Sunday, January 27, 2013

Donation to Vancouver Museum Costs Taxpayers Big Money

According a story written by columnist David Baines in the Vancouver Sun, two multi-million dollar donations of miniature "Michelangelo" statues to the Vancouver Museum turned out to be grossly overvalued. Apparently, the first group of statues originally valued at many millions of dollars ten years ago, was estimated recently by Sotheby's to bring from $200,000 to $300,000 at auction. It is reasonable to assume that the second group donated a few years later will get the same result. No information was given about the investors who bought the statues and donated them to the museum or about the appraisers. What the Vancouver Sun says is know is that the Vancouver Museum issued a total of 31.4 million dollars in tax receipts for non-cash donations in 1998 and 2006. The Vancouver sun says that 30 million dollars of the tax receipts was for the statues. If you are a taxpayer you should have felt a cool breeze as 13 to 14 million tax dollars flew out the window of the federal coffers - ouch.

When the donors of the statues are described as 'investors' we cannot help but think that it was a money-making scheme. This is pure speculation but I suspect (but don't know) that the tax refunds received by the 'investors' significantly exceeded the sum of the purchase price paid for the statues, the fees or commissions paid to the people who put the deal together and the appraisal fees. It is too late for the Canada Revenue Agency to challenge the tax refunds that resulted from the donation receipts. The Ministry of Finance and the Canada Revenue Agency has obviously got some work to do to to protect our hard earned tax dollars from this kind of leakage. Clink on this link to read Mr. Baines' entire article.

North Van man faces $112,000 US medical bill.

According to a story by Jeremy Shepherd, North Shore News, travel insurer Manulife has denied a $112,000 claim for US medical expenses incurred by North Vancouver Resident, John Toljanich. The 74 year-old Toljanich came down with pneumonia while on vacation in Palm Desert, California. The 112 big ones were racked up in four-and-one-half days in a Southern California hospital and the flight back to Vancouver. It seems that when I read about travel medical insurance claims being denied I expect the Manulife name to pop up in the article, and this time it did. Click on this link to see the entire news article. 

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

BC Seniors' Home Renovation Tax Credit

This is a refundable provincial income tax credit for individuals in BC who are at least 65 years old. The credit applies to eligible permanent home improvements. The credit is 10% of eligible expenditures incurred on or after April 1, 2012, up to a maximum credit of $1,000 per year. The credit can be claimed on personal income returns starting with 2012 year.

In simplified terms the eligible expenditures must meet 5 criteria:
1) be for improvements to the senior's principal place of residence (including the land),
2) be for the purpose of enabling a senior to gain access to or to be mobile or functional within the property or to reduce risk of harm to the senior,
3) be of an enduring nature and integral to the property, including things that become permanent fixtures,
4) were not made for the principal purpose of increasing the value of the property,
5) would ordinarily be made by, or for, a person with an impairment to enable that person to gain access to or to be mobile or functional within the residence or land.

It doesn't matter whether the indiviiduals own their home or they are renting. In addition the credit can be claimed by a person who shares a home with a related senior.

Generally speaking, taxpayers have to fit squarely within the provisions of the legislation to be entitled to tax credits.

Some examples of expenditures that may qualify include:
Certain renovations to permit a first-floor occupancy or secondary suite for a senior
Grab bars and related reinforcements around the toilet, tub and shower
Hand rails in corridors
Wheelchair ramps and lifts
Walk-in bathtubs
Wheel-in showers
Raised toilets
Widening passage doors
Lowering counters and cupboards
Motion operated lighting
Non-slip flooring in bathrooms
Lever handled taps and doors
Accessible light switches and electrical outlets
Hands-free taps
Touch and release drawers

See also Canadian Seniors Information website

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Tamiflu

Tamiflu has been touted by the World Health Organization and the US Center for Disease Control (CDC) as an essential anti-flu medicine and stockpiled at great cost by a number of countries. Tamiflu is said to shorten the time flu will linger if taken as soon as symptoms appear, and more importantly, to reduce the chances of getting flu if you take it shortly after being exposed to a flu virus. However,the Roche Groupe, the corporate group that makes Tamiflu, is said to have done ten studies, but have released their findings on only two of those studies. Okay, right away we have a huge reason not to trust Roche or anybody else touting Tamiflu. What isn't Roche telling us?

