No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
Depraved-heart murder is recognized in the Model Penal Code § 210.2(1)(b).[3] The Model Penal Code considers unintentional killing to constitute murder when the conduct of the defendant manifests "extreme indifference to the value of human life".
HELPING REFORM MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT AROUND THE WORLD
Suicide Risk Schizophrenics
People with the condition have a 50 times higher risk of attempting suicide than the general population; the risk of suicide is very serious in people with schizophrenia. Suicide is the number one cause of premature death among people with schizophrenia, with an estimated 10 percent to 13 percent killing themselves and approximately 40% attempting suicide at least once (and as much as 60% of males attempting suicide). The extreme depression and psychoses that can result due to lack of treatment are the usual causes. These suicides rates can be compared to the general population, which is somewhere around 0.01%. www.schizophrenia.com/szfacts.htm www.schizophrenicunderground.com
Hazed, Harrassed, and Terrorized at home ,
OF OREGON STATE HOSPITAL AND OTHER CARE TAKERS?
NO ATTEMPTED LIFE SAVING TREATMENT FOR YARYLN
SHE PASSED AWAY JUNE 7,2011,
HER BREAST EXAMS NEGLECTED
HER LIFE SAVING LUMP-ECTOMY NEGLECTED
NO EVIDENCE OF TERMINAL CANCER
! HER CANCER WAS NEVER PROVEN BY BIOPSY OR TUMOR MARKERS IN HER BLOOD STREAM!
THE OFFICIAL INVESTIGATORS RULE SHE IS NOT A VICTIM,
SHE HAD A RIGHT TO DIE FROM THEIR NEGLIGENCE?
THERE WAS NO EVIDENCE OF NEGLECT, BUT HER
DEATH IS EVIDENCE.
WAS THIS PASSIVE EUTHANASIA IN AMERICA OR EUGENICS BY NAZI DOCTORS AND STAFF?
mammogram is a breast X-ray used for early detection of breast cancer. It is recommended yearly starting at age 40. A clinical breast examination, in which a doctor or nurse examines the breast for lumps or irregularities, is recommended once every three years starting at age 20, then once a year at age 40 and up. Typical costs: What should be included:
- For an uninsured patient, typical full-price cost of a mammogram ranges from $80 to $120 or more, with an average of about $102, according to Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina. Some providers charge more, and some offer an uninsured discount. For example, at the Kapiolani Medical Center in Aiea, Hawaii, where the full price is about $212, an uninsured patient would pay about $127 to $148.
- Mammograms usually are covered by health insurance for women in the recommended age bracket. Many states require health insurance companies to cover regular mammograms, usually after age 40. The National Women's Law Center offers a state-by-state chart.
- For women covered by health insurance, some plans require no out-of-pocket expenses, while others charge a copay, generally between $10 and $35.
- A clinical breast exam is much less expensive, and usually is included as part of a general or gynecological check-up.
Additional costs:
- The mammogram technician places the breast between two plastic plates, which compress the breast tissue so a clear X-ray can be taken. The procedure takes about 20 minutes.
- The American Cancer Society offers a primer on early detection of breast cancer. Only two to four of every 1,000 women who undergo a mammogram end up receiving a diagnosis of cancer.
- In a clinical breast exam, the doctor or nurse manually checks the breasts, lymph nodes and nipples for any palpable irregularities.
Discounts:
- Women at high risk for breast cancer, such as those with a known breast cancer gene mutation, should consider getting an MRI each year in addition to a mammogram, according to the American Cancer Society.
- If an irregularity is found, more testing or follow-up testing might be required. About 10 percent of women who have a mammogram require more tests, usually just another mammogram. However, about 8 to 10 percent do require a biopsy.
Shopping for a mammogram:
- During the month of October, Breast Cancer Awareness Month, some community or women's groups offer free or very low-cost mammograms, sometimes using a mobile clinic. To find a program, call the Susan G. Komen for the Cure Breast Care Helpline at 1-800 I'M AWARE (1-800-462-9273). Or contact the YWCA's ENCOREplus program any time for a referral for a free or low-cost mammogram.
- Visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website to find a program in your area that offers low-cost or free mammograms to uninsured and underinsured women who qualify.
- If you have health insurance, consult with your general practitioner or gynecologist to get a mammogram and/or a clinical breast exam.
- Otherwise, check with your local Susan G. Komen for the Cure affiliate to get more information on planned screening events. Or, call your local health department or use the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Inc.'s online search feature to find a local clinic.
- For mammorgrams, the American Cancer Society recommends using a facility that performs many mammograms each day, and is authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to perform mammograms
" In the Middle Ages the scapegoats were "witches"; Today they are the involuntary ' mental patients' or the 'mentally ill' The Myth Of Mental Illness T Szasz p.210
" The hospitalized,involuntarily ,mentally ill are regarded as 'bad' and effects are made to make them 'better'---------------- though this is an ostensibly medical system of values, it is non the less an ethical scheme.In addition to the mentally ill, elderly persons, and people who are especially ugly or deformed find themsleves in a class analogous to the defunct category of witches or sorcerers...............The reason why individuals displaying such characteristics are considered 'bad' is inherent in the rules of the medical game. Just was witchcraft was an inverted theological game,so much of general psychiatry---especially the so called care of the involuntary mental patient- is kind of an inverted medical game. The Myth Of Mental Illness T. Szasz p.219
The most striking of such intrusions which produces both intense distress and confusions because of the density and high velocity of ideation occurs in the acute, initial stages of a schizophrenic episode. Under these conditions, the individual maybe confronted, from central sources, with an overwhelming number of images, impulses, and ideas changing so rapidly and reaching such a high level of density of stimulation that intense distress is activated, punctuated by sudden terror at the suddenness of increase of stimulation. Some patients resort to writing down this ideation with the explicit intention of reducing the velocity and density of ideas and their impression of chaos by ordering their thoughts, sometimes half of them on one side of the page, half of them on the other. The schemes of achieving order and reducing the excessive bombardment of the inner experience vary considerably, but all involve the reduction of confusion and distress by some simplification and ordering of ideas. Such patients believe that their future recovery depends on their reducing the number and velocity of ideas by which they are being bombarded. The normal individual ordinarily knows such central bombardment for only brief periods of time. When it proves excessive he is able to turn it off or down. In the acute psychotic phase it is not possible to turn down the density of such stimulation, so that stress is activated and very frequently terror at sudden experience of being overwhelmed. Affect ,Imagery and Consciousness Volume II, p 29 S Tomkins