Category Archives: Stem Cell Doctors


Needs way to measure pain besides the scale of 1-10 – Coastal Courier

By Keith Roach, M.D.

DEAR DR. ROACH: Why is pain measured by numbers? I have severe pain, and doctors do not know what to do when I say it is an 11 on a scale of 1-10. My pain cant be measured by numbers. It depends on the time of day, what I have done during the day and the weather.

I have arthritis in most of my joints, specifically my spine and hips. Having had five spine surgeries, epidurals and hip shots, I have pain every day. There is not much more that can be done but to take opioids. It can be hard to make the decision either to take an opioid and go out shopping or for coffee feeling like I am in a vacuum, or to go out in pain.

There is no chronic pain support group in my area, and no one can understand how I feel, even the professionals, unless they have gone through it. So when asked how I am, I say fine. Other people dont want to hear about my pain.

Why is there not another way the doctor can measure your pain? I have given up everything I love to do in life because of pain. Theres no way to get better from pain. -- M.L.D.

ANSWER: I am very sorry to hear your story, as it is similar to those I have heard before from people with chronic pain due to many different causes. It is disappointing for me to hear that you havent found a pain specialist in your area who seems to care about helping you.

Although the 1-10 pain scale is thoroughly entrenched, it has its flaws. The biggest one is that what one person might consider a two, another person might consider a nine. Ive seen people with horrifying injuries gritting their teeth and saying their pain is a 3 while other people claim their pain from what seems to be a minor condition is a 10 (I had one person tell me the pain from getting his blood pressure taken was a 10). Because pain is subjective, there is no way of standardizing what a person means with their pain rating. However, a 10 on a scale of 1-10 is supposed to be the worst pain imaginable.

DEAR DR. ROACH: My father, 90, has neuropathy in his feet and legs, and it is very painful. He recently talked to a clinic that is offering stem cell treatment to relieve the pain. The clinic says it helps 85% of those who get the treatment; however, because of HIPAA laws, they dont provide any referrals.

The treatments are very expensive ($16,000), and results are seen in six weeks to six months. Are you familiar with this treatment, and is it effective for most people? Is this something you can recommend? -- D.B.

ANSWER: I also have seen advertisements for stem cell treatments for many conditions. For neuropathy in particular, there are no good studies that give an estimate of effectiveness. It may be the case that 85% of people treated at the clinic report improvement. But the risk of a placebo effect is very high with this kind of procedure, and I could not recommend stem cell treatments for neuropathy without better information about the risks, the benefits and how long those benefits might last.

Dr. Roach regrets that he is unable to answer individual questions, but will incorporate them in the column whenever possible. Readers may email questions to ToYourGoodHealth@med.cornell.edu.

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Needs way to measure pain besides the scale of 1-10 - Coastal Courier

Brave intensive care nurse, 27, diagnosed with rare cancer just weeks after dream wedding dies of disease – The Sun

A BRAVE intensive care nurse diagnosed with rare cancer just weeks after her dream wedding has died of the disease.

Julia Cullen, 27, from Hartlepool, won plaudits for her no-holds-barred insight into life battling a rare form of leukaemia.

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The fit and healthy nurse fell ill just weeks after marrying her beloved fiance, Peter, 29, in October 2018.

She underwent gruelling treatment programmes to combat the disease - only for it to return aggressively in February.

Julia died at home in her sleep last week surrounded by her devastated family.

She lost her mum, Cath, who was also a nurse, to the cruel disease four years ago.

Heartbroken Peter wrote on Facebook: I need to let everybody who knew my beautiful wife Julia Cullen know that tonight she unfortunately passed away after a long battle with leukaemia.

She went peacefully in her sleep surrounded by her family. Thank you for all for your support during this difficult past year.

Goodnight darling be at peace I will never forget you.

Julias dad Graham, 57, sister Louisa, 28, brother Ste, 41, and twin Jack tragically lost their mum, Cath, 61, also a nurse, to bowel cancer in May 2016.

The family has now launched an appeal in support of Anthony Nolan and encouraged people to sign up as stem cell donors.

Louisa said: My best friend, my soul, my rock, my beautiful brave sister, took her last breath last night.

Its been such a hard journey for her and us all over the last year from her diagnosis.

Goodnight darling be at peace I will never forget you.

Julia, we always said we could get through anything as long as we have each other, so Im a bit lost what to do in life now.

Julia had shared blunt photos on Instagram from her 15-month fight to show how cancer does not discriminate.

She told her followers after being diagnosed aged 26: If theres anything I want to do after going through this experience of cancer, its to raise awareness that its happening.

Its happening to the young and old, the fit and unfit, the employed and the unemployed.

Its happening now and it could happen to you. Yes. You.

It isnt glamorous, it isnt a story - its hard, its painful, its gruelling, its terrifying.

In her Instagram story, Julia told how she then spotted spots on her legs and messaged Louisa: Ive Googled it, Ive got leukaemia.

Julia was admitted to a hospital ward in January 2019, where doctors dropped the bombshell that she had Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia - a blood cancer rare in adults and mainly found in children.

In Julias Instagram story, she tells how she went pink after an allergic reaction to antibiotics and how shaving her head was freeing yet upsetting as f***.

She shared the highs of spending time with her friends and the lows of having to have a plastic tube - known as a Hickman line - fed through her chest.

THREESY DOES ITBoris to reveal three-pronged 'roadmap' back to normality next week

BUM DEALLag who horrified PM after stuffing Kinder Egg up his own bum gets longer sentence

VACCINE HOPEScientists to find virus vaccine 'by summer' with Brits at front of queue

DANCE MACABRESick vid shows nurses dancing as they carry corpse of coronavirus victim

FUR-LOWDuncan Bannatyne quits lockdown for 3m Portugal villa after furloughing 2.5k staff

LONG HAULMonths more lockdown 'until cases below 1,000 a day - & 2nd peak could be WORSE'

In February, she wrote on Instagram of her determination to win her fight, and said: You will get through it.

You wont fight it as people say, youll face it. Youll face it with whoever and whatever you have to. Because life is precious. So be thankful. Always thankful.

Brother Jack, a hospital porter, said: Words cant describe how heartbroken and devastated I am to lose my twin sister.

I love you so much and I will continue to look after our wonderful family.

To support and donate to the family's appeal visit: https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/louisa-siddle-1

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Brave intensive care nurse, 27, diagnosed with rare cancer just weeks after dream wedding dies of disease - The Sun

RIP Rishi Kapoor! Succumbing to Leukemia, Veteran Actor Dies at 67 in Mumbai, Here is all You Need to Know Ab – India.com

Veteran actor Rishi Kapoor passed away today morning at around 8:45 am. He was suffering from leukemia, a type of cancer. The 67-year old actor was admitted to H N Reliance hospital in Mumbai on Wednesday morning after his health deteriorated. Rishi Kapoor took his last breath in the hospital surrounded by his family. Also Read - Twin Tragedies: After Irrfan Khan, Veteran Actor Rishi Kapoor Dies at 67; Twitter Overwhelmed With Sadness

Kapoor & Sons actor was diagnosed with leukemia in 2018 and was in New York for a long time for his treatment. Indias one of the finest actors, Rishi Kapoor lost his battle with cancer and left the world a day after actor Irrfan Khans demise. While we mourn his death and pray for his souls peace, here we tell you all about the condition he was suffering from. Also Read - Rishi Kapoor Dies at 67 (1952-2020) in Mumbai HN Reliance Foundation Hospital

Leukemia is a blood cancer in which there is an uncontrollable growth of the white blood cells (WBCs), which are responsible for protecting your body from invasion of harmful pathogens and abnormal cells. When the WBCs start dividing too quickly, they do not work normally and crowd out the red blood cells and blood platelets. Notably, WBCs are produced in the bone marrow. In case of leukemia, this spongy tissue produces abnormal WBCs. Also Read - Rishi Kapoor Fans Pray For Speedy Recovery After Actor is Shifted to ICU

Leukemia is characterised by symptoms including fever, persistent fatigue, unexplained weight loss, enlarged spleen, swollen lymph nodes, and recurrent nosebleed. People suffering from this deadly condition also experience excessive sweating, bone pain, and tiny red spots on skin.

