief upon his death, finally worn and finished up with an increasingly busy world. Uncle Theodore was now an Ancestor.

Bandele kept as quiet as he could, and allowed the older family members their opportunity to make peace with the finality of the moment. Facial expressions told who was at peace, and who was distraught. A close-knit family, many of them had made regular trips to see Uncle Theodore during his final months. Now with his death here the family began to discuss some of the subjects that they had purposefully tried to avoid while he lay on his sickbed, like funeral arrangements, his will and caring for Abigail, his wife. A few tears invited their way into the discussion and Bandele's older cousin Nehemiah excused himself to sit alone on the front porch.

Bandele kept envisioning Uncle Theodore's smile. He could remember clearly how his uncle had patiently taught him to catch and throw a football perfectly one quiet summer back in '79. He also remembered how he had later come to his rescue by loaning him money to make a down payment on a house when his wife was pregnant with their first child. Uncle Theodore was without a doubt, his favorite uncle. He kept telling himself that this man that he loved so much could not die. His body would leave. Still, there was comfort in knowing his Spirit would survive, so long as someone could remember him.

"This is how I will talk to you Uncle," Bandele thought while running his left index finger along the plump white cowry shells that rested in his right palm.

Against all western reason, his faith lay in the potency of these shells and the invocation that could conjure up the voice of the Ancestors through them. They were his link and he had seen them work many times in the past. Bandele had climbed knee deep into the netherworld and communicated with family members that existed only as Spirit. These people had lived and died way before he was born. These ancestors advised him on work, counseled him about his relationships and carefully guided his spiritual growth. Although he was not born in Africa, he had successfully incorporated the age-old custom of ancestral divination into his life and he was a better man for having done so.

While this funeral marked the end for the rest of his family, Bandele realized how fortunate he was to continue his relationship with his favorite uncle.

Uncle Theodore was just going to be four cowries away.

http://rootsandrooted.org/we_dont_die.htm


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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

African Americans must use their vast spending power to make change

Hit discriminators where it hurts: African Americans must use their vast spending power to make change
Black Enterprise, Nov, 2003 by Darrell Williams

African American consumers are a powerful force in the U.S. economy. Based on the 2001 Consumer Expenditure Survey, the $383 billion spent by African American consumers accounts for 5% of all U.S. consumer spending and 4% of Gross Domestic Product. (In 2004 that amount rose to over $656 Billion)

Despite this collective buying power, black consumers are still greeted with suspicion about their intentions and with skepticism about their ability to pay.


Given the importance of black consumer spending for the U.S. economy, and given the intense competition by businesses for those dollars, what can be done to discourage future discrimination? The answers may very well lie in how African American consumers respond when there is convincing evidence of consumer discrimination. The nature of the response is critical because it determines the penalty that companies face when their employees treat black consumers poorly. The best way to prevent consumer discrimination is to ensure that companies incur substantial penalties when it occurs.

The continued slights that African American consumers face suggest that the penalties that companies now face simply are not high enough. Victims of consumer discrimination typically respond by filing a lawsuit against the company. Although there may be monetary settlements equaling millions of dollars, these payments serve only to compensate the victims. They do not serve to punish the company, hence deterring similar conduct in the future. For example, in a well-known case against Denny's, the company paid a settlement of $54 million in 1994, which seems substantial but accounts for only 1.1% of its revenue in that year. Avis and Holiday Spa also faced lawsuits but paid monetary settlements equal to less than 1% of annual revenue. The monetary settlements alone are simply too small relative to the size of the companies to be a strong deterrent.
Advertisement

Civil rights organizations usually attempt to deter future discrimination by negotiating the implementation of administrative changes within the company, such as sensitivity training and the hiring of African Americans in key management positions. However, civil rights organizations simply do not have the resources to continuously monitor these companies to ensure that they adhere to new policies.

Maybe it's time that African American consumers themselves take a stronger stand by taking their dollars elsewhere. Not only will this impose a large economic penalty on the company engaged in discriminatory practices, it will also send a strong message to all other companies that consumer discrimination will not be tolerated. Put the profits of companies at risk and suddenly they have a strong incentive to implement the kind of administrative policies needed to ensure that African American consumers are treated with respect and courtesy without prodding by civil rights organizations.

This will not work in every case. But where African Americans represent a large share of the company's revenue, it is likely to be the most effective strategy.

Darrell Williams is a principal at Economic Analysis L.L.C., as well as a member of the BE Board of Economists.


