The war and drug has been lost and as my body rots from a treatable autoimmune disease, type 1 diabetes, you might ponder the following. Bcg, unlike insulin allows the body to regenerate cells that the immune system has killed. See eg faustmanlab.org pubmed.org Faustman dl uspto.gov inventor search Faustman. Law enforcement depends on drugs to keep them in business and supplied with forfeited assets.
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United States Patent | 8,697,077 |
Faustman | April 15, 2014 |
Methods and compositions for treating autoimmune diseases
The invention features methods for increasing or maintaining the number of functional cells of a predetermined type, for example, insulin producing cells of the pancreas, blood cells, spleen cells, brain cells, heart cells, vascular tissue cells, cells of the bile duct, or skin cells, in a mammal (e.g., a human patient) that has injured or damaged cells of the predetermined type.
Inventors: | Faustman; Denise L. (Boston, MA) | ||||||||||
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Applicant: |
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Assignee: | The General Hospital Corporation (Boston, MA) | ||||||||||
Family ID: | 30002891 | ||||||||||
Appl. No.: | 13/462,160 | ||||||||||
Filed: | May 2, 2012 |
Document Identifier | Publication Date | |
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US 20120213731 A1 | Aug 23, 2012 | |
Application Number | Filing Date | Patent Number | Issue Date | ||
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12632452 | Dec 7, 2009 | 8173129 | |||
10358664 | Feb 5, 2003 | 7628988 | |||
60392687 | Jun 27, 2002 | ||||
Current U.S. Class: | 424/139.1; 424/142.1; 424/154.1; 424/577 |
Children should not die before parents. A accepted generality. If your child has type 1 diabetes and you wish to prevent complications and do better than insulin see above. Is this worth during for or killing for?
Two armed robbers approach a pharmacy on a mission. One kills for opiates and the other kills for bcg
Each should be provided with what he seeks to achieve something good.
Some look forward to the day that heroin may be breed at home from yeast and others look forward to bcg being as easily available here as it is elsewhere in the world
2.
Ehrenberg R.
Nature. 2015 May 21;521(7552):267-8. doi: 10.1038/251267a. No abstract available.
- PMID:
- 25993934
I remember cousin Rudy and the stories of his son a cop who witnessed his father die in screaming agony from colon cancer because morphine did not help and was only useful for purposes of inducing death.
Long Island
Recovering addicts and parents of overdose victims shared stories of grief and resilience Thursday at Nassau County’s Heroin Education Summit, a forum meant to bolster public awareness of Long Island’s opiate epidemic.
Speakers from all walks of life — firefighters, teachers, college students and retirees among them — warned of the perils of heroin and painkiller abuse, a day after Nassau reported a record 58 fatal heroin overdoses in 2015.
Nassau Assistant Chief Fire Marshal John Priest said his son Robert, a lieutenant in the East Meadow Fire Department, died of a heroin overdose in 2012.
“My son Rob looked less like a drug addict than anybody you could imagine,” Priest said. “He was young, he was handsome, he was athletic, he was a leader . . . and he was a drug addict.”
Priest found his 23-year-old son sitting up in bed, hands folded over his chest. “I went over to shake him and he was ashen gray, and he was ice cold,” he said.
“Take out of your mind the words ‘this won’t happen to me,’ ” Priest told the crowd. “It’s everywhere.”
About 200 people attended the summit, held at Coral House in Baldwin.
Another grieving parent, Valerie Labiak of Bellmore, spoke of losing her son Michael, a 26-year-old aspiring police officer, to a fatal opiate overdose in 2014.
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Michael was slated to start using Vivitrol — a medication that helps keep addicts from relapsing — but had trouble getting timely access to the drug, his mother said.
“Michael overdosed and died alone on the Long Island Rail Road,” Labiak said. “We know our son would still be with us if he’d received that Vivitrol as planned.”
Several recovering heroin and painkiller addicts addressed the crowd, including Steven Dodge, 25, who urged opiate abusers not to give up.
“Addiction is 100 percent treatable,” he said.
Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano and Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone, as well as the police commissioners from both counties, shared stories of their own encounters with friends and loved ones who battled addiction to opiates.
The county leaders held a ceremonial signing establishing a joint overdose task force charged with investigating every heroin overdose on the Island in hopes of tracking the drugs to their source.
In Suffolk, there were at least 103 fatal heroin overdoses last year, according to preliminary data.
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