Re: Phyllis was this approved by Dr Jones' Lawyers? If not SHUT THE *** UP



SHUT UP PHYLLIS DO NO FURTHER HARM SHUT THE *** UP SHUT THE *** UP
SHUT THE *** UP AND GO *** YOURSELF



Mockingbird wrote:
> pmerv@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> > Dear Friends,
>
> I am NOT one of your friends.
>
> > Dr. Jones doesn't need any promotion from me
>
> Then why not SHUT THE *** UP?
>
> >- we all know he is a
> > saint. I want to concentrate on how this particular case is unique and
> > worth defending - because it is not just about Dr. Jones, it is about
> > the Lyme disease standard of care and our access to Lyme-literate
> > doctors.
>
> No it is NOT. What part of our previous discussions and Dr Jones'
> Lawyers' instructions did you NOT understand?
>
> > Yale is our historic enemy, home to Allen Steere when he was doing his
> > original study in Old Lyme, Connecticut and now home to Eugene Shapiro,
> > MD, the expert witness that the Connecticut Medical Board prosecutor
> > will use in the Jones case. Shapiro has been widely quoted in the media
> > with such gems as:
>
> Shapiro is NOT the "expert witness" to be used in the case. HE IS A
> MEMBER OF THE HEARING BOARD YOU FUCKING MORON!
>
> >> "People would rather say, 'I think I have Lyme disease' than
> > 'I'm getting old and tired.'" [ELLE magazine, December, 2000];
> >
> > "It's a lot more socially acceptable to have Lyme disease than
> > to be depressed," [Healthscout, Jan 15, 2001] and, from his grand
> > rounds at Stanford University School of Medicine;
> >
> > "This isn't AIDS that we're talking about or preventing, folks.
> > It's not a big deal if you get Lyme disease. It's easy to treat and
> > cure." [09-24-04]
> >
> >
> > Eugene Shapiro is also a major player in the Infectious Disease Society
> > of America (IDSA) and is on the panel currently working on new practice
> > guidelines for Lyme disease that IDSA intends to publish this spring.
> >
> > Standard of Care or Standard of Carelessness?
>
> You are such a fucking busybody moron.
>
> You just can't leave well enough alone.
>
> >> The mainstream standard of care for Lyme disease in the US is largely
> > dictated by the IDSA. Currently that treatment is limited to 2-3 weeks.
> > Attendees at a recent meeting of the IDSA were informed that new
> > guidelines will recommend 10 DAYS of treatment! The IDSA also does not
> > believe in chronic Lyme disease but talks about "post-Lyme syndrome."
> > The panel has indicated that they are not interested in any input from
> > Lyme patients or the doctors who treat us.
> >
> > Access to Care
> >
> > Patients across America and abroad have trouble finding a Lyme-literate
> > doctor to treat them. Most are either closed to new patients or booked
> > for months in advance. Every time one of our doctors is persecuted, it
> > has a deterrent effect on other doctors being willing to treat Lyme
> > disease. Imagine if Dr. Burrascano had lost his case!
>
> He DID lose his case! He was CONVICTED of practicing medicine
> negligently on more than one occasion. And it DID involve his treatment
> of Lyme and other TBDs. He LOST. He was convicted. He was sentenced to
> a period of probation and forced to practice with a practice monitor
> for some period of time supervising his practice. Etc.
>
> You LIAR!
>
> > Telemedicine is a hot new topic and plays an important role in the
> > treatment of Lyme where there are so few treating physicians and they
> > are often located far from their patients. It is neither practical nor
> > economically feasible for patients to travel hundreds or even thousands
> > of miles routinely for treatment. Telemedicine issues are central to
> > this case, as Dr. Jones was treating a child in Nevada.
>
> What he did was NOT telemedicine. Neither he NOR any doctor he was
> working with saw the patient children!
>
> Telemedicine involves a high speed hookup so the patient can be "seen"
> via VIDEO working with specialists and a local doctor. Labs are done
> and transmitted. A local doctor conducts procedures and examinations.
