U.S. Senate: Questions and answers

Here is something to think about.  "Here are the complete answers to a series of questions placed before U.S. Senate candiates Rep. Tom Udall and Rep. Steve Pearce. Both candidates were asked to give yes or no answers to the following questions with the option of explaining their answers.
 

Should a psychological evaluation be required for veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan?

Pearce: No

Udall: Yes. We should ensure all of our soldiers receive full medical examinations when they return from war, including psychological evaluations. Although not every medical condition can be immediately identified, such examinations help identify the signs of serious injuries to our service members and open the door to needed medical care and treatments. Veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan should be evaluated for behavioral health conditions and post-traumatic stress disorder, but prior to that they should be tested for traumatic brain injury. If veterans are treated with pharmaceuticals for PTSD, it could permanently complicate treatment of TBI. Further, we should ensure that there is mandatory health care funding for all veterans so that every man and women who served in uniform receives the care they were promised.

In Congress I co-sponsored several bills to increase funding for veterans with PTSD and TBI and to address some of the core issues that are preventing our veterans from receiving the best care possible when they return home. The Veterans TBI Act of 2007, for example, created a long-term care program for veterans with traumatic brain injury and created a transition office to ensure no veterans slip through the cracks.

 

 

Beating leads to Brain Injury

The Associated Press brought news of the death of an Arkansas news Anchor caused by a beating.  I represent victims of assault and battery.  Defendants and Insurance Companies typically defend cases like this.  I am working on several beating and brain injury cases.

Read the whole article by clicking here.

AIG agrees to $18 million injury settmement

This just in from the Associated Reporter.  This office handles several cases with AIG as the insurer.

American International Group, the insurance giant rescued by $85 billion in federal loans last month, has agreed to an $18 million settlement with the father of a disabled former Raleigh man.

AIG's decision to conclude the settlement with accident victim Mark Pellegrin's father comes after a judge ordered the company to pay $75 million when a subsidiary failed to defend the case in Wake Superior Court.

Such settlements rarely become public, but the details were discussed earlier this month in an open court session before U.S. District Judge Terrence Boyle attended by a reporter for the News & Observer of Raleigh. Lawyers for both sides asked to keep the settlement confidential, but Boyle did not take up their request.

Lawyers also said they were moving to settle quickly because of AIG's financial condition. In September, the Federal Reserve saved the imperiled company with a two-year, $85 billion credit line in return for a 79.9 percent stake in AIG.

The lawsuit settlement appears to be one of the largest in the state's history for a personal injury case, local lawyers said.

"That's huge," said Dan Hartzog, a Raleigh attorney who specializes in civil cases and was not involved in the case. "It would be a big jury verdict, but it's a really big settlement."

In May, state Superior Court Judge Orlando Hudson granted the request by Pellegrin's attorneys to order the company to pay damages of $75 million. No one representing National Union Fire Insurance Co. of Pittsburgh, an AIG subsidiary, showed up for trial to defend the company that owned the pickup truck involved in the incident and the employee who drove it.

National Union then asked that the case be taken up by the federal court. The company also began settlement talks with Pellegrin's attorneys.

One of National Union's attorneys, Jim Exum, told the federal court that the insurance policy had a maximum payout of $21 million.

The lawsuit was filed last year against KCI Technologies and one of its employees, Kelly Joe McKiernan, 29, who maintained the company's cell phone towers. McKiernan said in a deposition that on New Year's Eve 2005, after drinking beer and Jagermeister, he jumped into his company-issued truck. He was ready to leave Pellegrin's apartments after some roughhousing between the two friends left McKiernan upset.

But as McKiernan put the truck in gear, Pellegrin ran in front of the vehicle to try to get him to stop. The truck hit Pellegrin, who suffered severe brain injuries that left him with limited movement and speech.

Pellegrin, 29, is being cared for at his father's home near Houma, La.

Pellegrin's father, Jerry, said he was satisfied with the settlement, which pays $6 million immediately, invests another $6 million for future costs, and pays $6 million to Pellegrin's attorneys, who took the case on a contingency basis.