In my opinion the major pharmaceutical companies are about as trustable as the tobacco industry.

According to an article in the CBC news dated April 20, 2009 the Canadian stockpile of anti-flu drugs was about 55 million doses. Here is an excerpt from the CBC news article - The national antiviral stockpile contains 55.7 million doses, enough to treat nearly 5.6 million people. Tamiflu, which is sold by Hoffman-La Roche, makes up 90 per cent of the holdings. Relenza accounts for the remaining 10 per cent.
Over the past five years a number of countries have stockpiled antiviral drugs — mainly Tamiflu — as a hedge against a feared flu pandemic. Tamiflu seemed to be a safe bet. Resistance to the drug was rarely seen. And laboratory studies suggested viruses that acquired resistance would be weakened and less able to spread from person to person.
To widespread dismay that theory was proven to be wrong in the winter of 2008. A resistant strain of influenza A virus of the H1N1 variety emerged in Northern Europe. The strain took off, rapidly spreading around the world.

The following is an excerpt from another CBC News article dated March 2, 2009.

The main strain causing flu illnesses in the U.S. is resistant to the antiviral drug Tamiflu, a government report released Monday shows. As of Feb. 19, researchers found 264 of 268, or 98.5 per cent, of influenza A viruses tested were resistant to oseltamivir, or Tamiflu, researchers reported
in Monday's online issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

Last flu season, 19 per cent of H1N1 viruses tested were resistant to the
drug, said Dr. Nila Dharan of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in
Atlanta and her colleagues. In December, the CDC first warned doctors that they were noticing resistant to Tamiflu among H1N1 strains. At the time, the CDC advised giving Tamiflu with another anti-viral drug, Relenza, also called zanamivir, or a generic drug called rimantadine.

For the study, the researchers interviewed 99 patients.
They found 30 per
cent of them were vaccinated against the flu, but came down with it anyway
.

The following information is from the Tamiflu website

Indications Tamiflu is for treating people 1 year and older with influenza (flu) whose symptoms started within the last 2 days. Tamiflu can also reduce the chance of getting the flu. Tamiflu is not a substitute for an annual flu vaccination.

Important Safety Information
Before taking Tamiflu, tell your doctor if you are pregnant or nursing. Let your doctor know if you have kidney disease, heart disease, respiratory disease, or other serious health conditions. Also tell your doctor about any medications you are taking or if you’ve received a nasal-spray flu vaccine in the past 2 weeks. If you have an allergic reaction or a severe rash with Tamiflu, stop taking it, and contact your doctor right away. This may be very serious. The most common side effects of Tamiflu are mild to moderate nausea and vomiting.

The following bits of information are from the 24-page Tamiflu Prescribing Information Website:
There is no evidence for efficacy of TAMIFLU in any illness caused by agents other than influenza viruses types A and B. Influenza viruses change over time. Emergence of resistance mutations could decrease drug effectiveness. Other factors (for example, changes in viral virulence) might also diminish clinical benefit of antiviral drugs. Prescribers should consider available information on
influenza drug susceptibility patterns and treatment effects when deciding whether to use TAMIFLU.


People with the flu, particularly children and adolescents, may be at increased risk for seizures, confusion, or abnormal behavior when they first get sick. These events may occur when the flu is not treated or right after starting Tamiflu. These events are uncommon but may lead to accidental injury. Contact a healthcare professional right away if you notice any unusual behavior. The most common side effects are mild to moderate nausea and vomiting.

Limitations of Populations Studied
Efficacy of TAMIFLU in the treatment of influenza in patients with chronic cardiac disease and/or respiratory disease has not been established. No difference in the incidence of complications was observed between the treatment and placebo groups in this population. No information is available regarding treatment of influenza in patients with any medical condition sufficiently severe or unstable to be considered at imminent risk of requiring hospitalization. Efficacy of TAMIFLU for treatment or prophylaxis of influenza has not been established in immunocompromised patients.