Though the exact cause behind leukemia is unknown, doctors believe, it occurs when the WBCs undergo mutation in their DNA. This leads to rapid and abnormal growth of these cells.

Doctors conduct a physical exam to check for signs and symptoms of leukemia. They also recommend blood tests to determine if you have abnormal level of WBCs. Bone marrow test is also performed to confirm the condition. As a part of this test, a sample of bone marrow is removed from the hipbone of the patient and is sent to a lab for test.

As far as treatment of leukemia is concerned, options like chemotherapy, biological therapy, targeted therapy, radiation therapy, and stem cell transplant are currently available.

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RIP Rishi Kapoor! Succumbing to Leukemia, Veteran Actor Dies at 67 in Mumbai, Here is all You Need to Know Ab - India.com

The teenager who survived cancer, sepsis and a collapsed lung – Wales Online

Teenager Libby Waite first noticed something was wrong with her health on a family holiday to Florida. She felt exhausted the entire time and struggled to walk the shortest of diatances.

And once she returned home and her friends spotted a lump on her neck while admiring her necklace, she knew something more sinister was going on.

After seeing her GP, who sent Libby for blood tests, a private scan and biopsy revealed she had cancer.

She was immediately referred to the Noah's Ark Children's Hospital for Wales in Cardiff where she was diagnosed with the blood cancer Hodgkin lymphoma.

"As a teenage girl, my first concern was about how it would affect my appearance. I was scared I would lose my hair," Libby said.

Her mum Joanne added: "As a mother it's your worst nightmare. I felt like I had my guts wrenched out, it was awful."

Unfortunately, Libby's first few weeks in hospital took a dramatic turn when she contracted sepsis because of her suppressed immune system caused by the first dose of chemotherapy.

"I was so shocked. The doctors had first thought she would have very little side-effects, so no-one expected that reaction," mum Joanne explained.

"One minute she was sat having breakfast, the next she went quiet and unresponsive. It was frightening."

As a result of the sepsis, Libby's lung also collapsed and she had to spend two weeks in intensive care while she recovered.

Libby was eventually able to leave hospital on Christmas Eve 2015.

"Although it had been scary it was so nice to be able to get home for Christmas," said Libby.

Libby, now 18, from Pontypool, returned to hospital where she was able to continue with a different type of chemotherapy.

Despite having four doses, tests revealed that the cancer had not gone away, so she was referred to a specialist consultant in London who recommended immunotherapy - a treatment which uses a persons own modified cells to treat cancer.

It is thought that Libby was one of the first patients in Wales to receive the relatively new treatment back in 2016.

Libby had a stem cell transplant where her own cells were harvested, treated and planted back in to her body to fight the cancer.

This required a three-week isolation period where her immune system was completely supressed.

Unfortunately, Libby did lose her hair as a result of the earlier chemotherapy treatment, but she said: "It actually wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. I had a really cool wig and I was able to use make-up for my eyebrows."

Thankfully the treatment was successful and Libby is now in remission after a long recuperation period at home while she gathered her strength.

She recalled: "I felt so weak, I was confined to the sofa for weeks and I had to rebuild my strength to walk again"

Eventually Libby said she was was able to return to school and sit her GCSEs and go to her year 11 prom.

"Going to prom was the first time I finally felt like a young person again," she admitted.

"I just wanted to go out with my friends and do everything they were doing."

Libby, who is currently applying for university, is now helping Cancer Research UK launch Race for Life at Home in Wales to help carry on the fight against the disease in these unprecedented times.

She took part in her local Race for Life 5k event in Cwmbran in 2017 after her treatment.

The Cwmbran event is among many which the organisers have postponed this spring and summer to protect the countrys health during the coronavirus outbreak.

But as the nation continues on lockdown, undeterred women and men are already vowing to carry on and complete a Race for Life at Home challenge at home, in their garden or their nearest green space.

Many of the scientists and researchers funded by Cancer Research UK are currently being redeployed to help in the fight against Covid-19, including assisting with testing.

By helping to beat coronavirus, the charity said it can lessen the impact it is having on the care of cancer patients.

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Cassandra Miles, Cancer Research UKs spokeswoman for Wales, said: "At a time when it feels like everything is at a standstill, there is one thing that hasnt stopped, cancer.

"Our priority as a charity is ensuring that people affected by cancer are getting the support they need right now.

"But we are already getting people asking about doing Race for Life at Home because they dont want to see the charity lose out on vital funding. Its truly humbling to see the response.

"So from their homes, wed love for supporters to join us and Race for Life at Home in these challenging times.

"From a run or 5K walk around the garden to limbo in the living room, there is no wrong way to Race for Life at Home. With no entry fee, people might choose to twerk, limbo, star jump, squat, skip, dance, or come up with their own novel way of taking part and share it with friends. The message is very much that while we might be apart, were doing this together. There is no wrong way to get involved and join our community.

"Those lucky enough to have a garden may choose to make use of it but whatever people decide to do, we are immensely grateful for the support, now more than ever. If the idea takes off, we could be looking at hundreds of people in Wales stepping forward to Race for Life at Home and perhaps collecting sponsorship to do so."

People can visit raceforlife.org and sign up free for ideas on how they can create their own Race for Life at Home challenge.

And the Cancer Research UK Race for Life Facebook page will help people feel energised with weekly live workout sessions.

Organisers are also inviting participants to join the Race for Life at Home community by sharing photos and videos on social media using the hashtag, #RaceForLifeAtHome.

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The teenager who survived cancer, sepsis and a collapsed lung - Wales Online

Shares of Mesoblast Tumbled Over 20% Today After Doubling Last Week – The Motley Fool

What happened

Shares of Mesoblast (NASDAQ:MESO) fell as much as 22.3% today as investors decided to lock in gains. The stem-cell stock erupted for a 139% gain on Friday after data from a small study suggested the company's cell therapy might significantly improve outcomes for COVID-19 patients placed on mechanical ventilators.

The promising early stage results pushed the company's market cap to over $1.6 billion. Mesoblast had been valued at $450 million a few weeks earlier. Today's move suggests investors are taking the biopharma's inexperience and the preliminary nature of the study's data into account.

As of 3:58 p.m. EDT on Monday, the small-cap stock had settled to a 21.5% loss.

Image source: Getty Images.

In March and April, Mesoblast conducted a small study at New York City's Mount Sinai Hospital to evaluate if its lead drug candidate, remestemcel-L, could treat acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in individuals with COVID-19. Doctors administered two doses of the experimental therapy within five days of patients being placed on a mechanical ventilator. The study was conducted using an emergency compassionate-use order and was not considered a clinical trial.

Of the 12 individuals in the study, 10 survived and nine had been removed from ventilators at a median time of 10 days. That represents a survival rate of 83% and indicates 75% of patients improved enough to come off ventilator support relatively quickly.

All patients had received other experimental drugs, and the study was very small. But investors chose to focus on the remarkable outcome, especially when an observational study of 2,600 COVID-19 patients on ventilator support in New York City hospitals found that 88% died.

Mesoblast intends to use the 12-patient study to influence the design of a larger clinical trial studying remestemcel-L in the same patient population, with participation from medical centers across North America. It's plausible that some types of stem cells could help to relieve ARDS in COVID-19 patients, but investors need to remain cautious until the results are replicated in larger populations.

