Jan 15

VeriSign's iDefense security lab has published a report with technical details about the recent cyberattack that hit Google and over 30 other companies. The iDefense researchers traced the attack back to its origin and also identified the command-and-control servers that were used to manage the malware.

The cyber-assault came to light on Tuesday when Google disclosed to the public that the Gmail Web service was targeted in a highly-organized attack in late December. Google said that the intrusion attempt originated from China and was executed with the goal of obtaining information about political dissidents, but the company declined to speculate about the identity of the perpetrator.

Citing sources in the defense contracting and intelligence consulting community, the iDefense report unambiguously declares that the Chinese government was, in fact, behind the effort. The report also says that the malicious code was deployed in PDF files that were crafted to exploit a vulnerability in Adobe's software.

“The source IPs and drop server of the attack correspond to a single foreign entity consisting either of agents of the Chinese state or proxies thereof,” the report says.

The researchers have determined that there are significant similarities between the recent attack and a seemingly related one that was carried out in July against a large number of US companies. Both attacks were apparently managed through the same command-and-control servers.

“The servers used in both attacks employ the HomeLinux DynamicDNS provider, and both are currently pointing to IP addresses owned by Linode, a US-based company that offers Virtual Private Server hosting. The IP addresses in question are within the same subnet, and they are six IP addresses apart from each other,” the report says. “Considering this proximity, it is possible that the two attacks are one and the same, and that the organizations targeted in the Silicon Valley attacks have been compromised since July.”

If the report's findings are correct, it suggests that the government of China has been engaged for months in a massive campaign of industrial espionage against US companies.

Update: Adobe disputes iDefense's claim that PDFs were used to deploy the malware. In a statement issued today, Adobe says that they have found no evidence that their technology was used as an attack vector in this recent incident. This is supported by independent research conducted by security firm McAfee, which has found evidence that a vulnerability in Internet Explorer—but not Acrobat Reader—was exploited in the attack.

Jan 11

 

So, I was hanging out with Noam Chomsky in his office at MIT and we were talking about art and whether or not novels, plays, paintings and movies could ever be sufficiently weaponized to bully the dominant culture into being more accepting of radically humanitarian ideals and he said, comparing films from the past with films being produced nowadays, “I’ll occasionally look at an old movie from the 40s and its kind of fun because I remember them from when I was a kid, but you couldn’t really call them high art.  The actors were very wooden, there’s no storyline.  It’s fun to watch Cary Grant and Greta Garbo and people like that – Humphrey Bogart was fun, but he wasn’t subversive.”

“In all fairness,” I said, “the job of cinema back then was different.  Acting was exaggerated to serve the artistry of drama more than to mirror reality, which is more subtle and less precise – duller even.  Dialogue celebrated the written word more than the spoken word, which, I think, [is often] spectacular.  [After all], you don’t go to a ballet and then ridicule the dancers because you don’t see people walking down the street like that, do you?”

We had gotten off the main point of our conversation and into an area that was not at all unfamiliar to me.  For years I’ve argued against fascistic modernists in favor of the artistic legitimacy of early filmmakers and playwrights.  To me, the purpose of art, any art, has always been to provide a spectator with an experience or a vision unlikely to come to him or her through everyday living.    Sure I know that prejudice, for example, is abhorrent and that there are way too many demonstrations of that fact occurring all the time in the real world for me to have any doubt, but I can’t help believing that my spiritual understanding of what that kind of lazy hatred can do to a man’s soul is helped by something like Spencer Tracy’s speech at the end of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, or Gregory Peck’s eloquent defense, as Atticus Finch, of an African American wrongly accused of rape in To Kill a Mockingbird.  Indeed, nobody in real life speaks as poetically as either one of those scripted actors, but isn’t the truth too important to always be limited by the facts?

Sure, Norman Rockwell might appear more factually accurate in a literal sense than Willem De Kooning, but you have to ask yourself that if real vivid cosmic truth had radioactive properties which artist do you suppose would be more likely to make you vomit, piss blood, babble incoherently and then drop dead?

Okay, Bogart might not be subversive, but The Big Sleep kills me every time.

