Thursday, August 31, 2017

AGENT ORANGE TOWN HALL MEETING SCHEDULE









We update our meetings regularly on the Town Hall Meeting Calendar:

September 12, 2017
Naples, Florida
Contact: Ernie Kerskie 239-216-2763
John McGinty 904-679-1947
William MacNeill 239-643-7081

September 13, 2017
Miami, Florida
Contact: Jose Montes 305-992-2140
Luis Lalama 301-528-5221
John McGinty 904-679-1947

September 15, 2017
Marathon Key, Florida
Contact: Andy Paine 305-481-3541
Dan Perkins 305-414-3104
John McGinty 904-679-1947

September 23, 2017
Chicago, Illinois
Contact: Pat O'Brien 847.403.4676
Roger McGill 773.203.3353

Research Says VA Hospital Is Obstructing Research into Marijuana's Effects on PTSD

A major study about marijuana's effects on treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) began last February, but so far it's been difficult to make any conclusions. And the reason is obstruction from Veterans Affairs' hospitals.
Arizona psychiatrist Sue Sisley has been trying to study marijuana's ability to help those suffering with PTSD since 2009. After finally getting approval to begin in February, she's been able to enroll 25 subjects. But Sisley says she needs at least 76 people in the study to make any reasonable conclusions, but the Phoenix VA hospital is not cooperating.
"Despite our best efforts to work with the Phoenix VA hospital and share information about the study," Sisley writes in a letter to Secretary of Veterans Affairs David Shulkin, "they have been unwilling to assist by providing information to their patients and medical staff about a federally legal clinical trial happening right in their backyard that is of crucial importance to the veteran community."
She says if the current rate of recruitment continues, the study will not finish within the timeframe required by the $2.2 million grant she received from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.
The hospital points out that marijuana is still illegal at the federal level, and they cannot recommend their patients to engage in illegal activity. Sisley's reaching out directly to Shulkin to intervene and allow her to actively recruit at the hospital for her study.
The Department of Veterans Affairs has a complicated relationship with medical marijuana. Despite substantial evidence that cannabis can treat many afflictions and conditions suffered by veterans, VA hospitals and doctors are barred from prescribing marijuana even in states where it's legal. 
Many veterans' organizations, including the American Legion, have openly called on the Department to allow VA doctors to prescribe marijuana. And Shulkin himself has previously expressed some openness to allowing veterans to use medicinal cannabis.
But it looks like until the federal government wises up and makes marijuana legal, veterans will continue to have restricted access to all their medical options.

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Today in History - August 29, 1983

1983: US Department of Veterans Affairs announces tests of 85,000 Vietnam vets reveal no adverse health effects related to Agent Orange exposure.

Thursday, August 24, 2017

AGENT ORANGE TOWN HALL MEETING SCHEDULE








We update our meetings regularly on the Town Hall Meeting Calendar:

August 26, 2017
Mebane, North Carolina
Contact: Ken Sellers – 336-253-1113
Rossie Nance – 910-465-0683

September 12, 2017
Naples, Florida
Contact: Ernie Kerskie 239-266-2763
John McGinty 904-679-1947
William MacNeill 239-643-7081

September 13, 2017
Miami, Florida
Contact: Jose Montes 305-992-2140
Luis Lalama 301-528-5221
John McGinty 904-679-1947

September 14, 2017
Marathon Key, Florida
Contact: Andy Paine 305-481-3541
Dan Perkins 305-414-3104
John McGinty 904-679-1947

September 23, 2017
Chicago, Illinois
Contact: Pat O'Brien 847.403.4676
Roger McGill 773.203.3353

‘Serious Doubts’ Over Bayer and Monsanto’s $57 Billion Megadeal, Says EU


Bayer AG's takeover of Monsanto Co. faces deeper scrutiny from European antitrust regulators who say they have "serious doubts" about uniting two of the world's largest manufacturers of genetically engineered crop seeds and pesticides.
The European Commission said the $57 billion deal could add pressure on farmers already struggling against low crop prices. It has completed a preliminary probe but said Tuesday that it may need until January to finish its work, throwing into doubt the companies' plans to complete their deal by year-end.
It is common for regulators to take longer than initially expected to conduct their analyses. The planned tie-up between Bayer and Monsanto, the largest in a string of deals that are reshaping the global agricultural industry, was struck last September as several other rival seed and pesticide makers had made their own deals to combine.
EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager said: "We need to ensure effective competition."
European Commission officials have said the Bayer-Monsanto deal raised concerns that farmers could wind up paying more for a narrower range of seeds and sprays, and see a slower pace of innovation in the labs where crop scientists tweak plant genes to enable them to survive herbicides and repel bugs. 
Bayer and Monsanto both said the companies would continue to work with regulators with a view to obtaining approvals for the transaction by the end of the year.
A separate review by U.S. regulators is ongoing, and Bayer earlier this year said it had received requests for information from the U.S. Department of Justice.
Bayer and Monsanto have pitched their deal as a way to more tightly integrate research into new chemicals and seed genes, which in turn would help deliver better-performing supplies to farmers at a faster pace while reducing the companies' costs.
But some farm groups and lawmakers in the U.S. have warned that the succession of mergers will diminish competition and lead to higher prices on the farm, and potentially for consumers.