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Shares of Mesoblast Tumbled Over 20% Today After Doubling Last Week - The Motley Fool

THE BENEFITS OF TADALAFIL FOR ENLARGED PROSTATE AND ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION – RecentlyHeard.com

Tobacco kills and hurts people; therefore, you are always advised to quit smoking. Nowadays, some new options are available on the market. People can select a safe option that will not cause any health issue.

Smoking alternatives prove helpful for your quit smoking process. Visit a smoker supply shop to find out available substitutes. Here are six smoking tips to avoid health risks and other issues.

In the past, smoker believed that low-tar; light cigarettes had limited health risks. Studies prove that these cigarettes cant decrease dangerous health effects. The FDA (Food & Drug Administration) has barred these terms, such as low, mild and light in cigarette sales.

Some people prefer hand-rolled cigarettes because they consider them safe. Remember, these cigarettes have a maximum risk of cancers of esophagus, larynx, pharynx, and mouth. You may find them dangerous than machine-made cigarettes.

Nowadays, natural cigarettes are available in the market. Manufactures claim for selling cigarettes without additives and chemicals. These are rolled with cotton filters. Safety of these cigarettes may depend on the herbs in them. Remember, herbal cigarettes can be less dangerous if they are free from tobacco, carbon monoxide and tar.

E-cigarettes or electronic cigarettes can be a safe alternative to tobacco smoke. These are designed to convert the liquid into vapors to inhale. Other than tobacco, they depend on a liquid prepared from nicotine or other flavorings. However, the FDA doesnt endorse these products.

The advertisers of e-cigarettes claim that these options are safe and enable you to quit smoking. If you want a safe alternative of smoking, consult your doctor. With a battery-operated unit, you can enjoy non-nicotine solutions.

These look similar to cigarettes but work without burning any kind of tobacco. You can buy an e-cigarette as per your budget. Make sure to avoid overuse of these devices because it is dangerous for your health.

Studies show that vaping is safer than smoking. There is no need to worry about ash, tar or combustion. You will find them great for skin health, oral hygiene, and lung capacity, improved senses of taste and smell and circulation.

With the help of vaping, you can avoid noxious odors. These devices may have a particular aroma s per its flavor. The smell of vapors is hardly noticeable. Vaping enables you to enjoy maximum control on the nicotine dosage.

Along with vaporizers, you can get e-juices in different strengths. These devices offer you maximum control on vapors to exhale. Some tools, such as pod vapes are available to increase your convenience.

Get the advantage of endless options in terms of flavors. There are numerous new flavors in the market, such as tobacco, menthol, foods, beverages, desserts and fruits. You will find them great for instant satisfaction.

Bongs aka binger, billy or bubblers are water pipes to smoke marijuana. These are around for centuries to avoid possible problems of traditional smoking. You can buy them in different shapes and sizes.

A basic bong consists of a chamber and a bowl. Feel free to purchase a colorful bong that looks similar to a work of art. Bongs come with a small bowl to carry dried weed. Once you light this weed, it combusts and offers smoke. Remember, water in the base of bubbler will bubble while you inhale.

The smoke passes through water before entering your lungs and mouth. A bong is a good option to smoke weed as compared to dried weed bowled in a paper. Water in the bong can decrease the hazards of dry heat you may get from joints. You can enjoy cooler, smooth and creamy effect instead of harsh smoke.

If you want to decrease the hazards of smoking, you have to smoke in an open area. A room may have several things with probability to catch fire. Hot ashes or cigarette can make things dangerous. Moreover, an open environment will save you from possible troubles.

You can get rid of the smell of smoke easily in an open environment. It proves useful to get fresh oxygen immediately after smoking. After smoking, put your cigarettes out every time. Avoid walking away from smoking materials and lit cigarettes.

Immediately put water on the butts and ashes to make them cool before throwing them in the trash.

Remember, it is not safe to smoke after taking medication. You cant escape or prevent from fire if you are feeling sleepy. Carefully dispose of a burning cigarette before going to bed or taking medicines.

You should not smoke in your bed because bedding and mattresses can easily catch on fire. Moreover, you can sleep with a lit cigarette in your hand. Always put cigarettes out in ashtrays or buckets with sand. Keep lighters and matches away from children.

Alternatives to smoking are always useful for people interested in smoking cessation. You can try nicotine patches to apply on your body. Remember, these patches are designed with latex to apply on your skin. Heavy smokers can use them to get a stable dose of nicotine.

Lozenges are similar to candies and excellent for an instant nicotine fix. Feel free to put them in mouth and wait for ten minutes. You will feel its effects after a short period. These can dissolve in your mouth with 30 minutes. It can be an excellent choice to keep you busy.

Nicotine gums may start working within 5 to 10 minutes. You may find them in different flavors. Make sure to consult your doctor to learn about the right dose and its effects on your body. Some people may feel hiccups and nausea after consuming them.

Moreover, you cant ignore inhalers and nasal spray. It is a plastic tube similar to a pen. Inhalers can release nicotine with every puff. Nasal sprays are easy and convenient options to use. Keep it in mind that inhalers may become the reason for throat irritation and coughing. You have to consult your physician before trying any alternative.

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THE BENEFITS OF TADALAFIL FOR ENLARGED PROSTATE AND ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION - RecentlyHeard.com

Cancer treatment made me infertile at 29heres how Im planning to have a family now – Well+Good

The ski trip to Utah wasnt supposed to be this way. It was just supposed to be a fun, extended weekend trip with my husband. We were planning to celebrate me getting my dream job six months after graduating from business school, his placement in a competitive cardiology fellowship program, and our new life in New York City. It certainly wasnt supposed to be the day I was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkins lymphoma.

I had started experiencing intense chest pain on the flight to Salt Lake City, so my husband and I went straight to the emergency room as soon as the plane landed.After six hours of various tests, the emergency room doctor did a CT scan to see if I had a blood clot from the flight, but instead, what he found was a 10-by-8 centimeter tumor between my lungs, right behind my heart.

This was not news I was prepared to hear. I was 29, and my husband and I had been talking about starting a family together. Suddenly, it felt like my whole future was in doubt.

Non-Hodgkins lymphoma is one of the most common cancers in the U.S., accounting for roughly 4 percent of all cancers. But that statistic is a bit deceiving. There are 30 types of Non-Hodgkins lymphoma, and I was diagnosed with a rare one, primary mediastinal b-cell, which afflicts about 3,000 young women a year. Its a type of cancer that starts in white blood cells, which are crucial for immune health. For me, treatment would involve aggressive chemotherapy and immunotherapy, which would take 18 weeks. In the process, my body would be put into menopause (because chemotherapy can damage the ovaries), meaning I would likely no longer be able to conceive naturally.

That was a problem, because my husband and I knew we wanted kids. We were readyI had even taken out my IUD six months earlier. I knew that one option I had would be to freeze my eggs before I began treatment; my friend Lindsay Beck, a cancer survivor, had started a charity called Fertile Hope that encouraged cancer patients to advocate for their own fertility preservation. It was her work I thought of as I sat in a cold doctors office back in New York City.

I understand that not every woman with cancer who wants kids may want to do IVF. Some may choose to become a mother in another way, such as adopting. Still others may not have the luxury of choice because they cant afford it or theyre already too sick to undergo fertility treatments. I was fortunate that I could. For me, I instinctively felt that IVF was the right choice for me.

Because the tumor was growing so rapidly, I only had enough time to complete a single egg retrieval and freezing cycle. I was fortunate that Memorial Sloan Kettering, where I had set up my oncology care, speedily connected me with a reproductive endocrinologist at Weill Cornell Medicine; without their fast action, I might not have had time for even that single cycle.

I was also fortunate that my insurance was covering the majority of the process (some states require insurance companies to cover egg freezing for people like me who are losing their fertility to cancer) and the remainder was being covered by a Livestrong scholarship. They are covering the freezing costs of my eggs for up to five years. Had I not been fortunate to have coverage in these ways, the process would have cost me $30,000.