Boyle accepted the settlement but postponed judgment on the attorneys fees.
 

Quality of Life article

The International Brain Injury Association published an article entitled Overcoming Anomy: The Impact of Positive Rituals on Quality of Life issue 3 2008. 

Thomas E. Pomeranz, Ed.D., President, Universal LifeStiles, LLC, Research and Policy Fellow Minot State University, has this to say:

Quality of life can be elusive and complicated for all individuals and can be dramatically so for people with traumatic brain injury who are globally challenged. Physical prowess, cognitive functioning, family, friends, sexuality, employment and hope are among the markers of a quality of life that may be jeopardized or lost for many with TBI. These losses and/or perceived losses combined with a lowered threshold for mediating one’s emotional state, commonly give rise to demonstrations of anger and hostility. This article is intended to provide the reader with an alternative therapeutic strategy to address these behaviors which interfere with a quality of life. If my life has no meaning or value, then I will behave in a way to cause your life to be void of meaning and value as well. When this statement was first shared with me I was struck by its profound implication relative to a variety of quality of life issues affecting many people with TBI. It was immediately evident that for a significant percentage of people with TBI, especially those requiring pervasive supports, that their life lacks meaning – diminished of value.

Read the full article by clicking Overcoming Anomy: The Impact of Positive Rituals on Quality of Life.
 

Homeless and Brain Injury

Have you ever driven by the tent of cardboard boxes under the freeway and wondered why the people that live there don't get out and get a job or help themselves out of the dilemma?

A recent article points out that many homeless people suffer brain injury and are stuck in the very predicament they are in due to it.

More than one in three of Toronto's homeless suffered a traumatic brain injury prior to ending up on the streets, a new study indicates, suggesting that mental health is linked to homelessness.

Read the entire article by clicking here.

Who to Vote For

This just in from the AP

If John McCain is elected and goes on to win a second term, there's as much as a one-in-four chance America could see its first woman president — Sarah Palin.

It's actuarial math.

The odds highly favor either McCain or Barack Obama completing a first term in good health. After that, McCain's odds are still fairly solid, but his chances of dying or being in poor health go up faster than Obama's, mainly because of his age.

An Atlanta actuarial company specializing in individualized estimates of life and health expectancy has run the numbers for McCain, 72, and Obama, 47. The firm, Bragg Associates, calculated the odds of the candidates dying in office, adjusted for their known health problems.

McCain would be the oldest president to begin a first term in office. By the end of a second term, Jan. 20, 2017, he would have a 24.44 percent chance of dying, compared with 5.76 percent for Obama, the firm estimates.

"Can either candidate expect to serve two terms in a healthy state? The answer is yes," says James C. Brooks, Jr., an actuary with the firm. "They're both in outstanding health for people of their age."

Illness is another issue.

Because chances of developing a serious ailment are higher for any person than are the chances of dying, Bragg used the candidates' medical information to estimate how many years of good health might be in store for each. After all, a debilitating illness could force a president to step down.

The firm estimates that McCain has a health expectancy of 8.4 years, while Obama can expect another 21.9 years of good health. The calculations are from January 2009, covering two terms in office for either candidate. McCain, if he's like others in his age group, would have a cushion of just about five months.

But no one really knows. Actuaries like Brooks make statistical calculations for insurance companies, based on numbers culled from large databases. No matter how sophisticated, they can't predict anyone's future.

"There a randomness to it that we don't know," said Ron Gebhardtsbauer, who directs the actuarial science program at Penn State's Smeal College of Business.

For example, he said, "if McCain is president, he'll get the best health care in the world. I can't crank that into any of my numbers."

Health expectancy calculations, although relatively new, are becoming increasingly important as people buy long-term-care insurance.

"We've done thousands of these health expectancy calculations for financial planners," said Brooks. "People, especially those with high net worth, are concerned more about the risk of living too long than about what happens if they die prematurely. What if they need long-term care?"

The firm's estimates for McCain and Obama relied on medical information disclosed by the candidates. Bragg Associates has no partisan agenda, said Brooks: "We don't have a dog in this hunt."

