Tag Archives: medical

Shocking New Report: The CIA Performed Human Experiments on Prisoners Under Bush

Over the last year there have been an increasing number of accounts suggesting that, along with the CIA's “enhanced interrogation” torture program, there was a related program experimenting with and researching the application of the torture. For example, in the seven paragraphs released by a British court summarizing observations by British counterintelligence agents of the treatment of Binyan Mohamed by the CIA, the first two of these paragraphs these paragraphs stated: It was reported that a new series of interviews was conducted by the United States authorities prior to 17 May 2002 as part of a new strategy designed by an expert interviewer…. BM had been intentionally subjected to continuous sleep deprivation. The effects of the sleep deprivation were carefully observed. [emphasis added] The suggestion was that a new strategy was being tested and the results carefully examined. Several detainees have provided similar accounts, expressing their belief that their interrogations were being carefully studied, apparently so that the techniques could be modified based on the results. Such research would violate established laws and ethical rules governing research. Since Nazi doctors who experimented upon prisoners in the concentration camps were put on trial at Nuremberg, the U.S. and other countries have moved toward a high ethical standard for research on people. All but the most innocuous research requires the informed consent of those studied. Further, all research on people is subject to review by independent research ethics committees, known as Institutional Review Boards or IRBs. In the U.S., there was a major push toward more stringent research ethics when the existence of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study was publicly revealed in the early 1970s. In that study nearly 400 poor rural African-American men were denied existing treatment for their syphilis, and indeed, were never told they had syphilis by participating doctors. The study by the U.S. Public Health Service was intended to continue until the last of these men died of syphilis. When the study became public the resulting outcry helped cement evolving ethical standards mandating informed consent for any research with even a possibility of causing harm. These rules were codified in what has become known as the Common Rule, which applies to nearly all federally-funded research, including all research by the CIA. Experiments in Torture A new report of which I am a coauthor, Experiments in Torture: Evidence of Human Subject Research and Experimentation in the “Enhanced” Interrogation Program, just released by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) confirms previous suspicions and provides the first strong evidence that the CIA was indeed engaged in illegal and unethical research on detainees in its custody. The report, the result of six months of detailed work, analyzes now-public documents, including the “torture memos” from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel and the CIA's Inspector General Report and the accompanying CIA Office of Medical Services (OMS) guidelines for monitoring of detainees. The report points to several instances where medical personnel — physicians and psychologists — monitored the detailed administration of torture techniques and the effects upon those being abused. The resultant knowledge was then used both as a legal rationale for the use of the techniques and to refine these abusive techniques, allegedly in order to make them safer. For example, the OMS guidelines contain this note emphasizing how important it is “that every application of the waterboard be thoroughly documented” by medical personnel, and clarifying the nature of this documentation: “how long each application (and the entire procedure) lasted, how much water was applied (realizing that much splashes off), how exactly the water was applied, if a seal was achieved, if the naso- or oropharynx was filled, what sort of volume was expelled, how long was the break between applications, and how the subject looked between each treatment.” This type of documentation was not part of routine medical care as it was not being done in the interests of the person being waterboarded. Rather, the OMS made clear that this was being done “[i]n order to best inform future medical judgments and recommendations” [regarding how to torture people.] The purpose of this systematic monitoring was to modify how these techniques were implemented, that is, to develop generalizable knowledge to be utilized in the future. As Ren

Hospital Knew Gary Coleman’s Ex Took Pics

Filed under: Gary Coleman , Shannon Price , Celebrity Justice Officials at the hospital where Gary Coleman died tell TMZ they were “aware” that Shannon Price and her family were “inside taking pictures” around the time Coleman passed away. A rep from Utah Valley Regional Medical Center tells us, “We were aware that… Read more

See more here:
Hospital Knew Gary Coleman’s Ex Took Pics

Police: Stern sidekick Artie Lange stabbed self

Police say self-inflicted stab wounds put Howard Stern sidekick Artie Lange (LAYNG’) in a New Jersey hospital. Hoboken Police Detective Mark Competello says Lange’s mother found him on the floor of his waterfront home on Saturday. Competello says the 42-year-old comedian was unconscious but breathing after stabbing himself with a 13-inch Wolfgang Puck kitchen knife. Lange was taken to Jersey City Medical Center. Competello says doctors cleaned nine abdominal knife wounds and operated. He says Lange has been released. A message was left for Lange’s publicist. Stern has spoken of the suicide attempt and said his thoughts are with Lange’s mother and sister. Lange’s lost driving privileges after admitting he was under the influence of sleeping pills in a minor traffic accident.

