Husband Of TBI Survivor Shares Blog On Her Miraculous Recovery

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Posted on 15th April 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Believe in miracles – no matter what the doctors tell you.

 That’s the message from George. The Canadian resident asked that we share his family’s story and blog with you, to give hope to those who feel hopeless after their loved one sustains a traumatic brain injury.

 “My wife Yvonne was involved in a head-on collision with a tractor trailer in late January 2010,” George wrote us. “The car spun out on icy roads and crossed the line. Initially the doctors didn’t give us much hope. They said she might never leave the ICU and they asked us if it was her wish to be an organ donor. Yea, pretty damned bleak.”

 Well, apparently the doctors were wrong about Yvonne.

“She is healing beautifully and she IS a miracle girl!” George said.

The family has been keeping a blog about Yvonne’s progress, http://yvonneonthemend.blogspot.com/.

“I just wanted to share this so other families who suddenly find themselves in this situation will be able to read about her,” George wrote. .

The blog’s first entries date back to a day or two after the accident, which took place Jan. 27.

The Chicago City Council Approves $3 Million Settlement in Brain Injury Case

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Posted on 14th April 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

The Chicago City Council Wednesday approved a $3 million settlement for a woman who sustained permanent brain damage from a crash with a stolen van that was being chased by police. http://newsblogs.chicagotribune.com/clout_st/2010/04/chicago-aldermen-approve-3-million-settlement-in-police-chase-crash.html

The settlement stems from an accident involving Regina Varela, who has cognitive problems because of the brain injury she sustained in the August 2004 accident. Varela, 17 at the time of the accident, was a passenger in a car traveling west on Addison Avenue. That car was struck broadside by a stolen van that ran a red light while being pursued by police.

The $3 million settlement will be given to Varela’s family.

According to the Chicago Tribune, a Chicago Law Department press release had said that the man driving the van, one of his passengers and a witness all said that the police had been pursuing the stolen vehicle for several blocks.

The police, however, maintained that they had only just started to pursue the stolen vehicle. They were punished for being out of their district without approval.

 

Governors, District Attorneys in Arizona and Tennessee Tangle Over Suits To Overturn Health Care Law

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Posted on 8th April 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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 There are now two more cases, drawn along party lines, of state governors locking horns with their attorney generals over lawsuits challenging President Obama’s health care reform.

Arizona, like 15 other states, said Tuesday that it is filing suit challenging the constitutionality of the nation’s new health care law, despite the objections of the state’s Attorney General. In Tennessee, the state Attorney General has also balked at filing such a challenge.

Rather conveniently, Arizona’s Republican Gov. Jan Brewer signed a bill April 1 that allows her to get around Attorney General Terry Goddard, a Democrat, and file the anti-health care reform lawsuit.

 http://www.azcentral.com/news/election/azelections/articles/2010/04/06/20100406obama-health-care-lawsuit.html

In Arizona, Republicans claim that the new health care law violates the Constitution because it mandates that people buy private health insurance. Goddard argues that the suit is frivolous and a waste of taxpayers’ money.

So now Brewer’s general counsel, Joseph Kanefield, will handle the suit for the governor and the state.

Meanwhile, in Tennessee Attorney General Robert Cooper claims that his state Legislature’s bid to try to throw out the federal health care legislation is most likely unconstitutional, so he can’t enforce its efforts.  http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2010/apr/06/tennessee-ag-says-state-attempts-nullify-federal-h/?partner=popular

 Cooper on Tuesday offered his legal opinion that if the Legislature wants to take on Obama’s new health care law, it will have to get its own lawyer to do it.

 The attorney general contends that U.S. Constitution gives Congress the power to pre-empt state law.

 

Tarleton Football Player Dies of Traumatic Brain Injury From Practice

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Posted on 4th April 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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A Tarleton State University football died of traumatic brain injury (TBI) after falling and hitting his head during what the school called “routine” play during spring practice. http://www.star-telegram.com/2010/04/01/v-print/2083080/tarleton-football-player-died.html

Perhaps the lesson here is that no play in football is “routine,” in that players, particularly 18-year-olds like Zachary Shaver, always risk fatal injury. The youth from Wichita Falls, Texas, died last Monday from a head injury he sustained Saturday.