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Saturday, July 07, 2007

Chiquita Bananas and Columbia Killers

US coal firm linked to Colombia militias

By FRANK BAJAK, Associated Press Writer
Fri Jul 6, 10:53 PM ET

LA LOMA, Colombia - The bus had just left Drummond Co. Inc.'s coal mine carrying about 50 workers when gunmen halted it and forced two union leaders off. They shot one on the spot, pumping four bullets into his head, and dragged the other one off to be tortured and killed.

In a civil trial set to begin Monday before a federal jury in Birmingham, Ala., union lawyers have presented affidavits from two people who allege that Drummond ordered those killings, a charge the company denies.

The Chiquita banana company admitted paying right-wing militias known as paramilitaries to protect its Colombia operations. Human rights activists claim such practices were widespread among multinationals in Colombia, and that Drummond went even further, using the fighters to violently keep its labor costs down.

The Drummond case, they say, is their best chance yet of seeing those allegations heard in court.

The union has presented affidavits to the Alabama court from two people who say they were present when Drummond's chief executive in Colombia, Augusto Jimenez, handed over a large sum of cash to representatives of the local paramilitary warlord. They claim the money was for the March 10, 2001, killings of Sintramienergetica union local president Valmore Locarno and his deputy, Victor Orcasita.

Union leaders, former army soldiers and ex-paramilitary fighters also allege that family-owned Drummond, which shifted most of its operations to northern Colombia in the 1990s as its Alabama veins gave out, paid and provisioned the paramilitaries as a matter of policy.

Drummond says neither charge is true.

"Drummond did not pay any paramilitary or illegal or unlawful group," it said in a written response to questions from The Associated Press. Senior company executives declined interviews.

Rafael Garcia, the former technology director of the DAS state security agency, says in an affidavit that he saw Jimenez give "a suitcase full of cash" to paramilitary commanders "to assassinate specific union leaders," naming Locarno and Orcasita. Garcia is in prison, convicted of erasing drug traffickers' names from DAS records.

Former paramilitary fighter Alberto Visbal says in an affidavit that he saw Jimenez pay his boss, who went by the alias "Julian," $200,000 in cash. Visbal, who has fled Colombia, said he understood from another fighter present that the money was in exchange for the killings. Visbal says he was later sent to confirm Locarno's death.

In a filing in an Atlanta circuit court Thursday seeking more time to gather depositions, plaintiffs for the union also alleged that former union treasurer Jimmy Rubio saw a Drummond official — they didn't specify which one — pay a paramilitary leader for the killings. Rubio went into hiding when his father-in-law was murdered just before he was to give a deposition in the case, they said.

Affidavits from Rubio, Visbal and Garcia have all been entered into the public record in Birmingham.

Drummond challenged the accounts. "We have evidence that some (of the witnesses) are being paid and/or offered assistance by the United Steelworkers Union," it said in its written response.

The union said the only assistance provided to witnesses was helping some of them leave the country after their lives were threatened.

The lawsuit, filed under a U.S. statute that lets foreigners sue U.S. corporations for their conduct abroad, seeks hundreds of millions of dollars in damages, alleging Locarno, Orcasita and Gustavo Soler — who was killed after he took over for Locarno — "were direct victims of Drummond's plan to violently destroy the union."

"I think they thought they could get away with anything, literally get away with murder," United Steelworkers lawyer Daniel Kovalik said.

Drummond's relationship with the Sintramienergetica union, which represents a third of its 6,200 local workers, has long been tense. The union accuses the company of unsafe conditions it says contributed to 13 accidental deaths since 1995, of forcing injured employees to work and of indiscriminately dismissing workers.

Drummond said: "We have a good relationship with our rank and file workforce."

The landowner-backed paramilitaries arose in the 1980s to counter kidnapping and extortion by leftist rebels but grew into terrorist organizations in their own right, killing more than 10,000 people, stealing land from peasants and taking over much of Colombia's drug trade.

As the paramilitaries demobilize under a peace pact with the government, many former fighters are coming forward to describe the groups' ties with business leaders and politicians in revelations that are shaking the nation.

The U.S. Justice Department fined Chiquita Brands International Inc. $25 million this year for giving $1.7 million to the militias from 1997-2004. Chiquita said the regular monthly payments by its wholly owned subsidiary Banadex were "to protect the lives of its employees."

