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Anti-anthrax drug - 'a waste of money'?
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Tuesday, October 9, 2001 | By Paul Sperry

Posted on 10/09/2001 12:18:50 AM PDT by JohnHuang2

WND Exclusive
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK
Anti-anthrax drug
'a waste of money'?

Pentagon officials stock up on 'Cipro' despite cost, side effects


By Paul Sperry
© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com

WASHINGTON – Though the threat of bioterrorism is small, some Pentagon officials are not taking any chances.

They're stocking up on Ciprofloxacin, an antibiotic that's considered to be the most effective drug against anthrax – if you take it long before the hemorrhagic disease's early flu-like symptoms appear, that is.

"Cipro," as it's commonly known, is expensive and not covered under most medical-insurance plans. A two-week supply of the drug for a family of four costs about $400.

"Maybe it's paranoid of me," said one Pentagon official, "but as they taught us many years ago, 'Be prepared.'"

However, a Washington-area pharmacist, who has only 30 tablets of Cipro left in stock, said individual stockpiling of the anti-anthrax drug is "a waste of money." It also could deplete supplies for those who may really need it.

"How will you even know if you have it? It's odorless," he said of the potentially fatal pulmonary anthrax. "By the time you know, it could be too late."

"You have to take it in advance of symptoms," he explained. "That could get very expensive."

And your body could build up a resistance to the drug, which has many side effects, he says.

What's needed is a home-test kit to detect antibodies fighting infection from anthrax, botulism or small pox. Unfortunately, no such test is available on the market right now.

Related story:

Experts debunk bioterrorism myths

INS inspectors want to be deputized

In the war on terrorism, the United States Marshals Service is deputizing agents with the Border Patrol and U.S. Customs Service to give them broader authority in making arrests at airports.

Left out: Immigration and Naturalization Service inspection officers – even though the roughly 8,000 immigration inspection officers, who carry guns and have federal law-enforcement academy training, are already stationed at international airports throughout the country.

"We're watching U.S. Customs and Border Patrol get deputized, but not INS inspectors," complained one gung-ho officer.

Mosques apply for tolerance grants

At least one area mosque has applied for a grant to start a one-year program to raise tolerance among Christians for Muslims in the community.

Dar Al-Hijrah Islamic Center of Falls Church, Va., is asking for a $35,000 grant from the Community Foundation for the National Capital Region to help "minimize problems" with other ethnic and religious groups, the large mosque's imam, Samir Aboissa, told WorldNetDaily. He says other mosques also are applying for such grants.

Dar Al-Hijrah asked a neighboring church for a letter of recommendation but was turned down. Seems it wanted the pastor and his flock to accept Islam.

Terrorism good for security biz

As a recession looms larger, at least one business is booming – private security.

"Our business is exploding," said a security consultant in Houston. "I'm having trouble just getting out proposals, much less actually doing the assessments."

The former Compaq Computer Corp. security officer says clients are clamoring to defend themselves, their homes and their offices from terrorist attacks.

Know your turbans and facial hair

Do not be alarmed by the turban-wearing man in the information booth at Washington Dulles International Airport. He's not an Arab Muslim. He's an Indian Sikh.

So are all those cabbies with the colorful headdresses.

Sikhs, who are members of a Hindu religious sect found in northern India, are upset that Americans identify them with Arab Muslims because of their turbans, as well as dark skin. Sikhs are not fond of neighboring Muslims in Pakistan or Afghanistan.

Several Sikh cabbies lectured this reporter during a recent business trip on the finer points of distinguishing a Sikh from a Muslim, going by just their headdresses and facial hair.

Here's what I learned:

  • First, Arab Muslims seldom even wear headdresses, such as the kaffiyeh made famous by Yasser Arafat, when in America.

  • The style of headdress worn by Osama bin Laden and other Muslims in Afghanistan is wrapped flat, like a tire, around the head; whereas, the Sikh turban is wrapped into a pile on top of the head, like a danish.

  • The reason the Sikh turban is wrapped high is to cover all the hair that Sikh men grow. Orthodox Sikhs do not cut their hair – any hair.

  • That's another way to tell a Sikh from a Muslim. Sikh men grow out their mustaches and beards, while Muslims often trim or even shave them.

One Sikh cabby told me that Indians – and even Pakistanis – are petrified of the Islamic fundamentalists in Afghanistan, who he says are known to kill indiscriminately.

"They are crazy. They will kill anyone just like that," he said, snapping his fingers.

Hijackers not slowed by food carts

Flight attendants for United Airlines, the carrier from which Islamic terrorists hijacked two jets Sept. 11, doubt the hijackers were slowed by food-service carts, which are normally deployed down aisles within the first hour of nonstop, cross-country flights.

"I think these guys did practice runs the week before" to know when to avoid the breakfast service, said United flight attendant Joao Silva. Radar shows the planes veered off course on all the flights within the first 30 minutes or so, meaning hijackers more than likely took over the planes before the flight attendants broke out the food and beverage carts.

Boeing 767-300s equipped with seat-back radar

Speaking of radar, if doomed passengers had flown on Boeing 767-300s instead of 767-200s (United Flight 175 and American Airlines Flight 11 out of Boston), they would have been able to see their planes veering sharply off course in the roughly 6-inch-by-5-inch seat-back video screens in front of them.