Shaver, a redshirt freshman, became part of Tarleton’s team last fall as defensive lineman, according to press release posted on the Texas university’s Web site. http://www.tarleton.edu/scripts/press/display.asp?id=3069

During spring practice in Stephenville, “The 6-2, 280-pound defensive tackle got tangled up with an offensive lineman on a play,” The Times Record News of Wichita Falls reported. “The two players fell over the back of a pile with the offensive lineman on top of Shaver, who hit his head on the turf and never recovered.” http://www.timesrecordnews.com/news/2010/mar/29/former-rider-player-dies-result-practice-accident/

Shaver was airlifted to a hospital, but never recovered. The Tarrant County Medical Examiner found Shaver’s death was accidental and was caused by TBI.

Officials at Tarleton offered glowing praise for Shaver in the press release on his death.

“We are deeply saddened by the loss of this young student-athlete,” said Tarleton athletics director Lonn Reisman. “This is a tragic loss for the Shaver family and my heart goes out to them. I am thankful for our athletic training staff, the emergency medical teams and the hospital staff for their professional response.”

When Tarleton head coach Cary Fowler was the defensive coordinator at Midwestern State, the Shaver family lived close to the Fowlers.

“Zach was a great young man, and I enjoyed watching him grow up over the years,” Fowler said. “This is a very difficult time for the Shaver family and the Texan football family. Zach was a great person and teammate, and he was a pleasure to coach. We ask that everyone pray for his friends and family to help them through this difficult situation.”

Even Tarleton President F. Dominic Dottavio offered a statement on Shaver.

“It is always difficult to lose one of our Tarleton family members, especially when they are so young,” Dottavio said. “Counselors will be on hand to respond to any needs. Lisette and I will keep his family in our thoughts and prayers.”

The cause of the injury here is a puzzle. With all of the violent hits every football player endures in his career, this one would not stand out. The key is one never knows the internal forces at work or the weakness of that particular part of the brain subjected to the stress. Any claim that any given trauma isn’t sufficient to injure the brain is disproven by this one tragedy.

Georgia Attorney General Faces Possible Impeachment For Refusing Go File Suit Over Health Care Reform

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Posted on 1st April 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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More on the politics of no. The Republicans continue to think that if they can continue to paint meaningful health care reform as some breed of anarchy, socialism and treason, that no one will bother to look as to how much better the country will be with fair rules governing health insurance. The old axim of never letting the facts get in the way of a good story, sure seems to apply to this one.

When I studied Constitutional law in 1977, the basic rule was that the Federal government had the power to regulate anything that involved interstate commerce. Well there might be some “commerce” that isn’t interstate, but it is clearly not health care, one of the biggest and most comprehensive industries in our society. If it is constitutional for the federal government to tax working people for retired people’s Medicare, it is legal to require everyone be insured.

Yet, if the Republicans believe there is some political advantage to calling the new Health Care law bad, so they keep doing it. The louder they say it, the more votes they believe they will get. Let us hope that by November, the majority of the country will see that all that they stand for is nothing.

In Georgia Republicans are calling for the impeachment of the state Attorney General, because he has refused to file suit over the constitutionality of President Obama’s health-care overhaul. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/31/us/politics/31georgia.html?scp=1&sq=georgia%20attorney%20general%20&st=cse

In the Georgia state Legislature 31 Republicans Tuesday signed a resolution seeking the impeachment of Democrat Thurbert Baker. Baker is also a candidate in Georgia’s gubernatorial race, where incumbent Republican Sonny Perdue can’t seek a third term under the law.

Fourteen states have filed lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of the new health care reform, according to The New York Times. But Perdue has charged that this litigation is frivolous and a waste of taxpayers’ money.

Perdue has indicated that to get around Baker, he will appoint a “special attorney general,” a lawyer or legal team to file suit on Georgia’s behalf.

To be approved, the impeachment resolution would need the support of the majority of the Republican controlled, 180-member Georgia House.

Then there would have to be a trial in the state Senate, and Baker could be found guilty if two-thirds of the 56 senators went against him. But it would be tough for Baker to lose that vote, because the Republicans control just 60 percent of the Senate seats.