Colombia's chief prosecutor, Mario Iguaran, has opened criminal investigations into both the Drummond and Chiquita cases. Last month, the families of 144 people killed by paramilitaries operating where Chiquita harvested bananas sued the company in U.S. federal court in Washington.

And Rep. Bill Delahunt, D-Mass., said a congressional hearing that he called on the subject last week would be the first of many.

"We don't want American companies to fuel the unacceptable level of violence that exists in Colombia today," he said.

While the Birmingham trial focuses on the union leaders' murders, witnesses will also accuse Drummond of employing paramilitaries to protect its operations, which exported more than 25 million tons of coal last year from Colombia to the United States and Europe.

Previous efforts to use the Alien Tort Claims Act to make mulitnational corporations accountable for actions in other countries have failed. To win this case, the families must show the slayings amounted to war crimes sanctioned by state officials. Their attorneys say they can prove this since union activists have been systematically slaughtered in Colombia. l Three people unaffiliated with the union told The Associated Press that Drummond paid paramilitaries to guard its 25,000-acre La Loma mine and its coal trains against leftist rebel sabotage. They said the company supplied the mercenaries with pickup trucks and motorcycles and routinely fed them and let them gas up on mine property.

Two of them have offered testimony to Colombian and U.S. authorities: Edwin Guzman, a former army sergeant who later joined the paramilitaries, and Isnardo Ropero, who worked as the personal bodyguard for Drummond's community relations director. Both have fled Colombia.

The third is a former midlevel paramilitary member who worked in the region until early last year and spoke on condition of anonymity because he remains in Colombia and fears for his life. He said paramilitaries guarded Drummond's coal trains on the 120-mile rail line from La Loma to the coast. Every few miles, a motorized team shadowing the train on a parallel dirt road would hand off to another team, he said.

In an affidavit, Javier Ochoa, an ex-paramilitary who is serving time for murder, named the people he said collected "taxes" from Drummond, including between 20 and 32 cents per ton of coal produced. His affidavit was provided to the AP by Llanos Oil Exploration Ltd., which has sued Drummond separately for alleged theft of oil rights in an Orlando, Fla., federal court.

Rubio, the former union treasurer, said in an affidavit that he saw the mine's community relations director, Alfredo Araujo, hand over two checks to a known paramilitary member on mine grounds. Araujo denied the claim.

"That's false and will be so proven in court," he said in a telephone interview.


Go to www.corpwatch for more news on Chiquita


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Monday, July 02, 2007

Reach Inward, Then Share Outward

I came across an interesting statement by a Hindu priest on the importance of staying grounded and active in the world. This statement rang true because as a spiritualist I have a strong desire to withdraw into the Abyss on most occasions. While this is a place that brings me great joy (I liken meditating and ritual work to the feeling others get from riding a rollercoaster. I like it that much!) and protects me from exposure to toxic attitudes and personalities it can also prevent me from connecting to like minds and those that seeking renewal or new focus.

"Fundamentally, spiritual people should come out of the closet and become more active. It is important for them to understand that if you meditate for longer hours and spend a lot of time reflecting on god, over a period of time you will become other-worldly. In some cases, it may even create depression and a lack of interest in being active.

It is important that all spiritual people should do something to remain grounded. They can practice a martial art or some other form of physical exercise that will keep them alert. Also, get rid of the concept that this world is an illusion and it is important to focus attention on god rather than the world. You must realize that the world with all its complexity and silliness is still the creation of God. Think that when you are having a good meal, you are connecting with god. To run away from the world is to run away from God."

This quote reminds of the importance of fellowship and balance in spiritual life. I suggest that we all heed these simple words.

I promise to Reach Inward, Then Share Outward.

For those of you involved with Traditional Afrikan Traditions you might seek to balance very introspective Deities with more extroverted Ones. (Obatala and Osun, Olokun and Sango, etc...)

(Yes, this means I should call and email some of you a lot more than I presently do. )

8:52 AM - 2 Comments - 6 Kudos - Add Comment

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Good Morning Vietname (I mean Iraq)

Consider what is going to happen when your brother or sister comes back from this unethical and unjust war. Imagine what the next 30 years will be like in Amerikkka when these wounded soldiers spill back into our communities.
 
Gov't struggles to care for wounded GI's
 
.. END HEADLINE -->
.. BEGIN STORY BODY -->

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE, AP Medical Writer Sun Jun 24, 2:29 AM ET

More than 800 of them have lost an arm, a leg, fingers or toes. More than 100 are blind. Dozens need tubes and machines to keep them alive. Hundreds are disfigured by burns, and thousands have brain injuries and mangled minds.