Going through IVF was rough. I spent 10 days before the egg retrieval appointment giving myself multiple daily hormone injections to stimulate egg growthand the shots had to be timed perfectly. I also saw the doctor every day to make sure the egg follicles were growing properly. The last day, the doctor performed the egg retrieval, where they stuck a needle through my vaginal wall and suctioned the eggs out of the ovarian follicles to store and freeze. Fortunately, I was under sedation for that.

I was nervous about the whole process, but the evening before my retrieval day, there was actually an enormous fertile lunar moon. I saw it as a good omen and it most certainly was; I had 39 eggs retrieved that day, which is more than twice what my doctor was aiming for. Now that my eggs were safely frozen, I could focus on cancer treatment.

Two weeks after I finished freezing my eggs, I started cancer treatment. Physically, chemo and immunotherapy took an immense toll on my body. I had six rounds of treatment, each being three weeks long. During the first week of each round, I would receive the actual treatment in the hospital. A nurse would hook me up to a bag of chemotherapy drugs that would come home with me in a fanny pack. This treatment would run continuously for 36 hours, and then I would come back to the hospital for them to unhook me from it. The next week, my body would become neutropenic, which meant my white blood cells would dip and I would basically have no immune system, so Id have to be very careful about seeing anyone that even had the sniffles. The third week was spent recovering.

Often I was too tired to leave the couch. But my family and friends were amazing, coming over just to sit with me. Im so grateful for them, and my husband who was there for me every step of those long, 18 weeks.

It was draining emotionally, too. I started seeing a therapist. I had to get comfortable with the fact that I might die. In turn, that made me think about how I wanted to make my living days wonderful and joyous. I wanted to savor the days I did have. But of course its difficult to live life to the fullest when you have cancer; there are limitations to how you can genuinely enjoy yourself when youre constantly nauseous and exhausted. Mostly I just treasured the time I spent with my husband, family, and friends, just sitting and talking, being together.

I finished treatment in June 2018 and was considered to be cancer-free until a checkup in October 2018. My doctor did a CT scan, which showed an ominous mass in my chest. In order to make sure the mass wasnt cancerous, they had to do a biopsy, but because the mass was so close to my heart, it meant an invasive surgery that could be life-threatening. The surgery was scheduled for a few weeks later. After the surgery, my doctor told me the news I was dreading: My cancer was back.

I started treatment all over again, this time a more aggressive form of chemotherapy, a different immunotherapy. After nine weeks of that intense portion of treatment, I completed 20 sessions of radiation and had an autologous stem cell transplant, which had me in quarantine for 100 days last spring. I also focused even more on my mental and emotional health, seeing my therapist more often and starting reiki, acupuncture, and meditation.

My therapist suggested my husband and I adopt a dog, so we did, a mini labradoodle named Chloe. Shes become our little baby, someone the two of us can take care of together as a couple. Its a change from him taking care of me or me taking care of him; Chloe we take of together. She also just brings us so much joy and that alone has been incredibly healing.

On January 22, 2019, I officially went into remissionjust over a year after my initial diagnosis. When we got the news, I literally leaped out of my chair and hugged my oncologist. It was surreal. After spending the past two years coping with the idea of dying, now I could focus on the idea of living.

Before my cancer diagnosis, my husband and I were ready to start a family, and we still have that dream. Our doctors advise waiting 24 months after being in remission, so we have about 18 more months left before we have the all clear. Im 32 years old now and a lot of my friends have started having babies. Its hard that I could be experiencing my own childs first steps or birthdays right now, but thats been put on hold.

My husband is a cardiologist and is working on the front lines fighting COVID-19, so we cant be together physically right now. Im isolating apart from him, with Chloe. But when the time is right, we know my frozen eggs are there waiting for us. There is so much life out there for me, for us. And Im really excited to live it, with my family.

As told to Emily Laurence.

Originally posted here:
Cancer treatment made me infertile at 29heres how Im planning to have a family now - Well+Good

Incarceration Is Killing Us – Truthout

A woman plays a horn while taking part in a vigil outside Queensboro Correctional Facility on April 23, 2020, in New York City.Johannes Eisele / AFP via Getty Images

Kelly Hayes talks with Alan Mills about COVID-19, prisons and making bold demands.

Note: This a rush transcript and has been lightly edited for clarity. Copy may not be in its final form.

Kelly Hayes: Welcome to Movement Memos, a Truthout podcast about things you should know if you want to change the world. Im your host Kelly Hayes.

Get the news you want, delivered to your inbox every day.

Tensions are high in the U.S. as lockdowns continue in some states, while others have begun to ease restrictions. Gun-toting right-wing protesters have staged astroturf protests, demanding the economy be reopened. Doctors and scientists have continued to argue in favor of strict lockdowns to stem the spread of the disease. And stuck in the middle, we have everyday workers who either cannot escape the threat of going to work, or who are becoming increasingly desperate for any means of income in the absence of government relief.

What I hope people are considering as we debate our demands for stimulus and whether or not we reopen the economy, is that we are fighting for the dynamics that will define our experience of a plague. We are not talking about a policy fight that begins and ends in the next few months. We are talking about our experience of a slow-motion catastrophe of unknown duration. We dont know if this disease will slow down in the summer. It is presently thriving in some very warm and sunny environments. But if we do manage to slow things down, we are still looking at another wave of this in the winter or fall that could be much worse.

We are fighting, right now, for what our society looks like in its darkest hours. Economies can be manipulated. Their rules can be bent, broken and redefined. Thats not true of the coronavirus. There is no question which of these problems we should be leaning into. Rather than sacrificing ourselves to the virus to save the economy, we have to transform the economy as needed to survive the virus.

We have to be willing to change everything, and part of that will be changing how we assess the value of peoples lives. Right now, many of us are being viewed as disposable by people who have significantly more power and money than we do. Even within the working class, there are gradations in how we experience crisis, and how much we benefit from the subjugation and disposal of others. Imprisoned people are generally among those at the bottom of such hierarchies. We are conditioned by society to look away from the horrors of the prison system and to blame those experiencing carceral violence for the abuse they suffer. We are conditioned to believe that some people are expendable. Because capitalism doesnt simply happen to us. It infects our lives and our relationships with others. It positions us within dynamics that lead us to enact its violence, just as we do when we ignore the experiences of imprisoned people.

To transform our society such that we are not disposable, we have to destroy the moral framework that absolves the system of its violence. And we have to destroy the framework that absolves us of ours. Because its the same framework. It always has been. Its a framework that tells us its okay to let people die, and that tells others that its okay to let us die. This terrible moment is providing us with many opportunities to redefine who we are to each other. The catastrophe that is playing out in U.S. prisons is one of those opportunities. We have a moral choice about whether to allow these people to be sacrificed to the virus, or whether we will insist that they are not disposable and must be saved. If we cannot internalize this lesson ourselves, then we arent going to have what it takes to imagine a better world, let alone build one.

So lets talk about COVID-19 in prisons and how we can get people free.

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Kelly Hayes: Across the United States, people are locked down in their homes to keep COVID-19 at bay. Meanwhile, millions of imprisoned people are trapped in facilities where the contagion is running rampant, creating internationally recognized epicenters of contagion. And while some Americans may not be concerned with the fate of prisoners in this moment of crisis, that view couldnt be more short-sighted, or self destructive.

Todays guest is Alan Mills, the Executive Director of the Uptown Peoples Law Center in Chicago. Alan has been fighting for the rights of imprisoned people for decades and has played a key role in recent efforts to free prisoners who are locked in facilities where the coronavirus is spreading like wildfire. Alan, welcome to the show.

Alan Mills: Thank you. Well, the podcast now I get a chance to be on it.

KH: How are you doing today, friend?

AM: You know, its a little lonely not having coworkers. And I hate the fact that I cant walk along the lake all by myself. But you know, all things considered, Im doing good.

