Tribune - Lyme is a legal problem for IDSociety.org

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Kathleen

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Dec 8, 2010, 4:41:25 AM12/8/10
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Subject: Tribune - Lyme is a legal problem for IDSociety.org

Date: Dec 8, 2010 4:37 AM

ARTICLE BELOW

I could not publish this in the
comment section, apparently, because
it "has profanity in it" (see for
yourself that it does not).

========================

So, what did the guy have, if it wasn't Lyme disease? The story
doesn't reveal it. The Tribune (we know who is on the board, by the
way) apparently thinks it's okay to write a half a story - one sans
any facts.

Today, even the CDC admits Lyme is a permanent infection and that
spirochetes go internal, hybernate in a cyst form, and then are
released intact. No one sane - one capable of reading the scientific
literature (excludes, apparently anyone associated with the Tribune) -
would say "Lyme" [we prefer to use the original name and diagnostic
standard (Allen Steere's), "Relapsing Fever"], is not a chronic
infection.

The main problem is that the OspA "vaccines" produced the same
chronic, activated viral and immunosuppression outcomes as chronic
Lyme does (via the autovaccination of spirochetal blebbing). That's a
legal problem
http://www.actionlyme.org/101016.htm
for the Infectious Diseases Society of America, because the same
failed, falsified vaccine molecular class, Pam3Cys (LYMErix), ended up
in the failed HIV vaccines, much to the embarrassment of the entire
United States Department of Health Human Services, and particularly,
Anthony Fauci.

We don't expect justice, no. That's so 18th century. It was an idea;
a marketing tool, used by early and late immigrants to North America
to take for themselves, the revenue formerly paid to the king.


Now the Chinese have all our wealth, surpass us in talent:
http://www.actionlyme.org/101016.htm
and also are *not* *guilty* of killing 1.5 million people in the last
9 years in pursuit of stolen oil, not to mention the negligent deaths,
globally, caused by this OspA ruse.

*NOW,* we're a pariah, legally, morally, scientifically, and as re
"leadership." NOW, the world knows there is a vacuum of integrity,
worldwide. No one to trust. No one to respect. No one to complain
to about injustice. The standard is to jail anyone who prints the
truth, rendering America the global bastion of cowardice.


Kathleen M. Dickson
http://www.actionlyme.org
http://www.relapsingfever.org
===========================================

http://www.chicagotribune.com/health/ct-met-chronic-lyme-sidebar-20101207,0,7157397,print.story

www.chicagotribune.com/health/ct-met-chronic-lyme-sidebar-20101207,0,3967903.story
chicagotribune.com

When faith and trust erode

North Carolina man feels duped after erroneously being told he had
Lyme

11:31 PM CST, December 7, 2010
Advertisement

For patients who have no answers after bouncing from doctor to doctor,
physicians who diagnose and treat chronic Lyme disease can become
heroes.

Phillip Moore initially felt that way about Dr. Joseph Jemsek, who in
2004 diagnosed Moore with Lyme in North Carolina. "He made you feel
like he was the only person on the planet that was going to make you
better and save you," Moore said.

But Moore now says he feels duped. After enduring intravenous
antibiotic treatments that made him so sick he had to take a three-
month leave of absence from his job, Moore learned from a different
doctor that his tests and clinical history showed he didn't have Lyme
disease.

This year, Moore was told he had a rare form of non-Hodgkin lymphoma
and that the cancer had spread.

"In my heart, I know it delayed my opportunity for treatment," the 45-
year-old father of an infant and a toddler said of his Lyme diagnosis.

Jemsek was disciplined for "unprofessional conduct" by the North
Carolina Medical Board for his care of Moore and nine other patients.
Moore testified against Jemsek at a board hearing.

The board found that in treating Moore and the other nine patients,
Jemsek made a diagnosis of Lyme based on "non-specific symptoms such
as fatigue, achiness and decreased concentration" and did this "with
scant or no supporting historical, physical, serological or other
laboratory evidence."

Jemsek prescribed antibiotics for months and years, leading to
instances where patients suffered infections from the catheters, the
board found. Some of those infections were life-threatening, according
to the board.

In 2006, the board suspended Jemsek's license for one year but offered
to put that suspension on hold if Jemsek met certain conditions.

Two attorneys for Jemsek said in a statement that their client settled
a lawsuit filed by Moore with no admission of liability. The fact that
Jemsek is able to treat patients despite "vicious attacks," said
attorneys Jacques Simon and Susan Green, is "a story of triumph for
the chronically ill."

In an interview, Green added that Jemsek is a pioneer with "legions of
people who are devoted to him and will swear his treatment saved their
life."

Jemsek remains prominent in the Lyme world, continuing to serve on the
board of the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society and as
a medical adviser to the Turn the Corner Foundation, a Lyme patient
advocacy organization. In January, he opened an office in Washington,
D.C., where he treats Lyme.

Copyright © 2010, Chicago Tribune

KMDickson
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