These are America's war wounded, a toll that has received less attention than the 3,500 troops killed in Iraq. Depending on how you count them, they number between 35,000 and 53,000.

More of them are coming home, with injuries of a scope and magnitude the government did not predict and is now struggling to treat.

"If we left Iraq tomorrow, we would have the legacy of all these people for many years to come," said Dr. Jeffrey Drazen, editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine and an adviser to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. "The military simply wasn't prepared for its own success" at keeping severely wounded soldiers alive, he said.

Survival rates today are even higher than the record levels set early in the war, thanks to body armor and better care. For every American soldier or Marine killed in Iraq, 15 others have survived illness or injury there.

Unlike previous wars, few of them have been shot. The signature weapon of this war — the improvised explosive device, or IED — has left a signature wound: traumatic brain injury.

Soldiers hit in the head or knocked out by blasts — "getting your bell rung" is the military euphemism — sometimes have no visible wounds but a fog of war in their minds. They can be addled, irritable, depressed and unaware they are impaired.

Only an estimated 2,000 cases of brain injury have been treated, but doctors think many less obvious cases have gone undetected. One small study found that more than half of one group of wounded troops arriving at Walter Reed Army Medical Center had brain injuries. Around the nation, a new effort is under way to check every returning man and woman for this possibility.

Some of those on active duty may have subtle brain damage that was missed when they were treated for more visible wounds. Half of those wounded in action returned to duty within 72 hours — before some brain injuries may have been apparent. The military just adopted new procedures to spot these cases, too.

Back home, concerns grow about care. The Walter Reed hospital scandal and problems with some VA nursing homes have led Republicans and Democrats to call for better care for this new crop of veterans.

A lucky few get Cadillac care at one of the VA's four polytrauma centers, where the most complex wounds are treated with state-of-the-art techniques and whiz-bang devices like "power knee" or "smart ankle" prosthetics. Others battle bureaucracy to see doctors or get basic benefits in less ideal settings.

Mental health problems loom large. More than a third of troops received psychological counseling shortly after returning from Iraq, and a third of those were diagnosed with a problem, a recent Pentagon study found. The government plans to add 200 psychologists and social workers to help treat post-traumatic stress disorder and other issues.

No one knows what the ultimate cost will be. Harvard University economist Linda Bilmes estimates the lifetime health-care tab for these troops will be $250 billion to $650 billion — a wide range but a huge sum no matter how you slice it.

Who are the wounded?

Lee Jones, 24, of Lumberton, N.C., was severely burned on the face, hands, feet and legs when his Humvee was hit with an IED two years ago. A partial amputee with speech and other problems from a severe brain injury, he now does work therapy delivering mail at a VA hospital and tries to re-establish life in a nearby apartment with a wife and baby daughter.

Marine Cpl. Joshua Pitcher, 22, from upstate New York, is a Purple Heart recipient who returned to Iraq after he was shot in 2005. Half of his skull was removed to allow his brain to swell as he now recovers from a brain injury and shrapnel wounds from a grenade blast in February.

Maj. Thomas Deierlein, 39, is a New York City marketing executive who served five years after graduating from West Point. Twelve years later, called up as a reservist, he nearly died of bullet wounds that shattered his pelvis, leaving him with a colostomy and learning to walk again.

Joseph "Jay" Briseno, 24, of Manassas Park, Va., was shot in the back of the neck by an Iraqi in the early months of the war. One of the most severely wounded, he is now a quadriplegic, on a breathing machine, blind and unable to speak, but aware of what has happened to him.

"The mistake in Vietnam was, we hid the injured away from folks so they didn't get to tell their stories. Now it's important that we let them tell their stories to the public," said Dr. Steven Scott, director of the Polytrauma Rehabilitation Center at the Tampa VA Medical Center in Florida.

Counting the wounded can be contentious. Earlier this year, the Department of Defense changed how it tallies war-related injuries and illness, dropping those not needing air transport to a military hospital from the bottom-line total.

Bilmes, the economist, thinks this is disingenuous.

"An accident that happens while they're there is a cost of war, particularly when you factor in the length of deployment" and injury-inducing conditions like very hot weather, carrying heavy packs, and more vehicle accidents because it is not safe to walk anywhere, she said.

