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hi bill

you wrote:

> Dear All,
>This one went out (fax) to the St Louis Post Dispatch this morning.
> if anyone sees any Udall letters to the Editor would you please
>send me a clipping or a copy of that letter?
> Regards,  WHH
>
>"Heck no I'm not OK, I have Parkinson's Disease!"
> Mention Parkinson's Disease (PD) to the average person
>and one hears things like: "My great aunt Sofia had that,
>her fingers wiggled."  The image that comes to mind is an
>elderly person, slightly slow and with a tremor.  However,
>many people with PD (PWP) got the disease before their
>fortieth birthday. PD is not often kind to them.
>
>This is a complex, but not uncommon disease.  The onset
>is insidious.
>
>Doctors often believe an early PWP is malingering or having
>"mental problems". Later, the stiffness the patient has felt for
>months or years starts to show in body movements.  Eventually
>the diagnosis becomes obvious.
>
>The PWP is started on some "wonderful pills" that return
>them to a normal life.  Unfortunately, PD is progressive and
>the medicine that worked so well the first several years begins
>causing side effects of increasing severity - mostly involuntary
>body movements.
>
>That's what was going on one day last year when some concerned
>citizens asked me if I were OK.  I was thrashing around, fogging
>up the car windows, in a store parking lot.  I felt a flash of anger.
>They were genuinely concerned but the question demanded a trivial
>answer ("fine").  I was not "OK" but there was nothing they could
>do, and it took a lot of effort for me to explain that I lived with this.

>Bless their hearts, they located my wife and told on me.  She
>reassured them. Once before, someone had dialed 911 to report
>"a guy in the parking lot having a seizure".
>
>PD is an expensive waster of lives and treasure. Studies have
>shown the cost to the US Economy is about $25 billion a year.  As the baby
boomers age, the
 country will pay even more.
 The medicines are expensive, very few can continue working past about six
 years, and there usually is another ("caregiver"-CG) who is also taken out of
 productive pursuits.  With social security disability, lost taxes from
 disabled workers, medicines for veterans, etc. what the US Government pays
 must be substantial.  A conservative guess is 5 billion dollars a year (over
 $13 million a day).  That would go through $100 million in a week (7.3 days).

 PD should be eradicated ASAP.  Fortunately, today there are many hopeful
areas
 of research. They include neuroprotection, cell replacement, and stimulation
 devices.  Funding has been lacking.

 Legislation (The Morris K. Udall Parkinson's Research and Education Bill) for
 the government to invest in a cure and start recouping some of that waste has
 been around since the spring of 1995.  Unfortunately, Congress has been
 squandering both lives and money by failing to pass that legislation until
 last year.  Even today with a huge budget excess, they have yet to fund this
 legislation.

 If a cure is found and applied to end PD, it saves the United States 5
billion
 dollars, year after year.  That rate of return is 1000% the first year that
 the costs of PD go away.  Lesser therapies give lesser rates of return.. Help
 us be OK and do yourself a favor.  Call your Congressperson at (202) 224-3121
 tell him/her to get on with it.  Tell him/her to "Fund the Udall law.  Pass
 the full 100 million, now.!"

 541 words (excluding these and the name block)


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