Pfizer Penalties Will Add Up To $141 Million in Neurontin Racketeering Casee

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Posted on 31st March 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Pfizer will have to pay penalties totaling $141 million after being found to have unlawfully promoted the epilepsy drug Neurontin, violating a federal racketeering law. http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN259778920100325

A Boston jury last Thursday levied a $47 million judgment against Pfizer, the world’s largest drug manufacturer. But under the so-called federal RICO law, standing for Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations act, such as award is tripled, so the verdict will wind up costing Pfizer $141 million. The drug maker said it would appeal the verdict.

In the case plaintiffs Kaiser Foundation Hospitals and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan charged that Pfizer had unlawfully promoted Neurontin for unapproved uses for which the drug doesn’t work. Those unapproved uses included migraine headaches, pain and bipolar disorder.

Drug makers like Pfizer can just promote drugs for uses approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, although physicians can prescribes medicines as they choose.

“We are disappointed with the verdict and will pursue post-trial motions and an appeal,” Pfizer said in a statement. “The verdict and the judge’s rulings are not consistent with the facts and the law.”

Pfizer alleges that the judge improperly allowed details of a $430 million settlement the drug maker paid for unlawfully marketing Neurontin in 2004 to be considered by the Boston jury.

Obama Expected To Name Vocal Health-Care Critic to Head Medicare, Medicaid

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Posted on 30th March 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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President Obama’s expected choice to run the nation’s Medicate and Medicaid programs is a maverick who has criticized the U.S. medical establishment for failing to provide better health care at a reasonable price.

The New York Times reported Sunday that Dr. Donald Berwick, who it described as “an iconoclastic scholar of health policy,” would be named administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/28/health/policy/28health.html?ref=health

It would be helpful to get a breath of fresh air into the Washington health-care bureaucracy, we believe.

Dr. Berwick, who is filling in the void left by the exit of Dr. Mark McClellan in 2006, is president of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Mass.

Under the health-care overhaul that the president signed into law last week, Medicaid will be expanded to insure 16 million more Americans. But officials were also given a mandate to cut almost a half-trillion dollars out of the Medicare program during the next decade and to test new methods of offering health care.

Dr. Berwick’s nomination will have to be approved by the Senate.

The good doctor isn’t shy about voicing his opinions on the medical establishment. In one quote, he complained about “the insanity of health care that costs too much and achieves too little.”

Dr. Berwick bases some of his comments on his own medical experience. He has osteoarthritis in his right knee, and said, “It comes from medical error, botched surgery when I was a medical student, aggravated by years of jogging.”

Wisconsin Democrats Nix Attorney General’s Plan To Sue Over Federal Health-Care Reform

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Posted on 26th March 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Wisconsin Democrats have derailed Republican Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen’s plan to file suit against the federal government over the new health-insurance reform. http://www.jsonline.com/news/statepolitics/89110637.html

If Van Hollen had succeeded, Wisconsin would have joined more than a dozen attorney generals across the nation that are suing to challenge the constitutionality of the health-care reform that’s been approved by Congress.

But Van Hollen couldn’t proceed with a suit unless he had approval from Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle or one of the houses of the state Legislature, which are controlled by Democrats. Neither the governor or legislative leaders would give Van Hollen authorization.

In arguing in favor of the lawsuit, Van Hollen told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, “This is an issue of the federal government overreaching beyond what constitutional powers they have, which is an assault on (the Legislature’s) powers.”

But Doyle shot right back in a letter to Van Hollen.

“The lawsuit you suggest is a frivolous and political attempt to thwart the action of Congress and the law of the country,” Doyle wrote. “The State of Wisconsin will not enter into litigation intended to deny health care for tens of thousands of residents.”

Health Care Reform – Congratulations to Us All

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Posted on 22nd March 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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If it weren’t so important, it would have been hysterically funny. At 6:34 p.m. yesterday, I got an email that started like this:

Frantic Obama Plan’s Sunday ObamaCare Vote! ALERT: Obama and House Democrats are forcing a “suicide run” on ObamaCare with a Sunday vote but are still short the 216 votes they need to pass ObamaCare. Pelosi’s plan is to break down Blue Dog holdouts in a desperate last ditch effort with a vote on the floor of the House. If they don’t have the votes, they will allow the measure to be defeated.

FAX To STOP ObamaCare NOW!

TELL ALL 261 Democrat/Independent Representatives, Blue Dog Democrats AND President Obama To KILL THIS BILL and CUT HealthCare COSTS FIRST.