Normally used for movie-viewing, the screens also can be switched over by passengers, using a button on the armrest, to a topographical map showing real-time flight paths, including close-ups of mountain ranges, rivers, cities and other landmarks. Other data, such as ground speed and altitude, also are displayed.

For Education And Discussion Only. Not For Commercial Use.



TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 10/09/2001 12:18:50 AM PDT by JohnHuang2
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: JohnHuang2
A two-week supply of the drug for a family of four costs about $400.

That is kind of pricey. The generic version can be bought from overseas without a prescription--a 30-day supply (for 1 adult) costs about $80.

3 posted on 10/09/2001 1:56:46 AM PDT by Sandy
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To: candyman34
That doctor was absolutely right -- I heard another doctor on one of the cable news channels say pretty much the same thing yesterday.
4 posted on 10/09/2001 2:03:38 AM PDT by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
Though the threat of bioterrorism is small, some Pentagon officials are not taking any chances.

Small? Morons. Someone has a source for high quality Anthrax toxin and they are using it. Where do they get off trying to placate the citizens with the word "small"? It's here. It happened. It may happen or have happened again already.

With all due respect, it's time to take off the gloves.

5 posted on 10/09/2001 2:09:05 AM PDT by Glenn
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: JohnHuang2
"That doctor was absolutely right -- I heard another doctor on one of the cable news channels say pretty much the same thing yesterday."

There's some guy who just signed up at FR today, claims he's a doctor, and is pumping out sunshine telling people they're not to take antibiotics until they see symptoms.

I called him on it, and he went into weird-mode, and then I got flamed for not being "nice" to the good doctor.

If you want to take a look at the insanity, it's here and here.

7 posted on 10/09/2001 3:31:34 AM PDT by Don Joe
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To: JohnHuang2; Anyone with knowledge
They're stocking up on Ciprofloxacin, an antibiotic that's considered to be the most effective drug against anthrax – if you take it long before the hemorrhagic disease's early flu-like symptoms appear, that is.

I was unaware this was a "hemorrhagic disease". That would make it more like ebola virus or something. It was my understanding that it was more of a respiratory ailment that shuts the lungs down. Am I way off base here?

8 posted on 10/09/2001 5:07:59 AM PDT by dubyagee
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To: JohnHuang2
The problem as I see it is getting the fed to admit when/where an outbreak is suspected to have occured.
If they catch someone in the act of spreading the stuff around, then they need to warn people in the target
zone so that they can start taking the drug.
9 posted on 10/09/2001 6:06:30 AM PDT by freefly
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To: Glenn
Or time to put the gloves ON and a mask too!

It's my thought that the terrorists did not prepare this in a way that left spore particles fine enough to really penetrate the lungs. Thus they managed to sicken very few people. Perhaps they exposed hundreds and most did not get sufficient quantities of the spore to sicken them. Since this disease is not significantly contagious, we are in for a couple weeks of nervousness and then an end to these cases unless they are still working on the distribution problem. Umm, it might be wise if you're working in an office not to open mail too enthusiastically. WASH YOUR HANDS VERY CAREFULLY AND OFTEN!!!!!!!

We need to be thinking in terms of what a natural flu epidemic can do to this country at this point in time and act accordingly. Influenza experts have been predicting an especially dangerous flu season this year even without the events of 9/11. Tell your sick coworkers NOT TO COME TO WORK and keep sick kids at home. Our martyrish habit of going to work sick could literally endanger the lives of millions. FLU ISN'T JUST TWO WEEKS OF MISERY. IT HAS KILLED MORE PEOPLE IN HISTORY THAN ANY OTHER AIR BORNE DISEASE. And I have a feeling that dying of wild-strain flu is just as miserable of dying of terrorist-spread anthrax.
10 posted on 10/09/2001 7:37:02 AM PDT by ChemistCat
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To: ChemistCat
Tell your sick coworkers NOT TO COME TO WORK and keep sick kids at home

Good advice, but the careerist moms won't follow it. They'll whine for more "sick day care" facilities. Talk about breeding grounds for disease.

11 posted on 10/09/2001 7:52:17 AM PDT by gumbo
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To: gumbo
Got some weasel on another thread whining that I'm fomenting panic and aiding the terrorist by telling people to wash their hands and avoid exposing others if they get flu this year. You're right that most people will just keep going to work sick. I hope my clinic gets my flu shot in this week, is all I can say. Isn't it amazing that people with otherwise good manners will spread a cold or flu without apology?

If the terrorists did indeed attempt to spread anthrax in our country, that's a weapon of mass destruction and I hope we respond accordingly; fortunately, they appear not to have known WHAT THEY WERE DOING....
12 posted on 10/09/2001 8:38:30 AM PDT by ChemistCat
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To: Glenn
Small? Morons. Someone has a source for high quality Anthrax toxin and they are using it. Where do they get off trying to placate the citizens with the word "small"? It's here. It happened. It may happen or have happened again already.

So far the threat appears to be small. If more people get it, than the threat is becomes less and less small, but our emergency rooms aren't exactly filling up with people dying from anthrax right now. I'd say the chances of dying in a plane wreck are small as well. Doesn't mean it can't happen, or that people aren't planning for it to happen, just that the probability of it happening is small.

13 posted on 10/09/2001 9:00:44 AM PDT by Nate505
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