NM–same post as HL, but I left my preview window open for a half hour.
Great minds.
I never knew there was such consternation over the difference between vector-borne diseases. Stop. There shouldn’t be. If you want to define your kids as disease vectors (and I often do), go for it, but it’s a non-standard definition of the term. Not a non-scientific, a non-common-understanding.
And around and around and around with quaternions!
I wonder why he picked Lyme disease in specific. Is it because he’s going for the woo-woo vote? Between the mythical ‘chronic Lyme disease’ and all of the insane ‘alternative’ therapies (that is, alternatives to real therapy), Lyme disease is a target-rich environment for people looking for idiots who think modern medicine is out to get them.
Am I really going to be the biology nerd to bring up fomites vs/ vectors? Yes, yes, I am. But I’m not going to tell you the difference*, because I’m evil like that. Bwahahahaha!
Colds and flus generally spread by direct contact <—we’ve all heard that phrase, right? In bio-speak, most communicable illnesses spread through direct contact, airborne transmission or fomites/vectors. All of these are examples of horizontal transmission of pathogens.
*Okay, yes I will, because I’m also a huge lover of sharing information: fomites are inanimate objects, like tables, doorknobs, books, and hospital beds which infectious agents get on and live on until their next victim picks them up and gets infected with them. They also include contaminated needles and catheters and the like which, if reused, infect the next person. Vectors are living things which carry pathogens from one infected animal/person to another animal/person, but which don’t get sick themselves, and may even depend on the pathogen for its own health or reproduction. http://www.vet.uga.edu/vpp/archives/ivm/ENG/Modes/routes.htm
In other words, kindergartners aren’t a vector of the common cold, because they get the cold themselves, too. Ticks are a vector of Lyme disease because, even though they carry the pathogens, they don’t get sick from them.
Or it could be that Lyme disease is several times more prevalent than any other vector-borne disease in the US overall and even more so for Virginia in particular. Now if he had sent it to an area in which West Nile is currently hot, that choice would be a little more questionable.
I am so utterly disappointed that Romney would waste his time spending money to battle a disease which has left people incapable of walking and in need of constant medical care. Darn him.
Would that that were so, checkedible - but from all appearances, it’s less “Romney vows to fight terrible disease” and more “Romney pandering to quacks and pseudoscientists in order to get them to give him money”.
That would be sad if true but not in the least bit surprising. Since when did he (or most politicians) have any other motive?
Still it makes me like him a little more than I did (which was not at all), because there are many diseases which receive little or no attention losing it to other -also awful- diseases which are more frequently in the public eye, and hence struggle for funding and research. Anything that will draw attention to these is a positive step in my book. He could have been fashionable and gone for AIDS and cancer, both of which would have been admirable uses of his time and taxpayers’ money. But somehow I really appreciate that he didn’t, as fortunately there are plenty of others doing that already, and I’m sure Lyme disease sufferers were grateful too.
Ironically, a good friend of mine contracted Lyme disease quite recently. She discovered a bug bite that had the traditional bullseye mark around it – nothing inside but a ring around the site.
Of course, it was the fact that she had health insurance that made it so she could get it checked out. Like most of us, if she’d been suspicious about a strange mark she would’ve just ignored it if she didn’t have insurance. The worst thing is to discover you have a terrible disease while you’re uninsured – preexisting condition, after all.
What he is doing, if you read the articles above, is pretty much the Lyme disease equivalent of saying that HIV doesn’t cause AIDS, or that “Big Pharma” has a cancer cure and is suppressing it. I think legitimate sufferers of Lyme disease don’t need the kind of attention Romney is bringing.
Ok…I’m readin’ it but I’m not seein’ it. He doesn’t say anything of the sort, that I can see. He talks about raising awareness of the disease and working with those who are in the best position to help the situation. Is it the rather inappropriate use of “synergy” that you’re looking at? Because that just smacks me of “politician using buzzword without really understanding what it means”.
I’ll have to read more about it to know if this is a good proposal or not. It’s just that his campaign mantra has been all about cutting taxes and shrinking government, and now he promises some new thing he wants the government to do for everyone. As a wise dog once said, “it just don’t add up.”
I think we should hold Romney’s feet to the fire and find out, before election day, what hard choices he’d be prepared to make. It’s easy to promise everything to everybody.
Over at ThinkProgress there is a pretty good piece on this, with interesting quotes from the flyer.
What, perzackly, are “aggressive antibiotics”? Pugnacious penicillin? If this is a standard and recognized medical treatment, why does it need legal protection from lawsuits?
The story appears to center around one man, a Mr. Michael Farris, who urgently wants action on Lyme Disease, as
That is truly some extraordinary bad luck. I am not a doctor, but pending correction, I’m going to believe that this is very, very unlikely. And until someone clearly explains to me what exactly are “aggressive antibiotics” and why it would be necessary to protect doctors from lawsuits for prescribing them, I’m setting this firmly in the “looking askance upon” file.
The long and short of it, as per the RationalWiki link above, is that Mr. Farris is a quack who is making money by selling a cure to a fictional illness (there is no such thing as “chronic Lyme disease”) which does more harm than good, and that the purpose of Romney sending out this mailer was to get him to donate to the campaign.