ADVERSE REACTIONS

Serious skin and hypersensitivity reactions
Neuropsychiatric events

Less serious reactions include:Nausea,
Vomiting,
Diarrhea,
Headache,
Fatigue
and other less common reactions


The following chart is from www.Webmd

Common side effects of Tamiflu Oral:
Feel Like Throwing Up Less Severe
Throwing Up Less Severe

Infrequent side effects of Tamiflu Oral:
Bronchitis                            Severe
Dizzy                                   Less Severe
Chronic Trouble Sleeping   Less Severe
Head Pain                            Less Severe
Cough                                  Less Severe
Diarrhea                               Less Severe
Stomach Cramps                 Less Severe

Rare side effects of Tamiflu Oral:

Pink Eye                             Severe
Angina                                Severe
Abnormal Heart Rhythm Severe
Acute Infection of the
Nose, Throat or Sinus        Severe
Pneumonia                        Severe
Inflammation of the Large
Intestine with Bleeding     Severe
Hepatitis                           Severe
Bleeding of the Stomach
or Intestines
                    Severe
Bloody Diarrhea
from Antibiotics               Severe
Erythema Multiforme   Severe
Toxic Epidermal
Necrolysis                       Severe
Stevens-Johnson
Syndrome                       Severe
Hives                              Severe
Delirium                         Severe
Seizures                          Severe
Fever                              Severe
Rash                               Severe
Puffy Face from
Water Retention             Severe
Nosebleed                      Severe
Abnormal Liver
Function Tests               Severe
Injury                             Severe
Low Body Temperature Severe
Life Threatening Allergic
Reaction
                      Severe
Reaction due to
an Allergy                     Severe
Diabetes                       Severe
Anemia                         Severe
Confused Severe
Irritation of the Ear     Less Severe
Indigestion                  Less Severe
Eczema                       Less Severe
Inflammation of Skin
caused by an Allergy   Less Severe
Hallucination               Less Severe
Sensation of Spinning
or Whirling                  Less Severe

Low Energy                 Less Severe
Runny Nose                 Less Severe


The following is an excerpt of a November 28, 2012 article from Dr. Mercola's website, http:// articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/

By Dr. Mercola
What should you reach for when you come down with the flu? The antiviral drug
Tamiflu is the second recommendation on the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention's (CDC) list of recommended treatments, right behind the flu vaccine.

Both the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines
Agency have approved Tamiflu for both the treatment and prevention of flu, and
governments around the world have stockpiled the drug at the recommendation of
the World Health Organization (WHO), in preparation for potential flu pandemics.

Use of the drug dramatically increased after the worldwide
2009 swine flu pandemic. But does Tamiflu actually work?

Researchers with the prestigious Cochrane Collaboration group are now raising
serious questions about the drug's effectiveness and the scientific basis for
the global recommendation of the drug. In a similar vein, despite the fact that
the science behind flu vaccines is flimsy at best, with numerous studies showing
flu
vaccines simply do not work, 150 Cincinatti health care workers now face being fired unless they get a flu shot, as reported by CNBC above. This trend of widely recommending, or worse, mandating, certain drugs and vaccines without a sturdy scientific base for doing so is truly
troubling, and must be addressed.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

The world has been sucked in. All that Tamiflu and all that money and no evidence whatever that it works. As the makers tell you on their website, viruses mutate. Even if it works a little one year will it the next. The only believable evidence is that Tamiflu can make you sick or, in rare cases, kill you.
My question is why are we still pushing any anti-flu vaccines, whether it is Tamiflu or anything else. My own doctor, while paying lip service to the accepted practice of recommending annual flu shots, didn't try very hard at all. I was left to conclude that she didn't particularly disagree with my long held position that I am no more likely to get the flu than those who religiously, with blind faith in the unproven, take anti-flu vaccines. Actually I think I am less likely to get it. What is certain is that I am not ever going to get any of those potentially nasty side effects.


Thursday, November 15, 2012

Health Study Headlines Often Wrong

On October 5, 2012 a CBC News article written by Kelly Crowe reported a French study that concluded that the news media report initial biomedical findings that more often than not turn out to be wrong. The study also concluded that the news media generally ignore any follow-up information that refutes the initial claims.

