Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Avoid Nassau County and its poor healthcare

system. The State of NY is little better. BCG is available all over the world and not in NY.
Shoot guns or heroin if you wish. People with autoimmune diseases et al should have easy access to BCG

If Obama cared a little about healthcare he would read eg faustmanlab.org and pubmed.org and help.
Can't expect much of a lawyer?

Hello Mr. >>>>>
I am sorry but this office will not administer the BCG vaccine.  Please contact the Department of Health for any further advise.
 
Susan Conforti
Medical Office Manager
Nassau South Walk-In Medical Care
(O) 516-558-7858
(F) 516-812-3975
 
The information contained in this transmission and any attachments are for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may be confidential, privileged, copyrighted or may constitute intellectual property. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution of this transmission and any attachments is strictly prohibited. If you have received this transmission in error, please contact the sender and destroy all paper and/or electronic copies of this transmission.


 

From: leonard
To: nassausouth@yahoo.com
Sent: Monday, August 20, 2012 9:44 PM
Subject: [Fwd: Update from the Faustman Lab]
Dear Susan:I never heard back from you about BCG.I think you will find the attached fascinating.BCG has been given to billions of people and I would like to be one of them.
New Paper from the Faustman Lab: Proof-of-Concept, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial of Bacillus-Calmette-Guerin for Treatment of Long-term Type 1 Diabetes 
August 20, 2012
 
Clinical Paper on Phase I Trial with BCG Is Now Published
 
We are excited to share today's long-awaited news - the full published results of the Phase I clinical trial using BCG in advanced type 1 diabetes. You can find our paper, "Proof-of-Concept, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial of Bacillus-Calmette-Guerin for Treatment of Long-Term Type 1 Diabetes" on our website http://www.faustmanlab.org.
 
The findings from this double-blinded clinical trial, even at this early testing stage in humans, show that the generic BCG vaccine can raise the levels of an immune system modulator (called tumor necrosis factor, or TNF) to kill the disease-causing T cells that attack the pancreas and help to temporarily restore insulin secretion in patients with long-term type 1 diabetes.
 
We are trying to create a regimen that will reverse type 1 diabetes, even for people in the most advanced stages of the disease. With the Phase I clinical trial data, we believe we have validated in humans the treatment pathway we originally reported in mice. We expected to verify the safety of the BCG vaccine in type 1 diabetes in this Phase I study, as well as now show early signs of BCG efficacy. Our findings show that a simple, inexpensive vaccine can modify the autoimmunity underlying type 1 diabetes by selectively killing only the disease-causing T cells, leading to at least some restoration of pancreatic beta-cell insulin function. In Phase II human clinical testing of BCG, we hope that more frequent or higher BCG dosing will help the body eliminate the disease-causing T cells for a longer time, which we hope will restore insulin production to a greater degree and for a more sustained period of time than in the Phase I study.
 
Dr. Paul Burn, PhD, chair and director emeritus of the Sanford Project and professor of Pediatrics at the Sanford School of Medicine at the University of South Dakota, had this to say about our results: "Dr. Faustman and her team's clinical research data indicate that modifying the autoimmunity underlying type 1 diabetes allows for a safe and temporary restoration of insulin-secreting beta-cell function in patients with established type 1 diabetes. Restoring beta-cell function is a promising first step towards a cure. During my tenure in industry, at Sanford Health and at the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, I have seen how hard it is to get a project from mice into humans, and these are very impressive results."
 
These human clinical trials are unique in testing an immune intervention in advanced type 1 diabetes (not just new-onset disease), using an inexpensive and safe generic vaccine, understanding the mechanism by which the treatment works to selectively eliminate the unwanted, disease-causing T cells, and being able to successfully track efficacy with careful blood monitoring. These factors will contribute to speeding our progress as we move forward in clinical testing.  
 
Currently, $11 million of the total $25.2 million needed has been raised for a Phase II study. Please consider making a donation to support this groundbreaking work by visiting www.faustmanlab.org/support/support.html.
 
Signature
 
Denise Faustman, MD, Ph.D.
 
 
 
 



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Faustman Lab at Mass General Massachusetts General Hospital Charlestown, Massachusetts 02129 diabetestrial@partners.org 617-726-4084
 

This email was sent to pointreyes@verizon.net by diabetestrial@partners.org |  
Faustman Lab at Mass General | Massachusetts General Hospital | Building 149, 13th Street, Room 3602 | Charlestown | MA | 02129



Subject:
Re: [Fwd: Update from the Faustman Lab]
From:
Susan Conforti <nassausouth@yahoo.com>
Date:
Tue, 21 Aug 2012 08:31:15 -0700 (PDT)
To:
leonard >

Hello Mr.<<<<
I am sorry but this office will not administer the BCG vaccine.  Please contact the Department of Health for any further advise.
 
