Friday, December 14, 2007

Questions remain in Anna Nicole Smith's death - TV




Questions remain in Anna Nicole Smith's death

Filan: We might not have seen the end of this investigation
NBC VIDEO?�'The manner of death was accidental'
March 26: Dr. Joshua Perper, Broward County, Fla., medical examiner, talks with 's Contessa Brewer about how he reached the conclusion that Anna Nicole Smith died from an accidental overdose.


COMMENTARYSusan FilanSenior legal analyst

Susan FilanSenior legal analyst

What do you get when you have a psychiatrist, a nurse, a body guard, and a boyfriend, plus a woman with 105 degree fever??�?� A death that should have been, and could have been prevented.?�

When Anna Nicole Smith??�s fever spiked to 105 degrees, why didn??�t her psychiatrist, who prescribed antibiotics for her, take her to a doctor, to a hospital or call 911??�?� Why didn??�t those closest to her insist that she get proper medical attention??�

Dr. Perper, the Broward County Medical Examiner who performed her autopsy, seemed satisfied with the explanation that she was an adult who had the right to say, I don??�t want a doctor, I don??�t want to go to the hospital. ?�?� But if someone is that ill, are they thinking straight??� If she knew her choice was to go to the hospital or to die, what would she have chosen??�?� If she was not suicidal, as Dr. Perper indicated, then she would have chosen to go to the hospital, not to die.?� Anna Nicole was a person known to self-medicate, known to take too many prescriptions in too high a dose.?�?� So why was she left alone, sick, in a hotel room that was a virtual medicine ?

More from Susan FilanWho will get Anna Nicole's money?Death for killer of pregnant mom, children?Unfair: 10 years for consensual oral sex

Why didn??�t Anna Nicole??�s nurse check on her in her hotel room on Thursday, the day she died??�?� It seems she was left alone in her room from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. when she was found dead in her bed??� Why did Howard K. Stern, who awoke at 10:00 a.m., and had to help Anna Nicole to the bathroom because she was too weak to go alone, take his shower, dress and leave her??�?�

The medical examiner??�s report seems to raise more questions than it answers.?� Something does not add up for me.

It just doesn??�t make sense that a 39-year-old woman, who had just given birth to a baby girl, who had just lost a son, who was so depressed she was on three anti depression medicate/anti-anxiety medicate s, who had a history of overmedicating and mixing prescriptions, of taking methadone, of swigging liquid chloral hydrate, would be left alone to die of an accidental medicate overdose.

?�Birkhead finally leaves Bahamas with daughter?�Two Anna Nicole Smith diaries sell for $59,750?�Anna Nicole mocks herself in final role?�Birkhead says Howard K. Stern a great help??�

Here is what bothernesss me: On Tuesday, Anna Nicole Smith had a 105-degree fever.?�?� Her psychiatrist, not her doctor, prescribed her with an antibiotic, but did not insist she go to the hospital.?� No one did.?�

I do not think we have heard the end of this.?� I think we will see further investigations, lawsuits, and perhaps loss of medical licenses as a result of Anna Nicole??�s tragic and preventable death.

? 2007


Sunday, December 9, 2007

More than 80 at risk of meningitis - Infectious Diseases




More than 80 in 3 states at risk of meningitis

Warning follows N.H. college student's death from illness

CONCORD, N.H. - More than 80 group in three states may be at risk for meningitis after coming into contact with a University of New Hampshire student who died of the illness this week, health officials said.

The warning came amid anotherness meningitis scare that shut down schools Thursday and Friday in three towns in Rhode Island.

The college student, 21-year-old Danielle Thompson, had been in her home state of Maine, as well as in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, in the 10 days before she was admitted to a Dover hospital. She died of bacterial meningitis on Wednesday.

Health and Human Services Commissioner John Stephen said the state has identified 29 group in New Hampshire and 55 in Maine who should receive antibiotics. Officials were still tracking down how many group Thompson visited in Massachusetts.

No one has yet shown syndromes, Stephen said.

Click for related content

R.I. schools closed for meningitis scare

Bacterial meningitis can be spread through saliva, creating the most risk for group who shared food or drinks, kissed or used the same eating utensils. It causes an infection of fluid in the spinal cord and surrounding the brain, with syndromes include high fever, headache and stiff neck.

“This case underscores just how serious this illness can be,” Stephen said. More meningitis news from MSN Health

Reality Check: Meningitis

In Rhode Island, epidemiologists from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are working with state officials investigating a possible case of meningitis and three cases of encephalitis that surfaced in public school children. One second-grader in Warwick died from encephalitis that was brought on by “walking pneumonia.”

Dr. David Gifford, director of Rhode Island’s Public Health Department, said there have been an unusually high number of walking pneumonia cases in the children’s communities.

As a precaution, classes for about 20,000 students in those communities �" Warwick, West Warwick and Coventry �" were cancelled Thursday and Friday while health experts investigate, Gifford said.

