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Too Profitable to Cure

Brent Hoadley, Ph.D.
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Ask the victims who were transfused with tainted blood supplied by the American red cross. The red cross, the American Medical Association (AMA), the government, and many others guilty of causing patient deaths presented their opinion as truth. Expert opinion was tainted by money or fear of lawsuits and substituted for the truth. Any resulting death should not be regarded as accidental. The truth was hidden in favor of personal gain or self-preservation. This act results in a loss of patients' rights and freedom to choose!

The Autoimmune Epidemic

Donna Jackson Nakazawa
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Researchers working through two major laboratories found an alarming cocktail of 287 industrial chemicals and pollutants in the fetal cord blood of ten newborn infants from around the country, in samples taken by the American red cross. These chemicals included pesticides, phthalates, dioxins, flame retardants, and breakdown chemicals of Teflon, among other chemicals known to damage the immune system.

What If Medicine Disappeared?

Gerald E. Markle and Frances B. McCrea
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The red cross would be a good place." Fran nodded. "Maybe when this book is completed." Our hands were over our hearts, but not to pledge allegiance. A 2003 study of Seattle and its surrounding area found that without emergency service intervention, not one of 2,277 people survived what were termed such "death events." With timely emergency care (e.g., oxygen, aspirin, beta-blockers, nitrates, antiarrhythmic agents, and, of course, quick hospital transport) 128 of 1428—that is, 9%—survived. This improvement in mortality—saving these lives—is surely impressive.

Not Just a Pretty Face: The Ugly Side of the Beauty Industry

Stacy Malkan
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The babies were born in US hospitals in August and September of 2004 and chosen at random by the red cross for the study conducted by the Environmental Working Group, a Washington DC research organization, and Commonweal, a California health and environmental group.1 It was the first time such a wide range of pollutants had been measured in the umbilical cord blood of newborns who had never been in direct contact with industrialized society.
Baby Blues The blood was quietly collected by the American red cross workers and sent to two independent laboratories to be analyzed for chemicals. The results were similar to previous studies: each person's body was contaminated with hundreds of industrial chemical compounds, including pesticides, stain repellents, flame retardants, plasticizers, even PCBs that were banned in the 1970s. But the subjects of this study were unlike any of the others. These were newborn babies, fresh from the womb.

Too Profitable to Cure

Brent Hoadley, Ph.D.
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The cover-your-ass machinations of the red cross when tainted blood was discovered was also well-disguised. Politicians who swore they were doing all they could and regulatory agencies who turned a blind eye to the obvious, can—with hindsight—be seen as criminally involved. Unfortunately, the same kind of criminal activity is occurring every day and will ultimately affect you or someone you love. The World of Legal Drugs Bitter Pill: Inside the Hazardous World of Legal Drugs is Stephen Fried's account of his wife's medical nightmare.
Before you hastily whip out your checkbook, the next time you are approached by a charitable organization consider these misdeeds exposed by the media: • The American red cross covered up both death and disease that resulted from their supplies of tainted blood.10 • United Way misappropriated sizeable sums that were generously donated for 911 victims. • The American Heart Association, the American Cancer Association, and other large philanthropies offer tremendous public relations exposure for the pharmaceuticals that support their organizations.

Everybody's guide to homeopathic medicines

Stephen Cummings and Dana Ullman
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If someone in your family does suffer from an injury your first priorities are to apply the proper first-aid measures and to get medical help if necessary. The red cross offers first-aid classes in most localities. Every household should have a current, basic first-aid manual such as the red cross First Aid Textbook. You should also maintain a home first-aid kit (see the red cross book for details) as well as a kit of homeopathic first-aid medicines. The correct homeopathic medicine can complement the standard first-aid measures taken, as it reduces pain and speeds healing remarkably.

Too Profitable to Cure

Brent Hoadley, Ph.D.
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The "powers" in government were more interested in fueling the economic boom than in guaranteeing public confidence in agencies like the NIH and CDC, or charitable organizations like the red cross. The fact that agencies/organizations were actually instrumental in spreading the disease (AIDS) was hushed up, ignored, or denied. Only when the disease reached epidemic proportions, and politicians thought that even they might become victims, did government provide economic incentives for research into drugs that could control or prevent the disease.
The American red cross, the National Institutes of Health, other governmental agencies, researchers at prestigious institutions, and even advocate associations like those assisting hemophiliacs proffered their "opinion" as the truth. Victims of this opinion now know the opinion was merely that —an opinion—and an erroneous, life-threatening one at that. At the time, true science did not prevail; overriding monetary considerations (fear of lawsuits), egos, and status were the driving forces that hid the truth from the public. What followed was horrendous.

The Secret History of the War on Cancer

Devra Davis
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Red Cross paid my rent. I spent $600 on the grave for my father, who died the first year. In Russia, I was chemist and professor teaching organic chemistry. Here I was a nudnick, a nobody. My language was so poor. I never went to school for English. I learned on my own to read and do technical writing. My writing skills were so poor." Within months of working at the specialty chemicals firm, which she is not now allowed to name, she began to wonder why practices were so different from those in Russia. "We had hoods, where I worked in Moscow University making chemicals for food processing.
In his book The Mismeasure of Man, Stephen Jay Gould notes the case against the Buck women rested entirely on bogus descriptions masquerading as science: At the original trial in late 1924, when Vivian Buck was seven months old, a Miss Wilhelm, social worker for the red cross, appeared before the court. She began by stating honestly the true reason for Carrie Buck's commitment: "Mrs.

