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Posts Tagged ‘US Army’

September 26th, 2009

Army Lt. Col. Dr. Wayne Hachey Kick-Start H1N1 Vaccine for US Troops

Irving
Troops Receiving H1N1 Vaccination
Troops Receiving H1N1 Vaccination

The H1N1 vaccination program will begin in early October, said Army Lt. Col. Dr. Wayne Hachey, director of preventive medicine for Defense Department health affairs. According to Vitals.com, Doctor Hachey is board certified in preventive medicine and pediatrics. All military personnel will be vaccinated against the H1N1 (swine) flu virus, and the vaccine will be available to all military family members who want it.

The vaccine, which has been licensed by the Food and Drug Administration, will be mandatory for uniformed personnel, Hachey said. “What we want to do is target those people who are at highest risk for transmission,” he said.

Health-care workers, deploying troops, those serving on ships and submarines, and new accessions are at the top of the list. “Any place where we take a lot of people, squash them all together and get them nice and close and put them under stressful conditions will get the vaccine first,” he said.

The department will use the usual seasonal flu vaccine distribution chain for the H1N1, Hachey said, noting that while the mass H1N1 vaccinations are new to the general population, the process for vaccinating against seasonal flu is old hat for the Defense Department. “We’ve been doing this for decades,” he said. “The system is tried and true.”

The department initially will receive 1 million doses of the H1N1 vaccine, and another 1.7 million doses later in October. Officials don’t know yet whether people will need one dose or two, Hachey said. “The assumption right now is that people will need two doses, 21 days apart,” he said. “That may change.”

FDA officials still are studying H1N1 and the vaccine, and the results should be known by the end of the month. Seasonal flu vaccine already is available, and the Defense Department will begin giving those shots shortly, Hachey said. “That has been our message to immunizers: to try and get as many people as they can immunized against the seasonal flu early,” he said.

Guidelines for giving priority to family members will follow those for the general population, Hachey said. The Department of Health and Human Services is buying millions of doses of the vaccine. “Installations are going to register with each state as an immunizer,” Hachey said. “They will tell how many people they care for. This includes dependents, retirees and so on.”

The Centers for Disease Control will place the order and will ship the vaccine where needed. Family members will have multiple opportunities to get the vaccine, whether at Defense Department medical facilities or off post, Hachey said. The CDC has established target groups for those at greatest risk for transmitting or being affected by the H1N1. They include pregnant women, health-care workers, those younger than 25 or older than 65, and those with pre-existing health conditions.

Hachey said previous plans are serving the Defense Department well. “We have been preparing for pandemic flu because of its potential impact on the mission,” he said. The symptoms of the H1N1 flu are almost the same as the seasonal flu: fever, sore throat, runny nose, nausea, muscle aches and feeling rundown. The 2009 H1N1 virus - formerly known as swine flu - is a pandemic virus, according to the World Health Organization. U.S. officials call the virus “troubling” and urge communities across the United States to take actions to mitigate the effects of it. The federal government is urging states and municipalities to begin preparing now for the fall flu season.

President Barack Obama addressed the H1N1 pandemic following a White House meeting. “As I said when we saw the first cases of this virus back in the spring, I don’t want anybody to be alarmed, but I do want everybody to be prepared,” he said. “We know that we usually get a second, larger wave of these flu viruses in the fall, and so response plans have been put in place across all levels of government.”

But government cannot do it all, and the American people have a responsibility to stop the spread of the disease, Obama said. “We need families and businesses to ensure that they have plans in place if a family member, a child or a co-worker contracts the flu and needs to stay home,” he said.

“And most importantly, we need everyone to get informed about individual risk factors, and we need everyone to take the common-sense steps that we know can make a difference,” the president said. “Stay home if you’re sick. Wash your hands frequently. Cover your sneezes with your sleeve, not your hands. And take all the necessary precautions to stay healthy. I know it sounds simple, but it’s important and it works.”

The H1N1 is a never-before-seen combination of human, swine and avian flu viruses, officials said. First detected in Mexico in February, it quickly spread around the world. According to July WHO statistics, there have been 94,512 H1N1 cases worldwide, and 429 people have died from it. In the United States, 33,902 contracted H1N1, and 170 have died.

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September 26th, 2009

The Many Lies of Doctor Martin Joseph MacNeill

Irving

Jeff Robinson is the chief investigator for the Utah County Attorney’s Office. He has researched the background of Martin Joseph MacNeill, a family medicine doctor and attorney. Robinson unraveled years and years of lie after lie after lie. He compared the man’s life to the movie Catch Me If You Can but said the movie paled in comparison.

