No!  I don't believe it. They would not do something like that!  Put profit
above stopping human misery?   You must be some sort of paranoid conspiracy
theorist!  The government and the drug companies are trying to help us.etc,
etc, etc.

James-Osbourne: Holmes

-----Original Message-----
From: Marshall Dudley [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2001 9:20 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>Flesh eating bacteria

I read somewhere that H2O2 is extremely effective against this bacteria.  CS
is probably as well, but H2O2 is instantous in stopping it from a report I
read some time back.  Unfortunately hospitals will not use it, but instead
fill you with expensive drugs which have limited or no effectiveness.  H2O2
is too cheap to be an acceptable protocol. :<
Marshall
[email protected] wrote:
This is the 4th or 5th case of flesh eating bacteria in this area in a short
time.  Would CS, the hyperbaric system described by Brooks, or anything else
we have talked about, have worked for this guy?  He is the dad of a friend.
suzy
http://www.dmregister.com/news/stories/c4788996/14655842.html
Flesh-eating disease attacks Urbandale man

A sudden attack of "flesh-eating disease" leads to amputation.
By KATE KOMPAS
<mailto:[email protected]%3fsubject=online:%20Flesh-eating%20disease%20
attacks%20Urbandale%20man>
Register Staff Writer
05/11/2001Joseph Rogers of Urbandale got out of bed about 6 a.m. on April 21
and couldn't feel his toes.Doctors removed his leg before noon.Rogers, 76,
fell victim to necrotizing fasciitis, commonly known as the "flesh-eating
disease."The disease is caused by a variation of the bacteria that causes
strep throat and is as rare as it is deadly. The bacteria typically enter
the
body through a wound and immediately begin to devour muscle and fat. It can
progress at a speed of three centimeters an hour, doctors say.The Centers
for
Disease Control reports there are fewer than 2,000 people infected in the
United States each year. About 100 of them will die. Experts say the chance
of contracting necrotizing fasciitis from another person is near
nonexistent."I've got a disease I can't pronounce the name of," Rogers said
Thursday. "I don't understand why this happened to me."His was the second
case of necrotizing fasciitis reported in Iowa in the past month. Curtis
Benttine, a truck driver from St. Ansgar, was hospitalized earlier this
week.
Twelve pounds of infected tissue was removed from Benttine's leg.Dr. Cort
Lohff of the state health department said statewide numbers on necrotizing
fasciitis aren't kept, but the disease has shown up before:* Randy
Schabaker,
51, of Des Moines died of the flesh-eating disease in March 1993.* Bryan
Crawford, 12, of Independence lost part of his leg to the disease in 1994.*
Ryan Johnson, 14, of Independence died in 1995. He also had leukemia.*
Stuart
Eliasen, a 34-year-old Plainfield farmer, died in 1997.* Matthew Potter, 6,
of Amana died in 1998 from a streptococcus infection that later was
determined not to be the "flesh-eating" form.When his toes went numb, Rogers
called to his wife, Mary, who thought he was having a stroke and called
911.A
bruise appeared on his left leg by the time he arrived at the hospital,
Rogers said. The discoloration spread, inching up his leg within a few
hours.
By 10 a.m., the doctors at Iowa Methodist Medical Center said they should
amputate.Doctors still are puzzled over how Rogers contracted the disease."I
cried for three days," Mary Rogers said Thursday. "But I've accepted
it."Mary, who's been married to Joseph for 53 years, has been reading
everything she can on the disease.The retired steel worker and World War II
veteran will start rehabilitation soon and will be fitted with a prosthetic
leg."There's no pain," he said. "The good leg feels good, and the bad leg's
not there." Rogers said. "I guess I'm lucky I got through it."