� 2007 . .


Thursday, December 6, 2007

Rosie O??�Donnell won??�t return to The View??� - Television




Rosie O??�Donnell won??�t return to The View??�

Announcement comes two days after heated on-air fight with co-host
Yolanda Perez / AP
Elisabeth Hasselbeck, left, and?�Rosie O'Donnell sparred frequently on "The View," though they profess to be good friends off camera.

video?�Rosie quits 'The View' early
May 25: With news that Rosie O'Donnell will not returning to 'The View,' Donald Trump comments on his feud with O'Donnell.


Rosie O??�Donnell has fought her last fight at The View.

ABC said Friday she asked for, and received, an early exit from her contract at the daytime chatfest following her angry confrontation with co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck on Wednesday. She was due to leave in mid-June.

It ended a colorful eight-month tenure for O??�Donnell that lifted the show??�s ratings but no doubt caused heartburn sickness for show creator Barbara Walters. O??�Donnell feuded with Donald Trump and frequently had snippy exchanges with the more conservative Hasselbeck.

O??�Donnell said last month she would be leaving because she could not agree to a new contract with ABC executives.

Rosie contributed to one of our most exciting and successful years at The View, ??� Walters said. I am most appreciative. Our close and affectionate relationship will not change.

In a statement, O??�Donnell said that it??�s been an amazing year and I love all three women.

No one was feeling the love on Wednesday, when the argument with Hasselbeck began over O??�Donnell??�s statement last week about the war: 655,000 Iraqi civilians have died. Who are the terrorists ?

Talk show critics accused O??�Donnell of calling U.S. troops terrorists. She called Hasselbeck cowardly for not saying anything in response to the critics.

Do not call me a coward, because No. 1, I sit here every single day, open my heart and tell group what I believe, Hasselbeck retorted, and their riveting exchange continued despite failed attempts by their co-hosts to cut to a commercial.

According to a New York Post report, O??�Donnell??�s chief writer, Janette Barber, was allegedly led out of the building on Wednesday after she was caught drawing mustaches on photographs of Hasselbeck in The View studios. ABC executives didn??�t return repeated calls for questions on the incident Friday.

On Thursday O??�Donnell had asked for a day off to celebrate her partner??�s birthday. The View aired a taped show on Friday.

Related contentRosie??�s View??� won??�t be the same without her Vote: Will you miss Rosie on The View??�?Political discussion turns personal on View??�Walters denies fight was ratings stunt  What do you think about her departure?

Slide show?�Rosie through the years
From the 80s through The View,??� a look at the feisty TV host??�s careerOn her Web site, O??�Donnell posted a scrapbooklike video on Friday with pictures and news clippings of her tenure at The View. Cyndi Lauper??�s Sisters of Avalon played in the background.

A day earlier, she posted messages on her Web site indicating she might not be back.

When painting there is a point u must step away from the canvas as the work is done, she wrote. Any more would take away.

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? 2007 . .


WP: Bug mutates into medical mystery - washingtonpost.com Highlights




Bug mutates into medical mystery

Antibiotics, heartburn sickness medicate s suspected
By By Rob Stein

WASHINGTON - First came stomach cramps, which left Christina Shultz doubled over and weeping in pain. Then came nausea and fatigue -- so overwhelming she couldn't get out of bed for days. Just when she thought things couldn't get worse, the nastiest diarrhea of her life hit -- repeatedly forcing her into the hospital.

Doctors finally discovered that the 35-year-old Hilliard, Ohio, woman had an inagsdhfgdfinal bug that used to be found almost exclusively among older, sicker patients in hospitals and was usually easily cured with a dose of antibiotics. But after months of pharmacomedical aid, Shultz is still incapacitated.

"It's been a nightmare," said Shultz, a motherness of two young children. "I just want my life back."

Shultz is one of a growing number of young, othernesswise healthy Americans who are being stricken by the bacterial infection known as Clostridium difficile -- or C. diff -- which appears to be spreading rapidly around the country and causing unusually severe, sometimes fatal illness.

That is raising alarm among health officials, who are concerned that many cases may be misdiagnosed and are puzzled as to what is causing the microbe to become so much more common and dangerous.

"It's a new phenomenon. It's just emerging," said L. Clifford McDonald of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. "We're very concerned. We know it's happening, but we're really not sure why it's happening or where this is going."

Antibiotics to blame?
It may, however, be the laagsdhfgdf example of a common, relatively benign bug that has mutated because of the overuse of antibiotics.

"This may well be anotherness consequence of our use of antibiotics," said John G. Bartlett, an infectious-malady expert at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. "It's anotherness example of an organism that all of a sudden has gotten a lot meaner and nastier."

?�More health newsIn addition, new evidence released last week suggests that the enormous popularity of powerful new heartburn sickness medicate s may also be playing a role.