I didn’t get it until after the vote. By the time I had pulled myself away from the NCAA tournament and other Sunday activities, I had also gotten an email from Obama’s campaign thanking me for my support in getting health care through, stating:

Gordon —

For the first time in our nation’s history, Congress has passed comprehensive health care reform. America waited a hundred years and fought for decades to reach this moment. Tonight, thanks to you, we are finally here.

Consider the staggering scope of what you have just accomplished:

Because of you, every American will finally be guaranteed high quality, affordable health care coverage.

So I guess I now live in a socialist country.   Oh wait, that has been true since I was in grade school, at least if you believe the Republican rhetoric.  According to Ronald Reagan, , we have all lived in a Socialist country since Medicare passed.  He said this about Medicare in 1961, before the days of email and faxes:

What can we do about this? Well, you and I can do a great deal. We can say right now that we want no further encroachment on these individual liberties and freedoms and that you demand the continuation of our traditional free enterprise system. You and I can do this. The only way we can do it is by writing to our congressmen, even if we believe that he’s on our side to begin with, write to strengthen his hand. Write those letters now. Call your friends and tell them to write.

If you don’t, this program, I promise you, will pass just as surely as the sun will come up tomorrow. And behind it will come other federal programs that will invade every area of freedom as we have known it in this country… until one day as Norman Thomas said, we will awake to find that we have socialism. And if you don’t do this and if I don’t do it, one of these days you and I are going to spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it once was like in America when men were free.”

And if you don’t do this and if I don’t do it, one of these days you and I are going to spend our sunset years telling our children, and our children’s children, what it once was like in America when men were free.

Ironically, Reagan spent his sunset years protecting Medicare, when he was President.   I wonder if he felt less free?

For a historic perspective on this change, listen to the podcast from OnPoint Radio of today, which can be found at http://www.onpointradio.org/ As my friend Jack Beatty said on this show, the Obama plan is not socialism, but more akin to things that have been proposed by Republican presidents Eisenhower and Nixon, in an effort to stall Democratic proposals to do what Obama finally got done last night.

For those who are advocates for the disabled, this is an important step. It isn’t what American’s should have for coverage, Medicare for all, but it is huge step in the right direction. Ultimately, Barack Obama must get the credit. Often criticized from both the right and the left, he used his intelligent, reasonable and conscientious leadership style to patiently get something done that Presidents Johnson, Clinton and Roosevelt could not do.

Obama deserves the credit because he made “Change” something that galvanized the country. He deserves credit because he found a way, without ever losing the moral superiority of his position, to compromise, cajole and lead his party over every obstacle the “party of no” put in his way. He deserves credit because the excellence of his campaign, the inspiration of his ideas gave the Democrats such a landslide victory in November of 2008, that the Republicans could not stop this.

To echo Barack’s words of last night “Because of you, (President Obama), every American will finally be guaranteed high quality, affordable health care coverage.”

Dodger’s Vin Skully Hospitalized After Hitting Head

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Posted on 20th March 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Veteran Los Angeles Dodgers announcer Vin Skully was hospitalized Thursday after falling out of bed and bumping his head. http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/dodgers/2010/03/vin-scully-hospital-fall-out-bed-dodgers-.html

Skully, 82, was taken to West Hills Hospital and Medical Center observation, and was expected to be released Friday. The accident took place at his home in Hidden Hills, Calif.

The hospital told reporters that Skully was “doing great,” but let’s hope the facility pays serious attention to the announcer’s head injury, no matter how “great” he seems to be doing now. http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_14704097?source=rss

We fear that Scully, and team officials, may be in too much of a rush to take proper caution with his injury. That’s because the announcer is due at Camelback Ranch-Glendale in Arizona this weekend for an exhibition game against the Cleveland Indians.

A concussion may be a minor problem which resolves in days, or it can be the beginning of a lifetime of disability. What rushing a “return to play” decision can do (even if the “play” is work) is put undue stress on the brain, not only making healing more difficult, but perhaps worsening the organic injury.

The other part of the picture with Skully is his age. Those over 65 have much worse outcomes than a young person would. The chances of meaningful disability from a significant concussion at that age may approach 50%, rather than the normal 10-15% rate with those under 40.

The best thing for a concussion is rest and daily reevaluation. Skully will likely get the second, but not likely the first. A live radio broadcast, even if he can do it, will put unneccessary stressors on a wounded brain.