 Lie 1: Martin Joseph MacNeill signed up for the Army at age 17. MacNeill was put on disability leave two years later when a medical officer deemed him a latent schizophrenic with other mental and psychological infirmities.

Lie 2:  He was convicted of three theft, burglary and forgery felonies in California in 1978. Then MacNeill falsified transcripts and lied on applications to get into two different medical schools — and later to Brigham Young University Law School.

Lie 3: Investigators discovered that MacNeill tampered with his transcripts to indicate that he graduated in psychology and biology and that he received higher grades than he actually did. With false transcripts, MacNeill was able to get into a medical school in Guadalajara, Mexico, while he was still on probation from his felony charges in 1978.

Lie 4: After a semester there and while still on probation, Robinson said, MacNeill transferred to Western University of Health Sciences in California with his previous falsified transcripts, which also stated that he had been at the Guadalajara medical school for a full year.

Lie 5: The same year he transferred, he had an interview with the Army to check up on his disability leave, during which he allegedly told the examiner that he had not been working or attending school. Robinson said that made him eligible for 50 percent disability pay from the Veterans Administration and he later received 100 percent pay, according to documents investigators obtained. Robinson said the VA is investigating that matter. MacNeill also managed to receive 100 percent pay from Social Security.

Lie 6: Three years later, MacNeill received a license to practice as an osteopathic physician and surgeon in Utah. He started working part time for the BYU Health Center under what investigators say was a false pretense that he had no diagnosed psychological disorders. Investigators learned that during his work at BYU, he was accused of rape by a student, according to subpoenaed information.

Lie 7: In 1990, MacNeill was taken to court over another matter — Medicaid fraud — and was banned from having any Medicare patients for the next 12 years.

Lie 8: In 2007, when charges of sexual abuse were filed by a relative shortly after his wife, Michele, died on April 11, 2007.

Lie 9: MacNeill was indicted in federal court in January 2009 on nine counts of aiding and abetting in aggravated identity theft, misuse of a Social Security number, and making false statements. He pleaded guilty to two counts of aiding and abetting in aggravated identity theft.

Lie 10: In addition, just recently prosecutors say MacNeill admitted falsifying a burglary report and the loss of more than $10,000 from his Pleasant Grove home. He also obtained a fraudulent birth certificate for another person, court documents state. Last week, MacNeill — a father of eight — pleaded guilty to three felonies of false and inconsistent statements, insurance fraud and forgery in Provo’s 4th District Court and Judge Samuel McVey ordered him to serve three years in jail.

“It is amazing story about how he got from one place to another through lies,” Robinson said. “Whenever you can become a doctor and an attorney based on lies, that is an amazing thing.”

In ad nauseam, Vitlas.com reports that Dr. Macneill published one publication in his medical career titled none other then “The cost of White Lies”.

Dr. Macneill has 1 publication:

Article: The cost of white lies.
Date: April 2004

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September 10th, 2009

Major Brown Treats Mounting US Army Injuries in Afghanistan

Irving

MAJ William Brown Jr.

MAJ William Brown Jr.

Dr. Major William Augustus  Brown is the only US Army vascular surgeon for the entire country of Afghanistan.  The  trauma bay is his mainstay at the KAF Role III Hospital in Camp Dwyer.

Dr. Brown is concerned about the rising number of serious injuries.

The number of newly injured continue to climb.  On average, the hospital used to see about 80 patients a month. Mainly traumatic patients. By April it was 100 a month. And take a look at August, roughly 230 patients a month. And I think by fall the numbers will increase even more.

U.S. troops, coalition forces and locals, Dr. Brown treats them all.

The deal was when they need you for whatever they need you, go. That’s it. It is a sacrifice to my family, but it’s a privilege. Even when I’m back in Atlanta and they ask, what do I enjoy most about surgery? The most fun I ever have is in — when I’m at war. It was hardest for my son. And the oldest is 6 years old. That’s always hard. There’s no silver lining in that. He gave me a good luck charm. It’s a little stuffed dog. It’s in my uniform in the back. I always go with it. The promise was as long as I keep it on me I’ll be safe. You just don’t ever see yourself after all of those years of education, sitting in the middle of a desert trying to scrape dead tissue off a child. But I think maybe 20 years down the road when everything settles down if I could come back and see one of the child alive, grown up and you feel like it was worth it.

Camp Dwyer in Helmand (reuters.com)

Camp Dwyer in Helmand (reuters.com)

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