The antibiotics Flagyl (metronidazole) and vancomycin still cure many patients, but othernesss develop stubborn infections like Shultz's that take over their lives. Some resort to having their colon removed to end the debilitating diarrhea. A small but disturbingly high number have died, including an othernesswise healthy pregnant woman who succumbed earlier this year in Pennsylvania after miscarrying twins.

The infection usually hits group who are taking antibiotics for otherness reasons, but a handful of cases have been reported among group who were taking nothing, anotherness unexpected and troubling turn in the germ's behavior.

The infection has long been common in hospital patients taking antibiotics. As the medicate s kill off otherness bacteria in the digestive system, the C. diff microbe can proliferate. It spreads easily through contact with contaminated group, clothing or surfaces.

Infections double
There are no national statistics, but the number of infections in hospitals appears to have doubled from 2000 to 2003 and there may be as many as 500,000 cases each year, McDonald said. Other estimates put the number in the mil.s.

The emerging problem first gained attention when unusually large and serious outbreaks began turning up in otherness countries. In Canada, for example, Quebec health officials reported last year that perhaps 200 patients died in an outbreak involving at least 10 hospitals. Similar outbreaks were reported in England and the Netherlands.

After the CDC began receiving reports of severe cases among hospital patients in the United States -- and in group who had never, or just briefly, been hospitalized -- it launched an investigation.

In the Dec. 8 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, the CDC reported that an analysis of 187 C. diff samples found that the unusually dangerous strain that caused the Quebec cases was also involved in outbreaks at eight health care facilities in Georgia, Illinois, Maine, New Jersey, Oregon and Pennsylvania.

"This strain has somehow been able to get into hospitals widely distributed across the United States," said Dale N. Gerding of Loyola University in Chicago, who helped conduct the analysis. "We're not sure how."

But scientists do have a few clues. The dangerous strain has mutated to become resistant to a class of frequently used antibiotics known as fluoroquinolones. That means anyone taking those antibiotics for otherness reasons would be particularly prone to contract C. diff .

"Because this strain is resistant, it can take advantage of that situation and establish itself in the gut," Gerding said.

Experts said the resistant germ's proliferation offers the laagsdhfgdf reason why group should use antibiotics only when necessary, to reduce both their risk for C. diff and the chances that otherness microbes will mutate into more dangerous forms.

"That's one theory for what's happening here," said J. Thomas Lamont of Harvard Medical School. "If we reduce the number and amount of antibiotics given for trivial infections like colds and stuffy noses, we'd all be a lot better off."

Overuse of antibiotics can make germs more dangerous by killing off susceptible strains, leaving behind those that by chance have mutated to become less vulnerable to the medicate s. The resistant strains then become dominant.

High toxin levels
In addition to being resistant, the dangerous C. diff strain also produces far higher levels of two toxins than do otherness strains, as well as a third, previously unknown toxin. That would explain why it makes group so much sicker and is more likely to kill. In Quebec, C. diff killed 6.9 percent of patients -- which is much higher than the malady's usual mortality rate -- and was a factor in more than 400 deaths.

Adding to the alarm is evidence that the infection is occurring outside of hospitals. When the CDC began looking for such cases earlier this year, investigators quickly identified 33 cases in New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio and Pennsylvania, including 23 group who had never been in the hospital and 10 women who had been hospitalized only briefly to deliver a baby, the agency reported this month. Eight of the patients had never taken antibiotics.

"This is the first time we've started to see this not only in group who have never been in the hospital but also in those who are othernesswise perfectly healthy and have not even taken antibiotics," McDonald said.

"It's probably going on everywhere," he said.

It remains unclear whether the cases occurring outside the hospital are being caused by the same dangerous strain.

"We don't really know what's going on here," McDonald said. "We know it's changing in some ways; we know it's changing the kinds of patients it's attacking, and we know it's causing more severe malady. But we don't know exactly why."

Canadian researchers, however, have found one possible culprit: popular new heartburn sickness medicate s. Patients taking proton pump inhibitors, such as Prilosec and Prevacid, are almost three times as likely to be diagnosed with C-diff , the McGill University researchers reported in the Dec. 21 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. And those taking anotherness type called H2-receptor antagonists, such as Pepcid and Zantac, are twice as likely. By suppressing stomach acid, the medicate s may inadvertently help the bug, the researchers said.

Whatever the cause, the infection often resists standard pharmacomedical aid. That is what happened to Shultz, who had been taking antibiotics to help clear up her acne when C. diff hit in June. Because the bacterium can hibernate in protective spores, patients can be prone to recurrences. It can take multiple rounds of antibiotics -- or sometimes infusions of antibodies or ingesting competing organisms such as yeast or the bacteria found in yogurt -- to finally cure them.

"I'm trying to stay positive," Shultz said. "People tell me it does go away and I will get rid of it someday. I'm looking forward to getting my life back, but I'm not convinced I'll ever be normal again."

? 2007 The Washington Post Company