Go here to see the original:
Police: Stern sidekick Artie Lange stabbed self

Britney Spears’ Conservatorship: Will it Continue?

Britney Spears will have a conservatorship status hearing in a Los Angeles courtroom today, and some have speculated she will try to reclaim her life then. That sounds dramatic, but it’s pretty much what’s at stake. Her dad Jamie Spears has the final say over her medical, financial and career affairs indefinitely. It all dates back to early 2008, when her behavior became so erratic that a judge decreed Jamie would have ultimate control over the superstar’s affairs. This decision worked wonders for Spears, who has returned to music prominence and a semblance of normalcy too. But how long is too long for this to go? Rumblings that Britney wants out have surfaced for months. FREE BRITNEY? Is Spears capable of making her own decisions? While some of the rumors are likely untrue – she’s not allowed to be alone with her kids , he instituted a bra policy , etc. – Britney and Jamie have been at odds. Says a source: “It seems highly unlikely that the conservatorship will end by the end of summer. Britney’s just not ready, yet. She has good and bad days.” “Britney has complex,” the insider continues. “Issues on both a personal and professional level, and that is the reason the conservatorship is still in place.” It’s all moot to a degree. L.A. Superior Court Commissioner Reva Goetz is the sole person who can determine if and when the conservatorship will end. When that time comes, a formal hearing will take place, and if the commissioner has enough evidence to support ending the conservatorship, she will. At the appropriate time. Is that now? Unlikely.

Read more:
Britney Spears’ Conservatorship: Will it Continue?

Gary Coleman 911 Call From Ex-Wife Gives Glimpse Of Actor’s End

Coleman and Shannon Price divorced in 2008, though she was with him when he fell. By Gil Kaufman Gary Coleman Photo: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images It’s still unknown what happened in the moments before former child actor Gary Coleman suffered a fatal head injury , but the details of the frantic 911 call from his ex-wife Shannon Price are providing a brief glimpse into the chaotic final days of the “Diff’rent Strokes” star. Coleman, 42, died on Friday of a brain hemorrhage after being rushed to a Utah hospital two days earlier following a fall at home. According to People magazine, Price, 24, who, it has since been revealed, divorced Coleman in 2008, initially resisting helping her estranged spouse. In the call, Price tells a 911 operator that Coleman fell while preparing her dinner on the evening of May 26 in their Santaquin, Utah, home. “He just got home, I heard this big bang, I went downstairs. Blood everywhere,” she said in the call. “I don’t know if he’s OK. I’m not down there right now because I have seizures, if I get stressed out I’m going to seize.” Price then described the scene, saying Coleman’s head was bloody and that there was blood all over the floor. “I don’t know what happened,” she said, prompting the operator to ask if Price could go down and check on Coleman. “I’ll try, I don’t know, I mean.” The operator asked if someone else could go check on Coleman and Price said there wasn’t. “I’ve just been kind of sick,” she said. “I don’t want to be traumatized right now.” She then yelled down to Coleman, asking if he was OK and telling him not to move. When the operator asked Price to tell Coleman to put pressure on his wound, Price reported back that the actor was lethargic. “I can’t really help him,” she said. “I just need help quick. … I just can’t be here with the blood. … I’m sorry, I can’t do it. I can’t. … There’s blood all over and I can’t do anything.” Later in the call, Price added that she wasn’t able to drive Coleman to the hospital because she’d been sick and feared having a seizure. As her panicked state increased, Price followed the operator’s advice and handed Coleman a towel to put pressure on the wound, telling the 911 staffer that the situation was stressing her out. “Yeah, I’m just panicked,” she said. “I don’t know what to do … I just don’t want him to die. I’m freaking out.” A short time later, she shouted for Coleman to sit down while applying the pressure to his head. An official cause of death has not yet been determined, but Coleman was taken off life support two days later after doctors determined that he’d suffered a critical brain hemorrhage. A funeral is expected to take place this weekend in Utah , though details about the service have not yet been released. In the meantime, a controversy has arisen over the actor’s final hours, after Coleman’s lawyer, Randy Kester, told UsMagazine.com that he questioned whether Price had the authority to make the decision to remove Coleman from life support since the couple were not longer married. “We had no indication that the information Shannon gave us was false,” a rep for Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, where Coleman was treated, told “Entertainment Tonight.” “She portrayed herself as his wife.” Kester said he was the attorney for the August 12, 2008, divorce proceedings, which were kept secret until the papers were dug up this week by “ET.” If they were remarried — which would entitle Price to make such medical decisions — Kester said he was not aware of it. According to TMZ , Coleman had signed an “Advanced Health Care Directive” that authorized Price to make medical decisions on his behalf. The couple met on the 2006 set of the movie “Church Ball” and married in 2007. Kester described their recent relationship as “on-again, off-again.” At press time, there didn’t appear to be a valid will for Coleman, setting up a potentially ugly battle between Price and Coleman’s estranged adoptive parents, Sue and Willie Coleman. Related Videos Remembering Gary Coleman Related Photos Gary Coleman: A Life In Photos Related Artists Gary Coleman