Too Profitable to Cure

Brent Hoadley, Ph.D.
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The red cross, the American Medical Association (AMA), the government, and many others guilty of causing patient deaths presented their opinion as truth. Expert opinion was tainted by money or fear of lawsuits and substituted for the truth. Any resulting death should not be regarded as accidental. The truth was hidden in favor of personal gain or self-preservation. This act results in a loss of patients' rights and freedom to choose! Young men—patriots —go to war to protect their country and the freedoms of their fellow citizens.

Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century

Alex Steffen
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In New Orleans, three volunteers made maps of Katrina-affected areas that indicated where returning residents could find food, water, and clothing; they distributed 20,000 of them to residents and red cross workers alike. But Global MapAid isn't just about handing out maps to aid workers. One of its goals is to share its mapping expertise with locals to ensure that they can continue mapping projects once the NGOs are gone. After the 2004 tsunami, two MapAid volunteers provided GIS training to a group of students at the University of Syiah Kuala in Bande Aceh, Indonesia.

Empower yourself in 3 minutes a day: An introduction to indy media, NewsTarget.com and the online information revolution

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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In Wyoming, he donated thousands of dollars in preparedness supplies to the American red cross. In Taiwan, he raised $10,000 (US) for the 1999 Taiwan earthquake victims. He has also donated therapeutic touch services to the elderly, volunteered at nursing homes and donated software licenses to groups as diverse as an animal rights group, a Jewish Community Center and the Dakota Squadron, a group of World War II veteran bomber pilots.

Homeopathic Medicine at Home: Natural Remedies for Everyday Ailments and Minor Injuries

Maesimund B. Panos, M.D. and Jane Heimlich
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The 1925 edition of the American red cross Abridged Textbook on First Aid advises: "Painting iodine on wounds is unquestionably of considerable value in preventing their infection. The more promptly it is applied, the better." A Seattle physician, Dr. Harry H. Kretzler, Sr., recalls rejecting this advice when teaching a red cross class in First Aid in the 1930s. "I taught my students to cleanse a wound with mild soap and water," Dr. Kretzler said, "but was informed by the red cross that my students would not pass the course if they failed to mention iodine in their exams.

Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century

Alex Steffen
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The Humanitarian Logistics Software, built in coordination with the International Federation of red cross and Red Crescent Societies, brings to bear the experience and best practices of the commercial sector on the problems of humanitarian-relief delivery. The institute's annual conferences and "Network of Knowledge" capture the evolving lessons from humanitarian efforts in order to develop and document broad solutions for common problems.

Prescription for Nutritional Healing, 4th Edition: A Practical A-to-Z Reference to Drug-Free Remedies Using Vitamins, Minerals, Herbs & Food Supplements

Phyllis A. Balch, CNC
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Training on the proper use of defibrillators is conducted by both the American red cross and the American Heart Association. Q The use of a test called cardiokymography (CKG) together with electrocardiograms (ECGs) may help to detect "silent" heart disease. A comparison study revealed that electrocardiograms alone missed 39 percent of heart disease cases. When CKG was used along with ECGs, only 8 percent of cases were undetected.

Anti-Aging Manual: The Encyclopedia of Natural Health

Joseph E. Mario
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Thomas Maciag at the American red cross Holland Laboratory in Maryland doubled the longevity of artery cells, by blocking an aging hormone. 9) DEDIFFERENTIATE The Regeneration/regrowth of body parts composed of several different kinds ofcells as originally grown in the embryo involves a seemingly miraculous phase of electronegative de-specialization to a preceding, fully-charged state, from which pre-programmed evolutionary differentiation into a useful body part can occur from simpler, or seemingly unrelated, cells.

Prescription for Nutritional Healing, 4th Edition: A Practical A-to-Z Reference to Drug-Free Remedies Using Vitamins, Minerals, Herbs & Food Supplements

Phyllis A. Balch, CNC
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The American red cross and many local hospitals offer training in these techniques. Q Keep your weight down. Obesity is a risk factor for heart attacks and high blood pressure. Get regular moderate exercise. Caution: If you are over thirty-five and/or have been sedentary for some time, consult with your health care provider before beginning an exercise program. Q Avoid stress, and learn stress-management techniques. (See stress in Part Two.) Considerations Q The so-called bad cholesterol, LDL is commonly measured and is considered a key predictor of cardiovascular risk.

Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century

Alex Steffen
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There's even a term for the feedback loop between an environmental collapse and the failure of the human systems that caused it: Opposite, left: A red cross volunteer comforts a Hurricane Katrina refugee at the Houston Astrodome, Houston, Texas, 2005. Opposite, right: A survivor of the Kashmir earthquake talks with Pakistani paratroopers, Chautha, Kashmir, 2Q0S. Wexelblat disaster. In such a world, planning for effective disaster relief efforts isn't a luxury: since massive disasters are no longer a question of "what if" but "when," we'd better be ready.