>
> Making a diagnosis by telephone and treating by telephone is NOT
> TELEMEDICINE!
>
> This is TYPICAL of the LIES of you and Ellen Lubarsky and other Lyme
> activists and is exactly why I find you so dangerous and why you
> constantly make things WORSE not better.
>
> LIAR!
>
> LIAR!
>
> LIAR!
>
> This is such outrageous bull***!
>
>
> VIDAR Systems Corporation - Glossary
>
> http://www.filmdigitizer.com/about/news/glossary.htm
> TELEMEDICINE. Defined by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as the
> delivery and provision of healthcare and consultative services to
> individual patients and the transmission of information related to
> care, over distance, using telecommunications technologies.
> Telemedicine incorporates direct clinical, preventive, diagnostic, and
> therapeutic services and treatment; consultative and follow-up
> services; remote monitoring of patients; rehabilitative services; and
> patient education.
>
>
> ACP Online - Telemedicine Glossary
> http://www.acponline.org/computer/telemedicine/glossary.htm#T
>
> Telemedicine Glossary*
> A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> A
> Analog signal:
> A continuous electrical signal in the form of waves that vary as the
> source of the information varies.
> Asynchronous communication:
> Two-way communication in which there can be a time delay between when a
> message is sent and when it is received.
> Audio-teleconferencing:
> Two-way electronic voice communication between two or more people at
> separate locations.
> Authentication:
> The use of passwords, keys, and other automated identifiers to verify
> the identity of the person sending or receiving information.
> Automated data collection:
> Direct transfer of physiological data from monitoring instruments to
> either a bedside display system or a computer-based patient record.
> B
> Bandwidth:
> A measure of the information carrying capacity of a communications
> channel; a practical limit to the size, cost, and capability of a
> telemedicine service.
> Baud:
> A unit of digital transmission signaling speed of information
> transmission; the highest number of single information elements (bits)
> transferred between two devices in one second.
> Bit:
> Binary digit, the smallest possible unit of information making up a
> character or a word in digital code processed by computers.
> Broadband:
> Communications (e.g., broadcast television, microwave, and satellite)
> capable of carrying a wide range of frequencies; refers to transmission
> of signals in a frequency-modulated fashion, over a segment of the
> total bandwidth available, thereby permitting simultaneous transmission
> of several messages.
> Byte:
> A set of eight bits.
> C
> Cable television (CATV):
> A transmission system that distributes broadcast television signals and
> other services by means of a coaxial cable.
> Channel:
> A radio frequency assignment made according to the frequency band being
> used and the geographic location of the sending/receiving sites.
> Coaxial cable:
> Transmission wire(s) covered by an insulating layer, a shielding layer,
> and an outer jacket; used for data, voice, and video transmissions; can
> transmit either broadband (several signals) or baseband (one signal).
> Codec:
> A "code/decode" electrical device that converts an analog electrical
> signal into a digital form for transmission purposes and then converts
> it back at the other end.
> Compressed video:
> Video images that have been processed to reduce the amount of bandwidth
> needed to capture the necessary information so that the information can
> be sent over a telephone network.
> Computer-based Patient Record (CPR):
> A compilation in electronic form of individual patient information that
> resides in a system designed to provide access to complete and accurate
> patient data, alerts, reminders, clinical decision support systems,
> links to medical knowledge, and other aids.
> Computer Conferencing:
> Group communications through computers, or the use of shared computer
> files, remote terminal equipment, and telecommunications channels for
> two-way, real-time communication.
> D
> Data Compression:
> Processing data to reduce storage and bandwidth requirements. Some
> compression methods result in the loss of some information, which may
> or may not be clinically important.
> Digital:
> Discrete signals such as those represented by bits as opposed to
> continuously variable analog signals. Digital technology allows
> communications signals to be compressed for more efficient transmission
> .
> Digital Imaging and Communication in Medicine (DICOM):
> A standard for communications among medical imaging devices.
> Digitizing:
> Conversion of analog into digital information.
> Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS):
> A satellite designed with sufficient power so that inexpensive earth
> stations, or downlinks, can be used for direct residential reception.