KH: Glad to hear it and so glad to have you on the show today. During this crisis, the Uptown Peoples Law Center in Chicago has played a prominent role in the fight to liberate Illinois prisoners who are trapped in dungeon-like conditions, and in some cases, surrounded by death. But before we get into legal maneuvers, I just want to clarify something for some of our listeners who may feel like they dont have the head space to think about what happens to prisoners right now. Can you explain why that mindset is misguided?AM: Well, first and most, I think in some ways, most fundamentally, people in prisons are not like some separate species. You know, the Uptown Peoples Law Center started doing prisoners work when we were founded, not because we were particularly interested in prisons, but because it was people from Uptown who went to prison and people from prison came back to the community. And the people who founded this organization thought that it was silly to think of somehow when they went behind a prison wall, that they became not part of their community. And I think thats true all over the country. Most people in [state] prisons, 95% get out. A lot of people on the outside end up going in. So to think that theres an impenetrable wall between prisons and people in the community is just wrong. People have to remember that what happens in prison doesnt stay in prison. If we really want to get rid of this pandemic, which is spreading throughout the world, were going to have to solve the problem in prisons. You know, just because of the end of their sentence, 300 people a week are released from Illinois prisons. Those people are coming back to our communities. The question is, are we going to safeguard them so that when they come home, theyre healthy, or are they going to come home with an extraordinarily infectious disease? Allowing them to call them with a disease does absolutely nobody any good.KH: Were also talking, in some cases, about prisons that are located in counties that dont have much in the way of medical infrastructure.

AM: Absolutely. I mean, weve already seen Stateville Correctional Center, which is the Illinois prison which has the most tested and confirmed COVID-19 cases as overwhelmed Joliets ICU beds, and for a while its emergency rooms. But Stateville is located in one of the larger communities among our prisons. I look at Menard Correctional Center, which is way down in Southern Illinois, in Randolph County. Randolph County has one of the highest concentrations of COVID-19 in the state outside of the immediate Cook County area, and there are 2000 prisoners there. In the entire County, there are two ICU beds. In the entire southern 18 counties in Illinois, theres less than 100 ICU beds, and thats where the plurality of our prisoners are. So if a lot of people in prison get sick, its not only going to be a prison problem, its going to spill out into the community and will crash our public healthcare system throughout at least the southern half of the state.

KH: Whenever theres a well publicized tragedy in U.S. prisons, conditions in these facilities are often described by journalists as though theyre exceptional. In many ways, its a tendency that mirrors our current public dialogue about the financial crisis. To some people, the idea of millions of Americans experiencing a simultaneous economic freefall was unthinkable. But for others, this meltdown is consistent with our long held fears about where this system was headed. Can you say a bit about how the nature of U.S. prisons makes moments like this one inevitable?

AM: Yeah. I mean, we have built this problem over the last 50 years, starting really in the early 1970s, we began the trend towards mass incarceration where we incarcerated millions and millions of people. We currently have over 2 million people locked in our prisons and jails throughout the country, and that is unprecedented worldwide, and certainly in the history of this country. We now have about seven times as many people in prison as we had in the early 1970s. So packing people into small spaces is in and of itself a recipe for disaster and has been for years. This is not the first outbreak thats happened in prison. Weve seen that certainly with tuberculosis. Weve seen that with the regular old flu that comes around. So nothing here is new, but I would go beyond that. We have also, under-invested perhaps isnt the right word, but we certainly havent taken care of the people that we put behind prison walls. Illinois is a particularly good example of that, where the medical care in this state has been horrific for decades.

About five years ago, Illinois spending per prisoner was towards the very bottom of the United States. We were down at about 47 in terms of the ratio between staff and prisoners, medical staff and prisoners, we were 49th of 50. Weve improved a little bit. So maybe now were in the higher forties, but were still way down at the bottom of the stack. We at the Uptown Peoples Law Center sued about the medical care that was provided in prisons a decade ago, long before anybody thought about COVID-19 or the coronavirus, or any of these other things. We just werent treating really, really basic stuff. I can remember vividly a prisoner that I had been corresponding for awhile with, and hed been complaining about the lack of medical care, down at Tamms Correctional Center, our supermax prison, now thankfully closed.

And he said, When I was up at Stateville, I got a prostate test and they told me my PSA levels were elevated. They said it wasnt bad, but that I should have it checked every year to make sure it didnt get worse. Before any kind of follow up, he got transferred into Tamms and the doctors at Tamms claimed he was lying, so he never had an elevated test.

They checked his records, it wasnt there, and [they claimed] he was just trying to maneuver the system and try to get something he wasnt entitled to try and get away out of his cell. He got worse and worse, and they kept telling him, why youre getting older, you have arthritis, you know, thats why your have all these aches and pains. And he was like 40 years old. Finally, I went down to visit him and he literally had to crawl into the visiting room. He could not stand up. He could not get in and out of bed. He could barely use the toilet. And I just raised holy hell when I was down there. They finally took him to an outside doctor who realized who actually checked and found the old levels and did his tests, and discovered that he not only had cancer, but that at that point it had metastasized. They then immediately put him on to chemotherapy. However, a month later he died. This is a tragedy that repeats itself over and over again, even when there isnt a crisis.

Now, we settled this case about medical care almost a year ago and the settlement gave the department really a 10 year period. It was going to take 10 years to bring them up to minimal constitutional standards where theyre actually providing medical care that people desperately needed. They were that far behind. Unfortunately, nature has not given us 10 years. Here we are less than a year later and we have a pandemic, not just on the outside, but spreading through the prison system. And we are simply totally unequipped to deal with that. You know, I think in some sense, the most dramatic example of that is the fact that its Stateville and they had to bring in the National Guard in order, not for security purposes, but to provide doctors. So we had to bring in essentially army doctors because the Stateville medical system was so overwhelmed, they just could not deal with such simple things as checking peoples temperature, checking peoples blood oxygen levels, and they just couldnt do that sort of really simple stuff, let alone actually isolating people, let alone testing everybody. What that has meant is we have 10 deaths of prisoners at Stateville and we still dont have universal testing of all the prisoners in Stateville.

KH: We have a habit in the U.S. of congratulating ourselves for abolishing things that still exist, albeit less officially. The state of Illinois officially did with away with the death penalty in 2011, but as youve just outlined, death by incarceration has continued. Can you say a bit more about how death by incarceration is enacted, even in the absence of a pandemic?

AM: Yeah. We like to talk about not having a legal death penalty, but having this slow motion death penalty. And slow motion in the sense of like the cancer story I just told, this is somebody who did not have a death penalty, did not have a life sentence, but nonetheless died because of what happened in prison.

You and I have talked about Tiffany Rusher before. Tiffany was a young woman who went into prison. Im on a prostitution charge. She was doing survival sex work. And got into a fight, got put into solitary, and her mental health just bottomed out when she was in solitary, got really bad, became suicidal, started to engage in self harm, and rather than provide treatment or realize that solitary was a really bad idea, the department of corrections solution, and I put solution in big air quotes, which you cant see, was to put her into a crisis cell where she was stripped naked, taken away all of her possessions, no books, no magazines, no TV, no radio, given a suicide proof smock to wear and left alone.

She cycled in and out of these crisis cells for months, would spend a couple of days, sometimes strapped down to a bed, and then as soon as she was released, she would attempt to harm herself again. Eventually, for the last eight months of her sentence, she sat in one of these crisis cells for eight straight months with nothing whatsoever to do.

No human being to speak to. Unsurprisingly that did not make her better. And eventually, she committed suicide and was successful at doing so. So, you know, thats another example of somebody who got the slow motion death penalty, thereby solitary plus bad mental health care.

