Guest guest Posted January 23, 2003 Report Share Posted January 23, 2003 I was thinking about my own situation while reading about everyone else's personal battles with Lyme. I remember reading sometime back that Sen. ph Lieberman CT (who just announced his run for president in 2004,) is a Lyme advocate. Maybe we should all think of giving his campaign a letter or call and ask about his support for Lyme patients if he becomes President. Wouldn't that be ironic if all Lymies voted for Lieberman maybe then the government could get an accurate count of Lyme cases in the US! Well here is the contact info if anyone is interested: To contact Joe Lieberman's Senate office in D.C: 706 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 (202) 224-4041 Voice (202) 224-9399 TDD and in Connecticut: One Constitution Plaza, 7th Floor Hartford, CT 06103 (860) 549-8463 Voice (860) 522-8443 TDD (860) 549-8478 Fax (800) 225-5605 Toll Free in CT To contact his campaign office for Presidential Election 2004: Joe Lieberman for President, Inc. 236 Massachusetts Avenue, NE Suite 203 Washington, DC 20002 http://www.joe2004.com/index.jsp info@... (202) 543-6121 (Phone) (202) 543-5274 (Fax) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 23, 2003 Report Share Posted January 23, 2003 From: Everything You Need to Know About Lyme Disease and other Tick-Borne Disorders Vanderhoof-Forschner, 1997 AFTERWORD A Special Message from The Honorable Senator ph I Lieberman Vanderhoof-Forschner is a constituent of mine, but we did not first meet in our home state of Connecticut. In 1989, shortly after I was sworn in as a senator, I happened to be having lunch in the Senate Dining Room when was introduced to me. After a brief conversation, I asked her to let my office know if there was anything we could do for her while she was in Washington. 'As a matter of fact, there is..., " she said. And so began a long and fruitful friendship... and partnership in the battle against Lyme disease. Because of her own family's devastating encounter with this disease, was inspired to help make the public, the government, and the medical community itself more aware of Lyme disease-so that citizens could take steps to avoid it, doctors could know how to recognize and treat it, and government and researchers could find new ways to combat it. Vanderhoof-Forschner is the perfect person to bring us Everything You Need to Know about Lyme Disease. Written by a parent, the book comes at a time when so many parents have concerns about what to do when they spot a tick on their child's body. We've all heard something about Lyme disease - thanks in large part to 's remarkable public education efforts throughout this decade-but we're still largely in the dark about the practical steps we should all take to protect our families. That's where this book comes in. You've just come home from a hike in the woods with your kids, and while undressing, you see a tick attached to the area behind a knee or underneath a sock. You look at the tick ruefully, with a foggy awareness of Lyme disease, but no notion of what to do next. Do you burn it off or use nail polish or tweezers? How quickly should you act? What are the symptoms of Lyme disease? Should you call the doctor? This book answers those questions and does so in what I would call " plain language. " It includes everything from the names and addresses of companies that make special tweezers that remove ticks, to government public health agencies around the world that are in the forefront of the fight against Lyme disease. Along the way those interested can learn a lot about the history of the disease, medical treatment, and preventive measures that can protect you and your children. Ticks are commonplace, and when I was young they were considered little more than an itchy nuisance. Yet, today infected ticks harbor bacteria in their guts that can be injected into the victim. Once there, the bacteria cause a wide variety of symptoms developing over time-from flu-like symptoms and a rash to severe headaches, arthritis, and even cardiac abnormalities. Recent research has indicated that quick action to remove the tick can ward off much of the danger. But diagnosing the disease and treating infection once it occurs remain difficult. We have made great strides in our understanding over the last 10 years. The Lyme Disease Foundation, created by and her husband, Tom, has made a great contribution to that advance. This book is a valuable contribution that I believe will be useful to parents and health care professionals alike. Lyme disease is a real, national health threat. From 1982 to 1994 over seventy thousand cases of Lyme disease in forty-eight states were reported to the Centers for Disease Control. In 1994 there was a 58 percent increase in the number of cases over 1993. A study conducted by the Lyme Disease Foundation and the Society of Actuaries determined that Lyme disease could be costing this country as much as $1 billion a year in health care costs and lost productivity. I have worked with to improve awareness of the disease by sponsoring Lyme Disease Awareness Week each year. And we've lobbied, with some success, for funding of Lyme disease research and education. But the Centers for Disease Control estimate that thousands of Lyme disease cases still go undiagnosed, unreported, and untreated. That's why efforts by individuals and private organizations like the Lyme Disease Foundation are critical. And that's why Everything You Need to Know about Lyme Disease is so timely. I wish this book could be supplied as a gift to every parent leaving a hospital with a newborn child - or, better yet, to every man and woman for their library shelf. But for now, read and learn, and buy a copy for someone you love... because there may well come a day when they'll be happy to have it on their shelf. -Senator ph L Liebernan Connecticut [ ] Just a Thought Here.... I was thinking about my own situation while reading about everyone else's personal battles with Lyme. I remember reading sometime back that Sen. ph Lieberman CT (who just announced his run for president in 2004,) is a Lyme advocate. Maybe we should all think of giving his campaign a letter or call and ask about his support for Lyme patients if he becomes President. Wouldn't that be ironic if all Lymies voted for Lieberman maybe then the government could get an accurate count of Lyme cases in the US! Well here is the contact info if anyone is interested: To contact Joe Lieberman's Senate office in D.C: 706 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 (202) 224-4041 Voice (202) 224-9399 TDD and in Connecticut: One Constitution Plaza, 7th Floor Hartford, CT 06103 (860) 549-8463 Voice (860) 522-8443 TDD (860) 549-8478 Fax (800) 225-5605 Toll Free in CT To contact his campaign office for Presidential Election 2004: Joe Lieberman for President, Inc. 236 Massachusetts Avenue, NE Suite 203 Washington, DC 20002 http://www.joe2004.com/index.jsp info@... (202) 543-6121 (Phone) (202) 543-5274 (Fax) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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