A serious post for once, please please spare a couple of minutes

Oli_jgb

Member
Hey guys,
I came across this site today on one of my podcasts and it really really moved me, I do a bit for charity but not enough. If you can't donate, at least try to spread the message to help generate awareness.

The site is:

www.xtrb.org

Just watch the vid, pass it on. Thanks.

Oli

 
www.xdrtb.org i think is what he meant from seeing that video.

never knew about extreme drug resistant tb tho. kinda leans towards the theory of malthus. some of you more educated ns'ers will know what im talking about, and how it relates to whats happening in the world right now.
 
Yeh that's what I was talking about - sorry got the link wrong, but yeh the vid really moved me, and felt it needed sharing.
bump!
 
yeah I just saw that in Time mag this morning, it totally sucks. Pharmacutical companies have the treatments but for business reasons they jack up the prices to the point where third world countries cant afford them
 
Everyone on NS that reads this:

on the website (xdrtb.org) there is a link that says "sign." Click on this and send out a letter to five political candidates urging them to take action. It takes ten seconds of your time and all you need to do is type your name and click a button, or if you want you can write a custom letter. Please do this and make a difference
 
If you sign the petition, just reply to the thread and say "Signed". Don't lie, and everyone will give you + Karma.

Signed.
 
I got so sick when i saw this. TB should have disappeared decades ago. Instead the cure just makes money.

I signed this because it's direct political action.

It's not like that fucking RED campaign for aids which is just a stupid marketing scheme designed to make people show off how responsible they think they are.

 
Cool to see so many people signing - please help too by giving + Karma to those who do sign, it will encourage others to come and sign too.
 
Signed.

Maybe something will come of this. I certainly hope it does.

I would take issue with the statement that inadequate treatment is the cause of XDR-TB. As diseases mutate, they find their way around drugs, it's inevitable. I would say that inadequate prevention is a better focus when trying to stop a disease with no cure.
 
This is so cool that everyone is signing it, I have literally given every person who signed it 10/10 Karma, I hope everyone else is too, it's a little something in return for helping to spread the message.

Did anyone get an email back from the whitehouse?
 
On behalf of President Bush, thank you for your correspondence.

We appreciate hearing your views and welcome your suggestions.

Due to the large volume of e-mail received, the White House cannot respond to every message.

Thank you again for taking the time to write.

------------------

this is the email you get
 
man, those were some really sad pictures, something needs to be done fast.

of course i signed it
 
wow naders crew is on their shit i got this like a minute after sending that
Ralph Nader, noted consumer advocate and graduate of Princeton University and Harvard Law School, is the founder of Princeton Project 55 (PP55) and its Tuberculosis Initiative. Princeton Project 55 is an independent, non-profit, public interest organization established by Princeton University's Class of 1955, at the suggestion of Mr. Nader, to encourage more effective involvement in combating social problems that face our nation. Mr. Nader's interest in tuberculosis was originally sparked by the "WHO Report on the TB Epidemic 1996." As a board member of PP55, he presented his idea for a new initiative, along with the testimony of several recognized tuberculosis (TB) experts at the September 1996 board meeting. With the agreement of the board, the PP55 Tuberculosis Initiative was born.

The mission of the PP55 Tuberculosis Initiative is to increase public awareness of tuberculosis, encourage United States leadership of tuberculosis prevention and control programs and facilitate tuberculosis vaccine development by garnering government and industry support. PP55 seeks to remedy the shortcomings in domestic and international TB control efforts by affecting systemic change in the United States' strategies to control the disease.

With the support of the primary international TB control agencies, PP55 hosted a conference in February 1997, entitled "Tuberculosis: A Global Emergency," that was attended by representatives of 25 TB control organizations and a general audience of about 150 people. The message from the 25 participating organizations was that PP55 should devote its efforts to raising awareness of the seriousness of the epidemic. They emphasized that TB has lacked the attention of non-profit organizations like PP55, and there was a need for a "disinterested" advocate who can stimulate collaboration, facilitate innovation and provide a vocal appeal for greater efforts to control TB.

In November 1997, along with the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health, the TB Initiative convened the world's leading experts in TB control for a symposium, entitled "The Global Tuberculosis Pandemic: A Strategy for Unified Global Control and Ultimate Elimination." This meeting was a forum for examining the shortcomings in recent efforts to control the resurgence of TB, and establishing what objectives must be met to attain long-term control of tuberculosis.

In the past two years, the TB Initiative has been responsible for generating needed awareness about the epidemic. It has helped generate nearly 50 letters-to-the-editor, opinion-editorials and other articles. It has communicated with top officials within the Clinton administration on various topics relating to TB, including making global health an important piece of U.S. foreign policy, and establishing TB research as a priority within the National Institutes of Health. Currently, the TB Initiative is collaborating with other international health non-governmental organizations to target the foreign operations appropriations subcommittee in Congress for $60 million to go toward TB control programs abroad in the year 2000.

PP55 seeks to increase awareness about the TB epidemic by keeping decision makers informed about regional trends, methods of control and the roles that various organizations can play; through media advocacy to increase attention paid to the epidemic and expand the media's understanding of the complexities of this threat; and finally, by working with other agencies to develop positions on key TB issues. We are dedicated to ensuring that the world's number one infectious cause of death is treated with the urgency and gravity it deserves.
 
Back
Top