He classified the Democrat as a smoker with minor upper respiratory problems, probably linked to his smoking. Obama announced in February that he was trying to quit smoking again, with the aid of nicotine gum.

"We don't consider you a nonsmoker until you stay quit for 12 months," said Brooks.

In the spring, the Obama campaign released a letter from the candidate's doctor declaring him to be in excellent health. He had very good cholesterol levels, his EKG was normal, his pulse was 60 beats per minute, and his blood pressure was an outstanding 90 over 60. Obama also exercises regularly.

But Obama has a family history of cancer. His mother died of ovarian cancer and his maternal grandfather died of prostate cancer. Obama's PSA screening test for prostate cancer showed no sign of abnormalities.

For the Republican, Brooks took into account a history of skin cancer, degenerative arthritis from his Vietnam war injuries, moderately high cholesterol, mild vertigo and that McCain is a former smoker who quit in 1980.

McCain allowed reporters to review eight years of medical records, more than 1,000 pages. They show that he is cancer-free, has a strong heart and is generally in good health. As a three-time melanoma survivor, his biggest health worry is a recurrence of that cancer. But he is closely watched by his dermatologist, and any future melanoma should be caught in time to be treated successfully. McCain maintains a healthy weight and blood pressure, and takes medication for his cholesterol.

To underscore his chances of long life, he's campaigned with his mother, 96 and going strong.

Vice presidential candidates Joe Biden and Sarah Palin have not released their medical records, although Biden has promised to. Biden, 65, had surgery 20 years ago to repair a life-threatening brain aneurysm. He was out of the Senate for seven months while he recuperated but says he's fine now. Palin, 44, a mother of five, gave birth earlier this year to a son, Trig, who was born with Down syndrome.


In this Nov. 4, 2001 file photo, Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., waves to the crowd prior to Game 7 of the World Series between the Arizona Diamondbacks and the New York Yankees at Bank One Ballpark in Phoenix. (AP Photo/John Bazemore, File)

In this April 29, 2008 file photo, the University of North Carolina's Jack Wooten, right, pressures Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., during a basketball game in Chapel Hill, N.C. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)
 

The Naked Brain Reviewed by deMause

Richard Restak, The Naked Brain: How the Emerging Neurosociety is Changing How We Live, Work, and Love. New York: Harmony Books, 2006.

Reviewed by Lloyd deMause

The revolution in neuroimaging techniques in the past two decades has produced such a new understanding of the effects of early experiences on the brain and the disorders from attachment deficiencies that are their result that psychologists-including psychotherapists and psychohistorians-simply cannot fully understand what the developmental causes of child abuse unless they keep up to date on what neuroscience has been discovering. If, for instance, you write about racism-from the Holocaust to Islamic terrorism-you cannot really understand what is happening unless you know early developmental problems affect the prefrontal cortex and later produce disabled medula (mirror neurons that enable one to empathize with others). Similarly, when you study group-fantasies of growing irrational fears of being attacked by other nations (who often have no designs at all on your nation), you really must understand how these fears (say, of Mother England about to pounce on you) were originally implanted in the amygdala, and unless you understand how kinds of experiences are making whole nations switch into these early amygdalan fear modules.

Restak provides an excellent summary of the basic advances in understanding neuropathology. I particularly learned a lot about what makes people-even groups-create in-group and out-group minds and feelings, which happens particularly before wars. That groups (tribes, states, ethnic groups, nations) carry over the fears they imprint from their parents to their later social lives is evident, particularly if their early attachments are insecure and they generate fears of being controlled by "enemies" (external and internal) should they try anything new and experience too much freedom in their adult lives. Studies are cited that scan the brains of hundreds of mothers interacting with their infants that show that the mothers who are postpartum depressed or otherwise were not adept at reading their infant's needs produce older children who have crippled prefrontal lobes and therefore are behind others in language and play skills by age two. It simply helps one to think this way about political events: "You remember quite vividly where you were on September 11, 2001, because the horrific events of that day aroused your emotions and activated your amygdala." And charts showing wars occurring during a nations' most fearful, most reactionary periods are actually amygdalan activation periods. Eliminating wars therefore must somehow affect this brain state.