Posted on 02/10/2018 4:50:57 PM PST by Ennis85
Heather Holland, a second-grade teacher at Ikard Elementary School with the Weatherford Independent School District died over the weekend, the Weatherford Democrat reports. Holland got sick about a week ago and took medication, but delayed picking up the prescription due to the $116 copay, according to the newspaper.
By Friday night, Holland's condition worsened and she was taken to the hospital. Her husband Frank Holland told the Weatherford Democrat that she died Sunday morning.
"She loved helping people, helping the kids, and the kids loved her," Holland's husband told the Weatherford Democrat.
Charlotte LaGrone, a spokeswoman for Weatherford ISD, told news station CBS DFW that counselors are available at the school for the rest of the week to help students and school staff cope with the sudden loss. She added that custodians started deep cleaning the district's schools in December to keep students from getting sick, and that the specific campus where Holland was employed had received an additional cleaning on Friday, Feb. 2.
This year's flu season has been particularly deadly, with flu-related deaths being reported across the nation. Last month, five flu-related deaths were reported in the greater Houston area. The CDC reports the flu is widespread across America this year and possibly won't peak until March.
(Excerpt) Read more at chron.com ...
Hear! Hear! There are more than a few on this forum who like to think of themselves as upstanding Christians but have forgotten the words of Jesus: "I will have mercy upon the merciful." Cold-hearted bastards, I say.
I’m afraid you’re WAY outclassed by ExDemMom as far as relevant educational and employment credentials.
So sorry. Of course you’re in shock. Very sad.
Thank you.
So, what was the prescription she didn’t pick up supposed to be for? Definitely not for the flu. So don’t blame it on the flu.
No, it couldnt kill some people. I stand by getting ones blood level of d at 60, higher if fighting something chronic, but your study does suggest too high, like 90-100, might be deleterious in cancer patients. Non conclusive. But if you do all the testing and titrating your vitamin D3 dosages, then retesting in two months, flu season will be over. So while one SHOULD Get the blood test now, supplement if you are under 60, and test again in 2 months, its a lot of work when supplementing 5000 IU should get you through flu season for the time being.
But if you have cancer, Id say on the basis of your study, stick to only 5000 IU if you are NOT getting your blood levels tested.
How did she take medication if sh didnt pick up the prescription? Or did she wait until payday to pick up the prescription?
Article says she "took medication" - not "took the prescription medication." So she was probably swallowing aspirin, etc. - but allegedly didn't have enough money to purchase the high-powered perscription medication that, presumably, would have saved her.
Reading comprehension, sheesh!
Regards,
“decided to forgo the prescription and self-medicated...” would be more accurate.
Or “delayed picking up the prescription and took it too late to be effective”
All is conjecture
Another article about this case quoted her husband as saying she was frugal on principle and wouldn’t buy the tamiflu. He said he ended up buying it and making her take it.
Safety and side effects
Taken in appropriate doses, vitamin D is generally considered safe.
However, taking too much vitamin D can be harmful. Children age 9 years and older, adults, and pregnant and breast-feeding women who take more than 4,000 IU a day of vitamin D might experience:
Nausea
Vomiting
Poor appetite
Constipation
Weakness
Weight loss
Confusion
Disorientation
Heart rhythm problems
Kidney damage
https://www.mayoclinic.org/drugs-supplements-vitamin-d/art-20363792?pg=2
I have higher standards for myself.
I’m just an IT yo-yo in a factory.
Thank you!! This has been the most bizarre and insulting thread. I'm in my 22nd year of teaching in Texas. I take home less money year after year, despite some little pay increase on paper (though my upcoming monthly paycheck should reflect the DJT tax cut). The folks on this thread must have Texas teachers confused with unionized Yankee teachers. LOL! 😂
Vitamin D3 5,000IU prevents the flu.
Bullshit.
Show me the actual studies that prove that claim.
“...has a lot of side-effects. ...”
My doc prescribed 500mg Levofloxacin. I paid 110.00. When I got it home I looked up the side effects and said ‘no way’!
Thats when your body over reacts ...”
That’s pretty much how the 1918 Spanish flu killed so many people.
Indeed, thank you.
I try to counter the quackery when I can. Some of it is fairly harmless (e.g. spending twice as much on food labeled organic, even though it is indistinguishable from other food) and I leave that alone. But where quackery can endanger people's lives and even prevent them from seeking medical attention, I step in with real information.
Indeed, thank you, steve86. I think that during the course of my studies to earn a Ph.D. in biochemistry and molecular biology, I spent significantly more time on studying the actions of biomolecules and mechanisms of viral infection and replication. I also spent some time on learning the function of the immune system, although that learning was more directed to the production of antibodies for research.
On top of that, I have had to become an influenza guru during my professional career. So I know a fair amount about the virus and various countermeasures.
“She loved helping people, helping the kids, and the kids loved her,” .........
Too bad someone didn’t care enough to help her OR, perhaps she never though to ask for help. Sad ending for a young person to die that way. If she had been on welfare or an illegal, she would have gotten the meds for free.
Too bad someone didnt care enough to help her OR, perhaps she never though to ask for help. Sad ending for a young person to die that way. If she had been on welfare or an illegal, she would have gotten the meds for free.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
She went to the doctor who gave her a prescription - could have been for Tamiflu (which at that point wouldn’t have helped her much - needs to be taken 36-48 hours after symptoms start or upon exposure) and/or for other meds, maybe even antibiotics. She delayed getting her meds because of a COPAY so she obviously had some sort of insurance.
The flu virus can cause viral pneumonia and in some people, it results in a particularly severe inflammation of the lungs. Oxygen rates drop quickly and death results. This flu season it appears some people are dying within a day or two of being diagnosed with the flu so this is a particularly fast process and many are being caught by surprise. I think this poor woman’s “fate” was already sealed, whether she had meds or not. Being a virus, antibiotics at this point aren’t helpful (my aunt just died of complications from viral pneumonia this past May) & Tamiflu mostly reduces the duration of the flue by a couple of days, but not for something like this.
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