Lessons of abundance: be a river, not a dam

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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I will send a few thousand dollars worth of food supplies to a needy community, or I'll send emergency preparedness supplies to the American red cross. I'll donate money to earthquake victims, tsunami victims or people who are caught in some kind of a natural disaster. I'll donate software to groups that are doing good work and need some technology for their automation. Such acts are more important to me than collecting a lot of consumer products or things I don't really need. Heal yourself with flow In a nutshell, that is my own personal secret to abundance.

The Pathological Protein: Mad Cow, Chronic Wasting, and Other Deadly Prion Diseases

Philip Yam
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The American red cross, which collects nearly half of the U.S. blood supply, has generally stricter requirements: The U.K. donor ban doesn't stop at 1996 but continues to the present. The red cross also instituted European-wide donor bans before the FDA did.34) The disqualifications, called donor deferrals, cut the theoretical risk of getting variant CJD through blood by 90 percent and have resulted in about a 5-percent donor loss.35 Taking the brunt of the blood loss is New York City, which had imported up to 35 percent of its blood from Europe, or roughly 140,000 units a year.

Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century

Alex Steffen
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J J F & Dd Water Purification In Latin America, the group Potters for Peace has designed a low-tech, low-cost water purifier that can be manufactured by local potters; it has been used by the red cross and Doctors Without Borders. The Filtron is a pot made from clay infused with sawdust and colloidal silver. Water poured into the pot filters through its walls into a second, outside pot; in the process most bacteria get trapped, since they're too large to travel through the porous clay; the silver in the clay kills any bacteria that are small enough to pass through.

Everybody's guide to homeopathic medicines

Stephen Cummings and Dana Ullman
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Every household should have a current, basic first-aid manual such as the red cross First Aid Textbook. You should also maintain a home first-aid kit (see the red cross book for details) as well as a kit of homeopathic first-aid medicines. The correct homeopathic medicine can complement the standard first-aid measures taken, as it reduces pain and speeds healing remarkably. Even if an injury requires medical care, you can use homeopathy once the injured person's condition is stable.

The Pathological Protein: Mad Cow, Chronic Wasting, and Other Deadly Prion Diseases

Philip Yam
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Several companies have teamed up with university researchers and the red cross to develop technologies to detect the prion protein in blood and blood products. In the coming years, scientists might rely on membranes with nanometer-sized holes to filter out prion proteins. Or they may use a small molecule that can latch onto a portion of the prion protein—both molecule and prion would then be washed away. But until a validated means to screen vCJD -infected blood materializes, health officials will have to depend on various precautionary measures. The U.K.
Page, 'American red cross, vCJD Donor Deferral Criteria, and Blood Supply," presentation at the meeting of the Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy Advisory Committee, Food and Drug Administration, Gaithersburg, MD, June 26-27, 2002. 35 Dorothy Scott, "Update on Implementation of Revised Guidance on Blood Donor Deferrals for Risk of CJD and vCJD," presentation at the meeting of the Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy Advisory Committee, Food and Drug Administration, Gaithersburg, MD, June 26-27, 2002. 36 John Tagliabue, "U.S.
International Federation of red cross and Red Crescent Societies, http://www.ifrc.org/what/health/blood/index.asp (last accessed March 6, 2003). 29 Paul Brown, "Drug Therapy of CJD," Presentation at the Cambridge Healthtech Institute's Eighth Annual Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies meeting, Washington, DC, February 6-7, 2002. 30 Ian MacGregor, "Sources and Properties of Prion Protein (PrPC) in Human Plasma,"Presentation at the Cambridge Healthtech Institute's Eighth Annual Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies meeting, Washington, DC, February 6-7, 2002.

Homeopathic Medicine at Home: Natural Remedies for Everyday Ailments and Minor Injuries

Maesimund B. Panos, M.D. and Jane Heimlich
See book keywords and concepts
Red Cross class in First Aid in the 1930s. "I taught my students to cleanse a wound with mild soap and water," Dr. Kretzler said, "but was informed by the red cross that my students would not pass the course if they failed to mention iodine in their exams." Fifty years later, we scarcely hear about iodine. The authors of a popular family health guide, published in 1976, write: "All wounds should be washed with soap and water or a mild antiseptic solution." One reason for the decline of iodine was the observation that alcohol in solution tends to evaporate, leaving a more concentrated solution.

The Pathological Protein: Mad Cow, Chronic Wasting, and Other Deadly Prion Diseases

Philip Yam
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Red Cross does not collect, noted an increase in vCJD-related travel disqualifications from o.i percent in June 2001 to 1.4 percent in June 2002. The rules "are having a serious impact on the blood supply," the organization told theTSEAC committee during its June 2002 meeting. It asked TSEAC and the FDA about the criteria for eventually lifting some or all vCJD-related travel disqualifications. Balancing the theoretical risk of contracting vCJD from blood and the real risk of not having enough blood in an emergency is "a very complicated situation which may get worse," Will mentioned.

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