> Direct Digital Imaging:
> Involves the capture of digital images so that they can be
> electronically transmitted.
> Downlink:
> The path from a satellite to the Earth stations that receive its
> signals.
> DS1 (T1):
> A digital carrier capable of transmitting 1.544 Mbps of electronic
> information. The general term for a digital carrier available for
> high-value voice, data, or compressed video traffic.
> DS3 (T3):
> A carrier of 45 Mbps bandwidth. One DS3 channel can carry 28 DS1
> channels.
> Duplex:
> A transmission system allowing data to be transmitted in both
> directions simultaneously.
> E
> Electronic Data Interchange (EDI):
> The sending and receiving of data directly between trading partners
> without paper or human intervention.
> Encryption:
> The rearrangement of the "bit" stream of a previously digitally encoded
> signal in a systematic fashion to make it unrecognizable until restored
> by the necessary authorization key. This technique is used for securing
> information transmitted over a communication channel with the intent of
> excluding all other than the authorized receivers from interpreting the
> message.
> F
> Fiber optics:
> Hair-thin, flexible glass rods encased in cables that use light to
> transmit audio, video, and data signals.
> Film Digitizer:
> A device that allows scanning of existing static images so that the
> images can be stored, manipulated, or transmitted in digital form.
> Filmless Radiology:
> Use of devices that replace film by acquiring digital images and
> related patient information and transmit, store, retrieve, and display
> them electronically.
> Firewall:
> Computer hardware and software that block unauthorized communications
> between an institution's computer network and external networks.
> Freeze-frame (Slow scan):
> A method of transmitting still images over standard telephone lines at
> a rate of one every 8 to 30 seconds.
> Full Duplex:
> A communication channel over which both transmission and reception are
> possible at the same time.
> Full-motion Video:
> A standard video signal requiring 6MHz (megahertz) in analog format and
> 45 Mbps when encoded digitally.
> H
> Half-duplex:
> A communication channel over which both transmission and reception are
> possible, but only in one direction at a time.
> Health Level-7 Data Communications Protocol (HL-7):
> Defines standards for transmitting billing, hospital census, order
> entries, and other health-related information.
> I
> Image Processing:
> Use of algorithms to modify data representing an image, usually to
> improve diagnostic interpretation.
> Integrated services digital network (ISDN):
> A digital telecommunications technology that allows for the integrated
> transmission of voice, data, and video; a protocol for high-speed
> digital transmission.
> Interface:
> The boundary between two hardware or software systems across which data
> are transferred.
> Internet:
> the largest international computer network, linking computers and
> computer networks from colleges and universities, government agencies,
> institutions, and commercial organizations worldwide.
> L
> Local area networks (LANs):
> Private networks that facilitate the sharing of information and
> computer resources by members of a specific group.
> M
> Modem:
> A modulator/demodulator, this device converts digital information into
> analog form for transmission over a telecommunications channel and
> reconverts it to digital form at the point of reception.
> N
> Narrowband:
> A telecommunications medium that uses (relatively) low-frequency
> signals, exceeding 1.544 Mbps.
> Network:
> A set of nodes, points, or locations connected by means of data, voice,
> and video communications for the purpose of exchange.
> O
> Optical character recognition (OCR):
> Automated scanning and conversion of printed characters to
> computer-based text.
> P
> Picture archiving and communications system (PACS):
> A system that acquires, transmits, stores, retrieves, and displays
> digital images and related patient information from a variety of
> imaging sources and communicates the information over a network.
> Pixel:
> The smallest displayable area on a computer screen; the fundamental
> picture element of a digital image.
> R
> Real time:
> The capture, processing, and presentation of data at the time the data
> is originated.
> Resolution:
> Spatial resolution is the ability to distinguish between adjacent
> structures. Contrast resolution is the ability to distinguish between
> shades of gray.
> S
> Slow scan video:
> A device that transmits and receives still video pictures over a narrow
> telecommunications channel.
