Let Hillary healthcare Clinton see that BCG is easily inexpensively available all to citizens of the US.
Dr Denise L Faustman is more image and Clinton should aspire to no less.
See eg faustmanlab.org, pubmed.org and faustman dl
What cannot be cheaply done in the US can easily and profitably be done in Italy (see eg pubmed.org ristori + BCG)
Please help the US and its citizens
Dr. Faustman's type 1 diabetes research has earned her notable awards such as the Oprah Achievement Award for “Top Health Breakthrough by a Female Scientist” (2005), the "Women in Science Award" from the American Medical Women’s Association and Wyeth Pharmaceutical Company for her contributions to autoimmune disease research (2006), and the Goldman Philanthropic Partnerships/Partnership for Cures “George and Judith Goldman Angel Award” for research to find an effective treatment for type 1 diabetes (2011). Her previous research accomplishments include the first scientific description of modifying donor tissue antigens to change their foreignness. This achievement earned her the prestigious National Institutes of Health and National Library of Medicine “Changing the Face of Medicine” Award (2003) as one of 300 American physicians (one of 35 in research) honored for seminal scientific achievements in the United States.
Dr. Faustman earned her MD and PhD from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, and completed her internship, residency, and fellowships in Internal Medicine and Endocrinology at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.
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> Clinical Trials Info
>Sign up for e-mail updates
>Support the Faustman Lab
>Host an event or fundraiser
>Patient information forms
Your donation will directly support our Phase II research.
Raised to date: $18.4 million
Our total need: $25.2 million.
Raised to date: $18.4 million
Our total need: $25.2 million.
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Interested in the Phase II Trial?
The Faustman Lab at Massachusetts General Hospital
Denise Faustman, MD, PhD, is Director of the Immunobiology
Laboratory at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and an Associate
Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Her current research
focuses on discovering and developing new treatments for type 1 diabetes
and other autoimmune diseases, including Crohn's disease, lupus,
scleroderma, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren's syndrome, and multiple
sclerosis. She is currently leading a human clinical trial program
testing the efficacy of the BCG vaccine for reversal of long-term type 1
diabetes. Positive results from the Phase I study were reported in 2012.Dr. Faustman's type 1 diabetes research has earned her notable awards such as the Oprah Achievement Award for “Top Health Breakthrough by a Female Scientist” (2005), the "Women in Science Award" from the American Medical Women’s Association and Wyeth Pharmaceutical Company for her contributions to autoimmune disease research (2006), and the Goldman Philanthropic Partnerships/Partnership for Cures “George and Judith Goldman Angel Award” for research to find an effective treatment for type 1 diabetes (2011). Her previous research accomplishments include the first scientific description of modifying donor tissue antigens to change their foreignness. This achievement earned her the prestigious National Institutes of Health and National Library of Medicine “Changing the Face of Medicine” Award (2003) as one of 300 American physicians (one of 35 in research) honored for seminal scientific achievements in the United States.
Dr. Faustman earned her MD and PhD from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, and completed her internship, residency, and fellowships in Internal Medicine and Endocrinology at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.
To
get a brief reprieve from the pressures of working in the White House,
Kristina Schake, a former aide to the first lady, Michelle Obama, took a
class about her favorite painter, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio.
She noticed that the Italian painter often showed Christ with bare feet, portraying his subject as a common man.
It
was a lesson that informed Ms. Schake’s job in the East Wing when, as
Mrs. Obama’s communications chief, she encouraged the first lady to take
an undercover shopping trip to a Target in suburban Alexandria, Va., to
showcase her dance moves on “Late Night With Jimmy Fallon” and to make a
cameo at the Oscars.
Positioning
a public figure is not exactly the work of a Baroque master, and a trip
to Target does not a work of-art make. Nevertheless, the lesson from
Caravaggio was clear in Ms. Schake’s approach.
Having
helped shape Mrs. Obama’s public image into that of an accessible
everywoman, Ms. Schake is about to face what may be her toughest
challenge yet: working to get another first lady, Hillary Rodham Clinton, elected president.
Mrs.
Clinton, who is expected to announce her candidacy this month, has
brought Ms. Schake, 45, to her 2016 communications team to try to tackle
an issue that dogged the 2008 Clinton campaign.
Back
then, Mrs. Clinton’s advisers argued she should emphasize strength and
experience, rather than her softer side, a strategic decision that Ann
Lewis, a senior adviser in that race, has called the “biggest missed
opportunity” in the failed 2008 primary contest against Barack Obama.
Now,
after two decades in the public eye, Mrs. Clinton must try to show
voters a self-effacing, warm and funny side that her friends say
reflects who she really is. In short, she must counteract an impression
that she is just “likeable enough,” as Mr. Obama famously quipped in
2008.
As
the campaign’s presumptive deputy communications director, Ms. Schake
will be behind the effort to transport the Hillary Brand beyond paid
campaign television ads, policy discussions and the requisite sit-down
with a nightly news anchor.
The
daughter of a stay-at-home mother and a commercial airline pilot from
Sonoma, Calif., Ms. Schake is best known for finding ways to communicate
with Americans outside the coastal elite — a perspective Mrs. Clinton,
who lives in Chappaqua, N.Y., and regularly commands a speaking fee of
more than $200,000, will need.
That
won’t necessarily mean she will mimic Mrs. Obama’s “Driving the Station
Wagon” dance on late-night TV, but Mrs. Clinton could, for example,
talk to the Food Network about dinners with girlfriends or discuss her
yoga routines on a health and wellness blog.
The
proliferation of new ways to reach voters through multiple devices
means “it’s not the same formula in politics that it was even just four
years ago or eight years ago,” said Stephanie Cutter, a Democratic
strategist and a deputy campaign manager for the Obama reelection
campaign. “It’s about understanding people who are just living their
lives and figuring out ways to fit a candidate into that, rather than
vice versa.”