See the original post here:
Gary Coleman 911 Call From Ex-Wife Gives Glimpse Of Actor’s End

Shannon Price: Secretly Divorced From Gary Coleman, Still in Control of Actor’s Medical Decisions

Was Shannon Price in the right by taking Gary Coleman off life support? After the Gary Coleman 911 call was released yesterday, that question is being hotly debated, given her strange comments and behavior on the phone. She’s likely to come under even more scrutiny now that documents have surfaced proving that Coleman and Price secretly got divorced back in 2008. They wed in 2007 but split, legally, a year later due to “irreconcilable differences.” A judge signed off on the divorce, and they did not get re-married. Yet they were in bed together the night of Gary’s ultimately fatal injury. Shannon Price and (apparently) her ex-husband Gary Coleman . Price was the one who called 911, as we know, one week ago now, reporting that Coleman had fallen down in their Utah home and was unconscious. According to the Santaquin Police Department, The Diff’rent Strokes star was bleeding from a laceration on his head when the paramedics arrived. He was able to answer their questions and was also able to walk to the ambulance that transported him to the hospital, the incident report states. Price stayed upstairs once paramedics arrived, telling them she “didn’t want to be traumatized.” Officers stated they observed “nothing suspicious.” Coleman, who had been in a weakened state when he fell after undergoing a four-hour kidney dialysis treatment, later suffered a brain hemorrhage . He slipped into a coma was taken off life support on Friday by Shannon Price, who identified herself as Coleman’s wife, despite the fact that she isn’t. Prince wasn’t asked to provide documented proof, prompting Coleman’s divorce lawyer, Randy Kester, to question if Shannon had power of attorney. Apparently, she did, despite the couple’s non-marital status . Shannon Price was no longer Gary Coleman’s wife, but the actor trusted her with his life anyway. The legal documents that are in place establish this. He signed the paperwork authorizing her to make medical decisions for him if he was incapacitated and unable to do so, as Price tragically had to. So even though she technically told an untruth by telling hospital workers she was Gary Coleman’s wife, she didn’t cross more questionable lines. “Mr. Coleman had completed an Advanced Health Care Directive granting Shannon Price permission to make medical decisions on his behalf if he was unable to do so,” reads a statement released by Utah Valley Regional Medical Center. “An Advanced Health Care Directive remains in effect regardless of a patient’s marital status, unless modified by the patient. It is a private medical document which the hospital does not have permission to release.” “However, we received permission to confirm that the document was in effect at the time of Mr. Coleman’s death.” No other info is available due to privacy statutes, and it is not known when Coleman signed the form. However, Price looks to be legally in the clear. If any more details on Coleman’s sad and increasingly strange death become available, you will know as soon as we do. Stay tuned.