> Store-and-forward:
> Transmission of static images or audio-video clips to a remote data
> storage device, from which they can be retrieved by a medical
> practitioner for review and consultation at any time, obviating the
> need for the simultaneous availability of the consulting parties and
> reducing transmission costs due to low bandwidth requirements.
> Synchronous transmission:
> The process by which bits are transmitted at a fixed rate with the
> transmitter and receiver synchronized, eliminating the need for
> start/stop elements, thus providing greater efficiency.
> T
> Telecommunications:
> The use of wire, radio, optical, or other electromagnetic channels to
> transmit or receive signals for voice, data, and video communications.
> Teleconferencing:
> Interactive electronic communication between two or more people at two
> or more sites, which make use of voice, video, and/or data transmission
> systems.
> Teleconsultation:
> Geographic separation between two or more providers during a
> consultation.
> Telediagnosis:
> The detection of a disease by evaluating data transmitted to a
> receiving station from instruments monitoring a distant patient.
> Telematics:
> The use of computer-based information processing in telecommunications
> and the use of telecommunications to allow computers to transfer
> programs and data to one another.
> Telemedicine:
> The use of audio, video, and other telecommunications and electronic
> information processing technologies to provide health services or
> assist health care personnel at distant sites.
> Telementoring:
> The use of audio, video, and other telecommunications and electronic
> information processing technologies to provide individual guidance or
> instruction, for example, involving a consultant guiding a distant
> clinician in a new medical procedure.
> Telemonitoring:
> The use of audio, video, and other telecommunications and electronic
> information processing technologies to monitor patient status at a
> distance.
> Telepresence:
> The use of robotic and other devices that allow a person (e.g., a
> surgeon) to perform a task at a remote site by manipulating instruments
> (e.g., lasers or dental handpieces) and receiving sensory information
> or feedback (e.g., pressure akin to that created by touching a patient)
> that creates a sense of being present at the remote site and allows a
> satisfactory degree of technical performance (e.g., dexterity).
>
>
>
> > It will be enormously important if Dr. Jones can win his case, not just
> > to vindicate "Saint" Jones, but to preserve our access to care.
>
> NO NO NO YOU FUCKING MORON! IT IS NOT ABOUT THIS SHUT THE FUCK UP YOU
> IDIOT YOU ***!!!
>
>
> > Dr. Jones has treated over 7,000 children and is the only training
> > physician for pediatric Lyme and routinely consults with doctors
> > treating children. The loss of his work to the community would cut
> > deeply.
>
> And you're going to get him convicted you fucking moron!!!
>
> His biggest mistake was hooking up with you and pat smith!
>
>
> > It is wonderful that Dr. Jones, at his advanced age, is willing to
> > stand up and fight! He has assembled a great defense team and has the
> > advice, counsel and help from some of our best and brightest experts in
> > the treatment of Lyme. We must stand with him! Please give as
> > generously as you are able.
>
>
> Shut the *** up!!!
>
>
>
>
> > "The Dr. Charles Ray Jones Legal Defense Fund"
> > C/O George Heath, III (CPA)
> > 26 Fairlawn Drive
> > Wallingford, CT 06492
> > 203-782-4343 (work)
>
>
> Again, why couldn't you tell us who George Heath III is?
>
> (He IS Dr Jones' accountant apparently--which IS appropriate for a
> defense fund).
>
>
> > Please make your checks out to the "Charles Ray Jones Legal Defense
> > Fund" and be sure to write "GIFT" in the memo section of the check.
> >
> > Legal defense funds are not tax deductible. If you have further
> > questions, please contact Dr Jones' office at 203-772-1123.
> >
> > Thank you all.
> > Phyllis Mervine
> > CALDA
>
>
> Dr Jones might as well get a gun and shoot himself. That would be
> better than hooking up with YOU, with Pat Smith and with Ellen
> Lubarsky.
>
> You'll be the ruin of him!
>
> NOW SHUT THE FUCK UP PHYLLIS YOU FUCKING MORON SHUT THE FUCK UP ALREADY
> SHUT THE *** UP!!!!

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