We have another client who hasnt died, thank goodness, but did lose his leg. What started off as a blister went untreated and improperly treated for years, and eventually ended up with gangrene spreading up his leg, which had to be amputated. So these are all things that happened even before any kind of crisis happened. That was just the base level of care we were failing to provide to people who had what on the outside are relatively routine conditions, things that are treated every day. But inside, even those routine conditions, if left untreated long enough, can end up killing people.

And thats what we mean by a slow motion death penalty that Illinois, and other states, I dont want to say Illinois is unique, cause its not, but Illinois is among the worst. And we simply kill too many people.

KH: So what has the legal fight to free imprisoned people due to COVID-19 looked like?

AM: Well, its sort of proceeded on two fronts. The part that Ive been most involved in is saying that really theres nothing you can do in a prison that will keep people safe. Simple things like what we now all know about social isolation, which is why the tools are not sitting in the same room having this conversation. Were doing it remotely. Social isolation in a prison cell is impossible. Youre talking about two strangers who inhabit a cell that may be as big as 6 x 12, or maybe as small as four and a half by 10 feet. What four and a half by 10 feet means is it smaller than the typical parking place. It means that if you stand up and hold out your arms, you cant touch both sides of the cell with your fingertips because its not that wide. You can touch one side with your elbow and the other side of the fingertips. It means that both people can stand up in this all at the same time, but they cant both move at the same time in that cell.

So the idea that in those kinds of conditions you can somehow maintain a six foot separation is absurd. Other people live in open dormitories. We may have 40 people living and sleeping within a foot of each other. Again, its absolutely impossible to keep six foot apart. But even people who have their own cell, who are alone, have to come in contact with staff over and over and over again. And staff, frankly, has been, from all we can tell, the vector that has brought the coronavirus into the prisons. If you think about a persons typical day, if theyre in their cell, they get fed, which means that a staff person is walking down the gallery, touching bars, touching trays, picking them up, handing them out. And each of those contacts is a pathway for cross contamination. Or if the guard himself got it from the outside and brings it in, he could be handing that off to a hundred prisoners in a day. If you think about movement, anytime you leave your cell, you have to be handcuffed. Its impossible for a guard to handcuff somebody maintaining a six foot distance. They have to be right up in your face. They have to be patting you down, touching your clothes, touching your, you know, your hands, your legs, all of your clothing. Thats what a pat down is. When we move people, we tend to put them into a group cages. So for example, weve heard lots and lots of stories where people cells get searched and during that search, what they do is they move people out of their cells, put four or five of them together in a bullpen while their cells are being searched.

Again, theres no way with six guys or five guys in a small cage that you can maintain any sort of separation, and thats when coronavirus spreads. We had a tragic case at Stateville where somebody had been separated because they were positive for coronavirus, and then apparently he got into some oral dispute with the nurse about how they werent really taking his temperature properly or, I dont know the details there, but at any rate, somebody decided that he had violated some internal rule, so they decided to send him to solitary, walked him over to solitary where they did not have positive people. Within a week, everybody on that same unit tested positive. So the very idea that somehow we can isolate people in prison cells and keep them safe, we think is just wrong. So weve been pushing the governor to use all the tools that are available to him to get people out of prison, the only way to stay safe in prison is to leave. So weve been asking, the governor has in fact, commuted sentences of a dozen or more people.

The state has the right to get back six months of good time to most prisoners in the system, and theyve been doing some of that to get people out a little bit early. But they also have the right to put people on home confinement. Anybody within the last six months or a year of their sentence or anybody serving a lower level felony, thats not a sex offense, can be put on home confinement. They havent done a lot of that. They also now have the right to furlough anybody for medical reasons, protecting them from the COVID virus is obviously a medical reason. So literally anybody they want to, they could at this point send home or put on an electronic bracelet to get them out of a prison cell. Theyve done very little of that. Although the governor did loosen the requirements for medical furlough. So literally anybody whos now eligible, but theyre just not using that tool. So weve gone to court and in a couple of different ways to try to get the court to order a speed of up of that process. Sadly that has not worked. It has worked in other states. Ohios federal court just issued a great order getting some of the elderly and more vulnerable people out of one of the prisons in Ohio. A couple of jails around the country have had some release orders and a couple of the immigration detention centers are beginning to release people in order to keep them safe. Illinois has not yet. The other set of litigation, which we at the Uptown Peoples Law Center are also involved in, is trying to improve the care of those people that are left. So weve been trying there. There is a federal monitor in our class action lawsuit thats been going on for a decade and hes been trying to get them to impose better isolation procedures. For a while we had a big fight over whether theyre actually gonna provide soap to people, since the first and biggest advice everybody gets is you should wash your hands regularly. You cant do that if you dont have soap and running water. At least that problem seems to be solved in most of the prisons [in Illinois]. There was not enough soap, and theres not enough bleach and other cleaning supplies, but at least everybody has some soap now. The very fact you have to fight to get people soap is just absurd. So, you know, those are all the kinds of legal approaches we get. But I really have to say, although Im a lawyer and I think the legal system has its uses , what this has really proved to me is there are real limitations on what the legal system is going to do for prisoners in an emergency. The law is much better at cleaning up messes afterwards than preventing them from happening in the first place.

KH: Illinois governor J.B. Pritzker has faced some backlash for releasing prisoners that some critics have characterized as violent. Can you speak to that criticism?

AM: Uh, its wrong. IDOC, if anything, and the governors office have been overly cautious in who they let out of prison. Nobody that they have let out is at high risk of committing any sort of new crime, let alone any, any sort of violence. Which is not to say nobodys ever going to commit a crime that is released. People forget that in the ordinary course, Illinois and most states have a recidivism rate of about 50% or more. So even under normal circumstances, 50% of the people who would get out of prison are going to commit another crime. So does this to require that any sort of reform be 100% successful and have zero recidivism rate is just absurd. Thats not the way this society is set up. We wouldnt have 2 million people in prison if it was easy to stay out. But if anything, hes being far too cautious. And what has happened is that the people who are making these criticisms have really just focused on the name of the crime that somebody committed. Its easy to say, well, this person committed murder, or this person had a life sentence. But you have to look behind that and say, what really happened? So for example, one of the murder cases I know about was a 14 year old who was involved in a gun sale with a much older person. His job in that sale was to hang onto the gun.

The sale went bad and there was a struggle over the gun. It went off by accident and he was convicted of murder. Everybody admitted that the gun went off by accident, but it was in the course of committing a felony and therefore under Illinois is very strict felony murder statute, hes just as guilty of murder as is somebody who went out and stalked somebody and shot them. So, you know, and, and hes now spent 13 years in prison, is a very different person, has taken advantage of every opportunity he had in prison. And the governor commuted his sentence, something that had been on his desk for a year, having nothing to do with COVID-19 or the current pandemic. This is somebody who should not have spent any time in prison and certainly should not have spent 13 years in prison. It was certainly time for him to go home. So you know, there are lots of those stories. You cant just name a crime and then say, well, this person is violent and therefore theyre, theyre too dangerous to let out. You need to know the details of what happened. Who was that person then? How did they get involved, and what have they done since, and who are they today? Identifying people by the name of their crime is just shortsighted, wrong, and dehumanizes people in prison.

KH: I couldnt agree more. And this also highlights the problem with some of the well-intentioned language being invoked by advocates of mass release. Some people who have pushed for decarceration have used language like nonviolent offenders to elicit sympathy for prisoners who are perceived as non-threatening. Can you say a bit about the violent/nonviolent divide and why relying on these distinctions is dangerous?