Read more here:
Shannon Price: Secretly Divorced From Gary Coleman, Still in Control of Actor’s Medical Decisions

Hospital: Coleman’s Ex Had Right to Decide His Fate

Filed under: Gary Coleman Gary Coleman gave his ex-wife Shannon Price permission to make medical choices for him — including life or death — according to the Utah hospital where Gary died. Utah Valley Regional Medical Center released a statement saying Gary had signed an… Read more

Link:
Hospital: Coleman’s Ex Had Right to Decide His Fate

Woman Sues Google for Bad Directions

One day I was using my cell phone's GPS service to find the nearest Target. I was driving down the road when suddenly my cell phone piped up, “Turn right here.” I looked to the right. There was no road, just a tree and some grass. I chalked it up to a GPS glitch and turned right at the next corner. If I had been Lauren Rosenberg, however, I would have turned right at that very moment, hit the tree, suffered some cuts and minor brain damage, and then turned around and sued Verizon for the glitch in its GPS service. Seriously. Rosenberg, a Los Angeles California native, is suing Google because Google Maps issued directions that told her to walk down a rural highway. She started walking down the highway–which had no sidewalk or pedestrian paths–and was struck by a car. She is suing Google for her medical expenses ($100,000), as well as punitive damages. She is also suing the driver who struck her, Patrick Harwood of Park City, Utah. On January 19, 2010, Rosenberg was apparently trying to get from 96 Daly Street, Park City, Utah, to 1710 Prospector Avenue, Park City, Utah. She looked up the walking directions using Google Maps on her Blackberry. Google Maps suggested a route that included a half-mile walk down “Deer Valley Drive,” which is also known as “Utah State Route 224.” There's not much more to say–she started walking down the middle of a highway, and a car hit her. Who wouldn't have seen that one coming? According to Rosenberg's complaint filing: “As a direct and proximate cause of Defendant Google’s careless, reckless and negligent providing of unsafe directions, Plaintiff Lauren Rosenberg was led onto a dangerous highway, and was thereby stricken by a motor vehicle, causing her to suffer sever permanent physical, emotional, and mental injuries, including pain and suffering.” Google actually does offer up a warning about its walking directions–if you view Google Maps on a computer, it gives you the following message: “Walking directions are in beta. Use caution–This route may be missing sidewalks or pedestrian paths.” added by: 02

Police Raid in Death of LPGA Star

Filed under: TMZ Sports , Celebrity Justice TMZ has learned a doctor connected to LPGA star Erica Blasberg was the target of a police raid … and cops were looking for evidence in Erica’s death investigation. Cops in Henderson, Nevada executed a search warrant on May 13 and raided the medical… Read more

Go here to read the rest:
Police Raid in Death of LPGA Star

Gary Coleman’s Widow Thanks Fans For ‘Wonderful Support’

‘This has been so comforting to the family to know how beloved he still is,’ her statement reads. By Kara Warner Gary Coleman Photo: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images Mere hours after news broke that Gary Coleman died of an intracranial hemorrhage on Friday (May 28), Coleman’s widow, Shannon Price, thanked fans for their support. The heartfelt statement was read by her brother, Shawn Price, at a news conference. “We are very grateful for all the wonderful support everyone has been extending to Gary’s family,” he said. “Thousands of e-mails have poured in to the hospital. This has been so comforting to the family to know how beloved he still is. … Thank you so much for all that you guys have done and for the support and prayers that you guys have given us.” Price also said that details regarding Coleman’s death and funeral arrangements will be announced soon. The “Diff’rent Strokes” actor , whose congenital kidney disease halted his childhood growth at an early age, had suffered a series of health setbacks in recent years. He was admitted to the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center in Provo on Wednesday after hitting his head in an unexplained fall and had reportedly slipped into critical condition by the next day. On Friday, doctors announced that he was unconscious and on life support in a coma due to an intracranial hemorrhage, which results from a broken or ruptured blood vessel, causing bleeding inside the skull. Born in Zion, Illinois, on February 8, 1968, Coleman was adopted as an infant by a local couple. He was diagnosed with an autoimmune dysfunction called focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, a congenital kidney disease that stunted his growth (he was 4-foot-8) and required two kidney transplants as well as daily dialysis. Later in life, he was forced to work as a security guard on a movie set in 2008 when acting gigs dried up. He got married that year to then-22-year-old Shannon Price, though the union was rocky, landing the couple on the syndicated “Divorce Court” show. He was hospitalized in Los Angeles for undisclosed reasons in January, then again in February after suffering a seizure on the set of the TV show “The Insider.” Share your thoughts and memories of Gary Coleman in the comments below. Related Videos Remembering Gary Coleman Related Photos Gary Coleman: A Life In Photos Related Artists Gary Coleman

View post:
Gary Coleman’s Widow Thanks Fans For ‘Wonderful Support’