As of June 2, 25,830 troops had been wounded in action. Of these, 7,675 needed airlifts to military hospitals and the rest were treated and remained in Iraq.

There were another 27,103 non-battle-related air transports. Of those, 7,188 had injuries. Most occurred from vehicle accidents, training or work-related accidents. Ten percent were sports injuries, said Dr. Michael Kilpatrick, who tracks this information for the Defense Department.

Nearly 20,000 of these "non-hostile" airlifts were for illnesses or medical issues: general symptoms like fever or pain needing tests or evaluation; back problems; psychological problems adjusting to being in a war zone; "affective psychoses" (not able to function or care for themselves); neuroses; respiratory or chest symptoms; depression; head and neck problems (including traumatic brain injury); epilepsy; infections, and muscle pulls and strains.

"I don't want to try to say these are not war-related. Being in the military is a very physically demanding job," Kilpatrick said.

For stress-related problems, the military tries "three hots and a cot" — warm meals and a chance to sleep. Most of the time it works and troops return to their unit, Kilpatrick said.

Of the troops air evacuated to the military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany, 20 percent return to Iraq and 80 percent go back to the United States for more care or disability discharge.

Of the half-million troops who have left active duty and are eligible for VA health care, about one-third have sought it. The most complicated cases end up at one of the four polytrauma centers, in Tampa, Fla.; Richmond, Va.; Palo Alto, Calif.; and Minneapolis.

These were formed after doctors realized they were missing problems — amputees who were confused and unable to put on their prosthetics because of undiagnosed brain injuries, and guys who could remember their therapy dog's name but not their doctor's, or who could carry on a conversation but not recall what they had for breakfast.

Troops at these hospitals have an average of six major impairments and 10 specialists treating them.

"The important thing to realize is you could have all of them at once" — trouble speaking, seeing, walking, hearing, etc., Scott said.

Most of these injuries are caused by IED blasts, which send a pressurized air wave through delicate tissues like the brain, sometimes send it smacking against the inside of the skull and shearing fragile nerve connections that control speech, vision, reasoning, memory and other functions. Lungs, eardrums, spinal cords — virtually anything — can be damaged by the pressure wave. Injuries also come from collapsing buildings, flying debris, heat, burns or inhaled gases and vapors.

"Many of these you can't see on an X-ray," such as glass shards that can cause internal bleeding, Scott said.

In prior wars, one of every five to seven troops surviving a war-related wound had a traumatic brain injury, the military estimates. It's much higher in this war.

A pilot project at Walter Reed in 2003 to screen 155 patients returning from Iraq found that 62 percent had a brain injury.

"This is a very rapidly evolving area as a disease," with no screening test, agreed-upon set of symptoms for diagnosis, or even a billing code, said Kilpatrick, the military doctor.

Much needs to be learned about how to treat these injuries, he said, but credited the military medical staff for having the chance.

"It's just amazing to me every day when I look at these numbers," he said. "The good news is that the majority of these people who become ill or injured ... are going to survive and are going to be able to return either to the military or to civilian life and be productive."

___

On the Net:

Government casualty .. http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/STATE_OEF_OIF.pdf

Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center: http://ksgnotes1.harvard.edu/Research/wpaper.nsf/RWP/RWP07-001

Department of Veterans Affairs: http://www.defenselink.mil/

11:17 AM - 1 Comments - 4 Kudos - Add Comment

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Pfizer Endangers Nigerian Youth?

U.S. Drug Company Hit With Blockbuster Lawsuit
Special to NNPA from GIN

(GIN) - The pharmaceutical company Pfizer has been hit by charges that it carried out improper trials on Nigerian children for an anti-meningitis drug.

The Nigerian government is demanding $7 billion in damages for the families of children who allegedly died or suffered side-effects after being given Trovan.
The firm denies any wrongdoing, saying the trials were conducted according to Nigerian and international law.

Pfizer — the world's largest pharmaceutical company — tested the experimental drug in some meningitis-stricken children in Kano in 1996. Some children reportedly died, and campaigners say several others developed mental and physical deformities.

The government says the children were injected with the drug without approval from Nigerian regulatory agencies.
A separate case in the city of Kano — in which the state is seeking 2.7 billion in compensation — has been running for more than two years. On Monday, judges postponed that trial by a month, to allow the firm to appear before the Kano court.

Trovan has been approved for use by adults, but not children, in the US.

10:49 PM - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment


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