AM: Yeah. I mean, first of all, theyre just wrong. Statistically. You know, the highest recidivism rate is among people who are convicted of drug crimes. Everybodys favorite example of nonviolent, which is not because theyre bad people, but because we dont treat the underlying condition in prison. So unsurprisingly, people who are addicted to drugs who spend six months in prison and go home, arent magically changed. Their lives arent changed and their addiction wasnt changed. But more fundamentally, what someone did, often decades ago, doesnt define who they are. It didnt define who they were back then, and it certainly doesnt define who they are today. So to make this distinction between violent and nonviolent, simply as labeling people by one act, they did one day in their life, that is not how any of us would like to be judged, by the worst day in our life, which is what generally people in prison are there for, is something that happened on the worst day of their. Wed all like to be judged on the way weve lived our lives in general, whether weve done, you know, good things or bad things, and. Just to make this distinction, which is arbitrary in the first place, between violent and nonviolent makes no sense at all. I dont think its okay to sentence anybody to death and its certainly not okay to sentence people to death by medical neglect, which is what were doing.

KH: Absolutely, and I definitely want our listeners to be especially mindful of language when advocating or the freedom of imprisoned people. I know that, in my own organizing, when we worked on a set of local and national grassroots demands related to COVID-19, there were people from all over the country who consulted on that list, including scientists, healthcare workers and, obviously, grassroots organizers. So it was no simple matter to devise language that everyone would be comfortable with, and we knew we were going to fall short, and even acknowledged those limitations in the document. But looking back at the demand around prisons and COVID-19, I wish we had only talked about mass release. We did talk about mass release, but we also talked about what care should look like inside prisons. And while we know that not everyone will be released, and we do want higher standards of care for people trapped inside, we know that, organizing within this system, if we ask for a mile, were lucky if we get an inch. We know that theyre not going to let everyone go, but I also feel strongly that what we should be aiming for is life and freedom for as many people as possible, and not trying to negotiate for lesser outcomes. Theres also a difference between whats leveraged in court and how we appeal to people narratively, and how we convey the values behind our demands. And I just hope thats something that people who do the kind of work Im involved in are critical of, in terms of assessing the ways we can improve our demands, improve our language and improve upon the vision we are presenting to the public. Because I think we have to ask ourselves if the story we are telling is about the value of human life and what justice looks like.

AM: Yeah, I couldnt agree more. I think the idea that somehow, we can keep people safe from this pandemic and a prison environment if we only like tweak the way we treat them, if we only hire a few more doctors or do a different rule, is just fooling ourselves. Prisons are petri dishes for disease and particularly for extraordinarily communicable disease like this one. And as I said before, its not going to stay behind prison walls. If we want to get rid of this virus and society as a whole, we have no choice but to get rid of it in prison. And the only way to get rid of in prison is to dramatically reduce the number of people that are in prison. And youre not just talking about the easy cases, the old people, the people that never should have been in prison in the first place, or should have been released decades ago. You gotta really look at whos in prison and is there any justification for keeping them there, and the answer in most cases is going to be no.

KH: I dont think that most people in the U.S. realize that, in the late 60s, there were actually discussions about whether or not prisons had outlived their usefulness and should be abolished altogether. Of course, all of that changed as a shifting economy and the destruction of the welfare state created a broadening criminal dragnet. These mechanisms have facilitated the violence of capitalism by separating so-called productive members of society from people who are deemed surplus. Some of the people who were incarcerated during the early prison boom of the 70s and 80s are now elders who are trapped in the path of COVID-19. In a sense, millions of tragedies have delivered us to this moment, which could serve as a breaking point for an untenable system. Can you tell us what has historically happened when conflicts over prison conditions come to a head, and what you hope will happen instead?

AM: I think its important and people really dont realize who is in our prisons these days. Back not that long ago, the typical prisoner is what a lot of people think of: a 20 to 25 year old, usually a man who has committed a violent act and is being punished for that. Today in Illinois, for example, over 45% of our prisoners are over the age of 50. We have a couple of dozen who are over the age of 80. This is the result of decades of truth and sentencing, mandatory minimums and a bunch of other laws that have gradually increased the amount of time people spend in prison. So that what used to be a young persons facility has turned into a senior citizen home. So, you know, I think thats how it, in some sense, how we got here today. But your larger question really goes to how did we end up with so many people in prison at all? How did we end up with the situation where a large part of the public is willing to write off prisoners? And I think that there were some real turning points historically where that happened. And I like to point to Attica as being one of the crucial turning points here. In the early 1970s, conditions in Attica prison, which is in upstate New York, were horrific, but actually about the same as they are today in many of our maximum security prisons. Illinois has really old prisons. All of Illinois maximum security prisons were built before the 1920s. Attica was built at almost the exact same time as our Illinois prisons were and looks exactly the same. Prisoners there began to protest, first peacefully, and then when there was a crackdown, there was at first some pushing back, pushing and shoving sort of backwards, and ultimately they took over the entire prison. The narrative right then and there broke into two different storylines that were being put out. On the one hand, there was a storyline that Attica was such a mess, that was so repressive, that it was so overcrowded and prisoners had been denied so many things that all of us consider to be normal and almost a right, like toilet paper, like soap, like educational opportunities. All those things were denied to people in Attica. And there was a real movement saying, well, of course, if you dont fix the prison system, this is going to happen over and over again.

But there was also a counter narrative that was very carefully designed, and because of the work of some really good historians, like Heather Ann Thompson who wrote an entire book about the Attica experience, Blood in the Water, we know that it was a very intentional that before the takeover happened, then governor [Nelson] Rockefeller met in his pool house with people from the department of corrections, from the local states attorneys, from the state police, and they all came up with a narrative and they all came up with this narrative that this was the radical Black people who were causing this problem, even though, in fact, everybody, whites, Latinos, and Blacks, all had a leadership role in the movement and were supported by outside organizations covering all of the ethnic groups. But the narrative that came out was very much that this was a Black person problem, and that these people were animals. And this was frankly coordinated all the way up to the White House. Because Nixon did us the favor of taping off his conversations, theres an audio tape of a conversation between Nixon and Rockefeller where Nixon says, well, this is the Blacks that are doing this, right? And Rockafeller says, yeah, its the Blacks. And Nixon says, well, you wont have a problem. And the next day, Rockefeller authorizes the armed takeover of the prison. And as a result of that, over a dozen people were killed. The original narrative that was put out was that the people being killed were the prisoners who were slaughtering the hostages they had taken. We now know that was completely false, that not a single hostage was harmed by any of the prisoners. Rather, the hostages were all killed as a result of the takeover by members of the national guard or, or sheriffs or anybody else got a gun there, as were the prisoners. So everybody died of bullet wounds. Nobody died of anything that the prisoners did. But thats not the narrative that went out. The narrative was, these are animals.

We had no choice but to take them back over again. They were slitting peoples throats. They even made up a story that theyd emasculated one of the, one of the guards using a knife. And all that was totally false. But nonetheless, that narrative that somehow prisoners are different from those of us that are on the outside, that somehow they are uncontrollable animals, that the only way to punish them is to deprive them of everything.

That narrative won out. And that was a very intentional, you know, this was before Fox news, but if Fox news had been around, they would have been leading it. But it was a very intentional narrative by the powers that be saying, we want to expand the system. We want to use this system as a way of not only cutting out, as you said, excess labor, um, people arent really needed, but also radicals. Also people who are calling for change, people who are organizing, and we saw this in the Black Panther Party where they ended up incarcerating or killing the leadership, labeling them as criminals in order to do so. So this has been an intentional movement to convince the public at large that its okay to lock up more people than have ever been locked up in the history of this country or in the history of this world. That its okay to spend millions and millions and millions of dollars doing that even though the crime rate has not in fact changed at all. All thats happened is weve destroyed communities.

KH: In addition to how we see imprisoned people as being fundamentally dangerous or harmful, theres also the matter of how we see ourselves, and how structures like the prison system bolster ideas that people have about themselves as being fundamentally good or decent. A lot of people cling to the idea that they are good people, positioning goodness as an identity, rather than something we create outside of ourselves with effort. But some of those people, who see themselves as fundamentally different than prisoners, and sort of inherently law-abiding, may be in for a rude awakening in our changing world. As capitalism cuts its losses in this time of crisis, what do you think the broadening dragnet of criminalization will look like?