Susan Conforti
Medical Office Manager
Nassau South Walk-In Medical Care
(O) 516-558-7858
(F) 516-812-3975
 
The information contained in this transmission and any attachments are for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may be confidential, privileged, copyrighted or may constitute intellectual property. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution of this transmission and any attachments is strictly prohibited. If you have received this transmission in error, please contact the sender and destroy all paper and/or electronic copies of this transmission.


 

From: leonard <pointreyes@verizon.net>
To: nassausouth@yahoo.com
Sent: Monday, August 20, 2012 9:44 PM
Subject: [Fwd: Update from the Faustman Lab]
Dear Susan:I never heard back from you about BCG.I think you will find the attached fascinating.BCG has been given to billions of people and I would like to be one of them.jackson leeds223-8407
New Paper from the Faustman Lab: Proof-of-Concept, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial of Bacillus-Calmette-Guerin for Treatment of Long-term Type 1 Diabetes 
August 20, 2012
 
Clinical Paper on Phase I Trial with BCG Is Now Published
 
We are excited to share today's long-awaited news - the full published results of the Phase I clinical trial using BCG in advanced type 1 diabetes. You can find our paper, "Proof-of-Concept, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial of Bacillus-Calmette-Guerin for Treatment of Long-Term Type 1 Diabetes" on our website http://www.faustmanlab.org.
 
The findings from this double-blinded clinical trial, even at this early testing stage in humans, show that the generic BCG vaccine can raise the levels of an immune system modulator (called tumor necrosis factor, or TNF) to kill the disease-causing T cells that attack the pancreas and help to temporarily restore insulin secretion in patients with long-term type 1 diabetes.
 
We are trying to create a regimen that will reverse type 1 diabetes, even for people in the most advanced stages of the disease. With the Phase I clinical trial data, we believe we have validated in humans the treatment pathway we originally reported in mice. We expected to verify the safety of the BCG vaccine in type 1 diabetes in this Phase I study, as well as now show early signs of BCG efficacy. Our findings show that a simple, inexpensive vaccine can modify the autoimmunity underlying type 1 diabetes by selectively killing only the disease-causing T cells, leading to at least some restoration of pancreatic beta-cell insulin function. In Phase II human clinical testing of BCG, we hope that more frequent or higher BCG dosing will help the body eliminate the disease-causing T cells for a longer time, which we hope will restore insulin production to a greater degree and for a more sustained period of time than in the Phase I study.
 
Dr. Paul Burn, PhD, chair and director emeritus of the Sanford Project and professor of Pediatrics at the Sanford School of Medicine at the University of South Dakota, had this to say about our results: "Dr. Faustman and her team's clinical research data indicate that modifying the autoimmunity underlying type 1 diabetes allows for a safe and temporary restoration of insulin-secreting beta-cell function in patients with established type 1 diabetes. Restoring beta-cell function is a promising first step towards a cure. During my tenure in industry, at Sanford Health and at the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, I have seen how hard it is to get a project from mice into humans, and these are very impressive results."
 
These human clinical trials are unique in testing an immune intervention in advanced type 1 diabetes (not just new-onset disease), using an inexpensive and safe generic vaccine, understanding the mechanism by which the treatment works to selectively eliminate the unwanted, disease-causing T cells, and being able to successfully track efficacy with careful blood monitoring. These factors will contribute to speeding our progress as we move forward in clinical testing.  
 
Currently, $11 million of the total $25.2 million needed has been raised for a Phase II study. Please consider making a donation to support this groundbreaking work by visiting www.faustmanlab.org/support/support.html.
 
Signature
 
Denise Faustman, MD, Ph.D.
 
 
 
 

MGH emblem
 
Harvard Emblem
 
 
Like us on Facebook
 
Faustman Lab at Mass General Massachusetts General Hospital Charlestown, Massachusetts 02129 diabetestrial@partners.org 617-726-4084
 
This email was sent to pointreyes@verizon.net by diabetestrial@partners.org |  
Faustman Lab at Mass General | Massachusetts General Hospital | Building 149, 13th Street, Room 3602 | Charlestown | MA | 02129

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