Are we surprised? I don't think so. And it's not just the news media. Many internet websites and blogsites are loaded with the latest health claims, new health product information and diet information or claims. Nobody seems to ever retract anything. It seems that it is all about grabbing readers' attention, increasing volume and making money; not about spreading truth.

Obviously we have to read these reports and claims with several grains of salt. The items I find the most disturbing are the ones that want to make people believe that more pharmaceutical drugs are needed. The French study made a specific reference to a number of studies on attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) that in most most cases were never proven to be true over time but were never revisited by the media.I found this reference to ADHD interesting because of the large increase in ADHD medicine prescritions in BC over the last decade. On November 3 I wrote about this issue. I am not suggesting that report was incorrect. It was based on information the Vancouver Sun obtained from the BC Ministry of Health. However the increase in prescriptions for ADHD would at least in part reflect the reports in the news media about ADHD. As reported in the Vancouver Sun a lot of the information about ADHD in Canada is funded by the pharmaceutical industry.


Saturday, November 3, 2012

ADHD Prescriptions Triple

A recent news article in the Vancouver Sun stated that ADHD medication prescriptions have tripled in BC over the last ten years. Are we surprised? No, we are not surprised at all. North American society seems to have gone prescription drug crazy over the last decade. The pharmaceutical industry is winning the battle to make you believe you need their products and to keep your money in their pockets. It seems that you cannot turn on a television without being innundated with advertisements flogging some prescription drug, usually loaded with terrifying side effects. We are also bombarded by the health care industry with products of questionable value such as flu shots.

According to the news article the Centre for ADHD Awareness in Canada recently ran a national awareness week funded by Shire Canada, the makers of two of the ADHD medications. Once again the drug makers are calling the tune.

The news article also stated that all of the doctors on the board of  Canadian ADHD Resource Alliance which has set diagnosis and treatment guidelines for ADHD have declared links to pharmaceutical companies for either consulting or speaking engagements. This is like being a paid advocate or a lobbyist. Ladies and gentlemen, the key point to understand about paid advocates or lobbyists is that their opinions are bought and paid for by special interest groups, in this case by the pharmaceutical industry.

Who knows what long-term side effects are going to come out of the current wave of ADHD drugs. Remember in most cases these drugs are being given young children or teenagers.

With the massive amounts of prescription drugs, flu shots and similar items it is no wonder that healthcare costs are skyrocketing.

The government should ban direct public advertising of prescription pharmaceuticals and also make it illegal for practising doctors or other healthcare professionals to earn fees or take money or gifts from the pharmaceutical industry. Objectivity is a critical aspect of professionalism.

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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

NHL Lockout

So there is an NHL lockout. Damnation eh. I am trying to generate some internal emotion but for me the lockout is more more like Snooze City. Out of curiosity I looked on StubHub website for the price of Vancouver Canuck tickets for the December 2, 2012 game with the Anaheim Ducks. If the lockout ends in time for this game to be played you can buy a resale ticket on this particular website for prices ranging from $77 (upper deck of course) to $595 (lower bowl). As these are resale I have no idea what the original ticket price was, I couldn't find any ticket prices on the Canucks' website. Assuming I wouldn't find any $77 tickets available - I'm never that quick - I would be looking at probably $100 to $200 each for a pair of nosebleed seats in the upper deck, if I actually wanted to go, which I don't. By the time you add in $20 or so for parking, and another $20 to $30 for snacks to relieve potential boredom we are up to  a minimum of $250, and more likely $350 for a game which may or may not be entertaining. I don't dislike hockey, just the ticket prices. At those prices I would feel ripped-off, especially if they decide to lay an egg that particular night. Way back when, during the Canucks first season in the NHL, I had 2 season tickets in row 36 straddling the centre line at the Pacific Coliseum for the princely sum of $3.50 a seat.  The row directly in front of us cost $5 a seat and the top price in the lower section was $6. Back then we had Orland Kurtenback, Andre Boudrias and Dale Talon instead of Roberto Luongo, Ryan Kesler and the Sedin Twins. The current crop are undenably more successful, but not necessarily more entertaining. In any case I don't care if the NHL season is cancelled. I am getting sick of overpaid jocks and over-inflated ticket prices. You can always go watch the Vancouver Giants junior team, a local Pee Wee team, or ...gasp... read a novel.

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