AM: So on the one hand, we are certainly criminalizing dissent more than we have done in many, many years in this country. But on the other hand, we are also driving more and more people to economic desperation. Which on one hand leads to things like self-medication through the use of drugs, which we then make illegal and use that as a reason to incarcerate people, and also makes some people engage in activities that are illegal but are actually crimes of survival, which may be things like buying or selling marijuana, which is now legal, but only if you do it from a licensed facility. If you buy from an unlicensed person, its still a crime and you can still go to jail for it. If you possess it and you cant prove you bought it from a licensed facility, you can still go to jail for it. If you are hungry and you shoplift a bag up a loaf of bread, you can still go to jail for it. So we not only criminalize dissent, we also criminalize survival. And were seeing right now the number of people who are losing their jobs or who are temporarily without any sources of support, is skyrocketing. I believe the statistics are that on April 1st about a quarter of the population could not pay its rent in full. May 1st I suspect that number is going to go up rather dramatically. You know whats going to happen when we have 50,000 people in Chicago all being evicted at the same time? Whats going to happen when our homeless population swells and all these folks have no way of eating or living other than staying on the street? Were going to criminalize that. That is the history of this country. We end up criminalizing people after we deprived them of the ability to take care of themselves.

KH: So with all of that said, what gives you hope?

AM: What gives me hope actually is the grassroots. We are seeing more people out on the streets, even though we cant do mass demonstrations, we are seeing people be very creative in ways that they can push back against this. And Im not talking about lawyers, Im talking about regular old people who are, you know, loved ones who are not involved in this movement at all before picking up the phone, calling legislators, organizing Zoom chats, flooding the governors press thing that he does every afternoon that the comments and chats there was demands that people be out doing car caravans, doing car protests in the loop.

Where people can still stay apart. Doing a prayer vigil outside of Cook County Jail where everybody was six feet apart doing the prayer vigil. So it really gives me hope that there are people out there who are actively attempting to bring this to the publics attention and its working. I think prisons have gotten more press in the last six weeks, then they got for the six months prior. So everything thats happening, both legal and grassroots, have done a really good job of grabbing the attention of the public. My hope is, and the reason I have some hope, is that that conversation will not end once people have the right to go back out of their houses, that this is forcing societies as a whole to reexamine a whole lot of things.

But in particular, the question of who do we have locked up, why are they there, and do we really need in this country 2 million people to be locked in cages? I think the answer is clearly no and more and more people I think are coming to that realization as they see whats happening in prisons, and are hearing from their neighbors that in fact this is regular old people who are locked in prison, not some animals from outer space.KH: Well, if any of our listeners are riled up and eager to get involved, you can support the work the Uptown Peoples Law Center is doing by visiting their website at uplcchicago.org, and if you would like to learn more about efforts to support imprisoned people via mutual aid you can go to the website Beyond Prisons, and thats at beyond-prisons.com. And Alan, I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for joining us today, and for all that you do.

AM: Thank you, Kelly, and thank you for doing such a great podcast every week.

KH: I also want to thank our listeners for joining us today, and remember, our best defense against cynicism is to do good, and to remember that the good we do matters. Until next time, Ill see you in the streets.

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Incarceration Is Killing Us - Truthout

Coronavirus Doctors experiment with stem cell therapy on COVID-19 patients CBS News 9:39 AM – KTVQ Billings News

Doctors are hoping stem cell therapy could be a weapon in the fight against coronavirus. On Friday, regenerative medicine company Mesoblast announced a 300-person trial to determine whether stem cell treatments will work in COVID-19 patients suffering from severe lung inflammation.

One hospital in New York tried it as an experiment with 12 patients, 10 of whom were able to come off of ventilators.

"What we saw in the very first patient was that within four hours of getting the cells, a lot of her parameters started to get better," Dr. Karen Osman, who led the team at Mount Sinai, told CBS News' Adriana Diaz.

The doctor said she was encouraged by the results, though she was hesitant to link the stem cell procedure to her patients' recovery.

"We don't know" if the 10 people removed from ventilators would not have gotten had they not gotten the stem cells, she said. "And we would never dare to claim that it was related to the cells."

She explained that only a "randomized controlled trial" would be the only way "to make a true comparison."

Luis Naranjo, a 60-year-old COVID-19 survivor, was one of Mount Sinai's stem cell trial success stories. He told Diaz in Spanish that he was feeling "much better."

Naranjo's daughter, Paola, brought him to the emergency room, fearful she would not see her father again. Like so many families struck by the coronavirus, she was not allowed inside with him.

"I forgot to tell him that I love him," she said. "All I said was go inside, I hope you feel better."

During his hospital stay, Naranjo was unconscious and on a ventilator for 14 days.

Doctors proposed giving him stem cells from bone marrow in hopes it would suppress the severe lung inflammation caused by the virus.

Now, Naranjo credits the doctors who treated him for his survival. Though income from his family's jewelry business has been cut off and they found themselves falling behind on rent, Naranjo said he is focused primarily on his recovery and regaining the 25 pounds he lost at the hospital.

Although stem cell treatment, usually reserved for other diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, might end up being another step toward helping coronavirus patients recover, Dr. Osman was quick to say it would not be a "miracle treatment."

"The miracle treatment will be a vaccine," she said.

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Coronavirus Doctors experiment with stem cell therapy on COVID-19 patients CBS News 9:39 AM - KTVQ Billings News

Call for ‘sofa life-savers’ as stem cell register takes a hit – Hereford Times

People have been urged to be a lifesaver from the sofa as a stem cell donor register has been adversely affected by the coronavirus crisis.

Charity DKMS said that the number of stem cell donor registrations is down by 50% compared with this time last year.

With operations and appointments being delayed, the need for donors will be much higher than usual in the months to come, it said.

The charity is encouraging people to register to become potential donors by sending swabs through the post.

People can sign up for a swab pack online, which will be posted out.

They then need to return the swabs in a pre-paid envelope which can be dropped to any local post box.

The family of a little girl with a rare blood cancer has backed the campaign.

Two-year-old Adeline Davidson, from Inverness, was diagnosed with myelodysplasia, a rare form of blood cancer, in February last year.

Her mother Steph Davidson, 26, said: We were so relieved when we heard that there was a match for Adeline, there were no words really this person who doesnt even know Adeline was giving her a second chance at life. It was the best news ever.

We were all ready for the transplant to start, but doctors took a throat swab from Adeline and found she had a common cold, so we had to wait a few days for that to clear up.

But in those few days the coronavirus situation completely blew up and we were told the transplant was no longer going to go ahead.

The transplant has been delayed for the foreseeable so we just have to wait and keep her healthy, because if she contracts any illness and has to be admitted to hospital, shes at high risk of infection.

She needs the transplant to live a normal life. We are a little fearful because of the delay and what this means for her future.

Were begging people to still register with DKMS if you can.

Jonathan Pearce, chief executive of DKMS UK, added: We are hugely concerned about the impact Covid-19 is having on those who rely on a blood stem cell donor.

While many stem cell transplants are still going ahead, the logistics around supporting blood stem cell donors to travel to hospital, and then arranging the transport of the stem cells to the transplant centre, have become much more challenging and complex.

There are also transplants that have been delayed, but once the pandemic is over we know there will be a backlog of patients in urgent need of an unrelated blood stem cell donor.

Sadly though, in some of those cases, theres a risk that the disease could progress further, and a transplant may no longer be possible once this is all over.

We still need many, many more potential blood stem cell donors to come forward, and we know from our clinicians that once the world is free of Covid-19, there will be even more transplants needed.

To find out more, visit https://www.dkms.org.uk/en/register-now

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Call for 'sofa life-savers' as stem cell register takes a hit - Hereford Times