Ms.
Schake, who declined to be interviewed for this article, first learned
what resonates with a mass American audience from the man best known for
“All in the Family” and “When Harry Met Sally.” In 1998 the actor and
director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, hired her to
help with their push to pass a ballot initiative that would add a
50-cent tax to each pack of cigarettes sold in California to fund early
childhood education.
Mr.
Reiner said Ms. Schake consistently reminded him not to veer from the
predetermined script, which had an almost cinematic simplicity. “Every
step of the way it was ‘the good guys are fighting the bad guys,’ ” Mr.
Reiner said in an interview. “It was, ‘Do you want to support big
tobacco or do you want to support little children?’ ”
The initiative passed despite the roughly $40 million the tobacco lobby spent to defeat it.
Mr.
Reiner introduced Ms. Schake to Chad Griffin, a former aide in the
Clinton White House who is now the president of the Human Rights
Campaign. Mr. Griffin and Ms. Schake became best friends and together
started Griffin-Schake, a Los Angeles-based public affairs shop. They
handled media relations for Maria Shriver when she was the first lady of
California.
Ms.
Schake was one of the first people Mr. Griffin came out to, on the
rooftop of the Standard Hotel in downtown Los Angeles. “She worked to
get the story out of me and she got what she wanted,” Mr. Griffin said.
The battle for gay rights soon became the two friends’ focus when they became central players in the legal case against Proposition 8,
the ballot initiative that barred same-sex couples from marrying. Ms.
Schake prepared the plaintiffs for the crush of publicity, while also
showing a mainstream audience that they were just ordinary committed
couples.
A
month before the Supreme Court dismissed the California measure, Ms.
Schake persuaded Kris Perry and Sandy Stier of Berkeley, Calif., who had
been together more than a decade, to pose for a feature in People
magazine.
“I
was really self-conscious about being the only really physically
gay-looking one” of the plaintiffs, Ms. Perry said in an interview. She
told Ms. Schake she thought she should change her hair or wear different
clothes. “She just put her hand on my shoulder and said, ‘No, that is
not going to happen,’ ” Ms. Perry said.
In
2010, Ms. Schake stepped back from the gay marriage fight to work for
Mrs. Obama, a position for which Ms. Shriver recommended her.
She
promoted Mrs. Obama’s “Let’s Move!” initiative to fight childhood
obesity, spreading the first lady’s message with appearances on “The
Ellen DeGeneres Show” and “Top Chef,” and in her famous “Mom Dancing”
routine with Mr. Fallon, which generated 22 million views on YouTube.
“She
was in California, so she didn’t have an ingrained Washington way of
doing things, which I think let her take a fresh look at things,” said
Susan Sher, the former chief of staff to Mrs. Obama who hired Ms.
Schake.
Can
Kristina Schake help Hillary Clinton come across as more than ‘likable
enough’?After a position in the West Wing fell through, Ms. Schake
joined L’Oréal USA as the cosmetics company’s chief communications
officer. Dan Pfeiffer, a former senior adviser to Mr. Obama, said he
thought Ms. Schake had “retired from politics” before the Clinton
campaign called.
“She
is happiest when she’s working on things like the marriage campaign,”
said her older sister, Kori Schake, a prominent Republican who held a
senior position on President George W. Bush’s National Security Council.
“She was very much drawn to the historic opportunity to help Secretary
Clinton.”
The
bipartisan Schake sisters stick together despite their political
differences. Kristina Schake used to intervene whenever their parents’
liberal friends in Northern California tried to debate the Iraq War.
“She’d say, ‘We’re so happy Kori is home for the holidays, please don’t
make her do her job,’ ” Kori said.
A
relatively new New Yorker, Kristina Schake lives with her longtime
boyfriend, an Albanian journalist she met in Rome. She frequently
attends exhibitions of photography and art, and walks the streets
listening to Bowery Boys podcasts about the history of the subway
system. She will likely work out of the Clinton campaign’s headquarters
in Brooklyn.
It
remains to be seen whether veteran Clinton aides will empower newcomers
like Ms. Schake and whether Mrs. Clinton will be open to trying new
things that could prove risky. Ms. Schake will work under her friend
Jennifer Palmieri, a former White House communications director who also
worked in the Clinton Administration. Other veteran Clinton aides,
including Mandy Grunwald, will also advise, particularly about Mrs.
Clinton’s backstory.
A
person familiar with Clinton camp discussions who could not go on the
record before the campaign’s official start said Mrs. Clinton does not
need a “life coach,” and that Ms. Schake’s value will be to figure out
new ways to spread the former Secretary of State’s central message of
lifting the middle class.
To
that end, Ms. Schake, whom Anita Dunn, a former White House
communications director, described as “an island of tranquillity and
calm when everything is going crazy,” often sits in on early strategy
and policy meetings, in addition to typical powwows about communications
and press coverage.
No
matter how effective Mrs. Clinton’s message, voters tend to have an
intangible hankering when it comes to presidential candidates. “You have
to feel a person’s warmth and humanness, because you’re going to see
them in your living room for four years,” said Mr. Reiner, a longtime
Clinton supporter.
That’s
easier said than done in the throes of a campaign when even genuine
acts can seem like political posturing. In 2008, critics accused Mrs.
Clinton of pandering when she cried in a diner in New Hampshire and
downed a shot of whiskey in Indiana.
“When
you see Hillary Clinton alone, she’s a good old girl,” Mr. Reiner said,
echoing the familiar lament that voters just don’t know the real Hillary. “She likes to have a beer and laugh.”
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