Jan 05

WIRED MAGAZINE: 17.09

Sony boosts Alpha range with DSLR-A450: Digital Photography Review

Sony boosts Alpha range with DSLR-A450: Sony has introduced another sub-$1000 DSLR, the A450. The Sony Alpha 450 slots in below the A500, offering the same 14.2 megapixel CMOS sensor as the more expensive A550 but …

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By Steve Silberman Email

Photo: Nick Veasey

Merck was in trouble. In 2002, the pharmaceutical giant was falling behind its rivals in sales. Even worse, patents on five blockbuster drugs were about to expire, which would allow cheaper generics to flood the market. The company hadn't introduced a truly new product in three years, and its stock price was plummeting.

In interviews with the press, Edward Scolnick, Merck's research director, laid out his battle plan to restore the firm to preeminence. Key to his strategy was expanding the company's reach into the antidepressant market, where Merck had lagged while competitors like Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline created some of the best-selling drugs in the world. “To remain dominant in the future,” he told Forbes, “we need to dominate the central nervous system.”

His plan hinged on the success of an experimental antidepressant codenamed MK-869. Still in clinical trials, it looked like every pharma executive's dream: a new kind of medication that exploited brain chemistry in innovative ways to promote feelings of well-being. The drug tested brilliantly early on, with minimal side effects, and Merck touted its game-changing potential at a meeting of 300 securities analysts.

Behind the scenes, however, MK-869 was starting to unravel. True, many test subjects treated with the medication felt their hopelessness and anxiety lift. But so did nearly the same number who took a placebo, a look-alike pill made of milk sugar or another inert substance given to groups of volunteers in clinical trials to gauge how much more effective the real drug is by comparison. The fact that taking a faux drug can powerfully improve some people's health—the so-called placebo effect—has long been considered an embarrassment to the serious practice of pharmacology.

Ultimately, Merck's foray into the antidepressant market failed. In subsequent tests, MK-869 turned out to be no more effective than a placebo. In the jargon of the industry, the trials crossed the futility boundary.

MK-869 wasn't the only highly anticipated medical breakthrough to be undone in recent years by the placebo effect. From 2001 to 2006, the percentage of new products cut from development after Phase II clinical trials, when drugs are first tested against placebo, rose by 20 percent. The failure rate in more extensive Phase III trials increased by 11 percent, mainly due to surprisingly poor showings against placebo. Despite historic levels of industry investment in R&D, the US Food and Drug Administration approved only 19 first-of-their-kind remedies in 2007—the fewest since 1983—and just 24 in 2008. Half of all drugs that fail in late-stage trials drop out of the pipeline due to their inability to beat sugar pills.

The upshot is fewer new medicines available to ailing patients and more financial woes for the beleaguered pharmaceutical industry. Last November, a new type of gene therapy for Parkinson's disease, championed by the Michael J. Fox Foundation, was abruptly withdrawn from Phase II trials after unexpectedly tanking against placebo. A stem-cell startup called Osiris Therapeutics got a drubbing on Wall Street in March, when it suspended trials of its pill for Crohn's disease, an intestinal ailment, citing an “unusually high” response to placebo. Two days later, Eli Lilly broke off testing of a much-touted new drug for schizophrenia when volunteers showed double the expected level of placebo response.

It's not only trials of new drugs that are crossing the futility boundary. Some products that have been on the market for decades, like Prozac, are faltering in more recent follow-up tests. In many cases, these are the compounds that, in the late '90s, made Big Pharma more profitable than Big Oil. But if these same drugs were vetted now, the FDA might not approve some of them. Two comprehensive analyses of antidepressant trials have uncovered a dramatic increase in placebo response since the 1980s. One estimated that the so-called effect size (a measure of statistical significance) in placebo groups had nearly doubled over that time.

It's not that the old meds are getting weaker, drug developers say. It's as if the placebo effect is somehow getting stronger.

The fact that an increasing number of medications are unable to beat sugar pills has thrown the industry into crisis. The stakes could hardly be higher. In today's economy, the fate of a long-established company can hang on the outcome of a handful of tests.

Why are inert pills suddenly overwhelming promising new drugs and established medicines alike? The reasons are only just beginning to be understood. A network of independent researchers is doggedly uncovering the inner workings—and potential therapeutic applications—of the placebo effect. At the same time, drugmakers are realizing they need to fully understand the mechanisms behind it so they can design trials that differentiate more clearly between the beneficial effects of their products and the body's innate ability to heal itself. A special task force of the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health is seeking to stem the crisis by quietly undertaking one of the most ambitious data-sharing efforts in the history of the drug industry. After decades in the jungles of fringe science, the placebo effect has become the elephant in the boardroom.

The roots of the placebo problem can be traced to a lie told by an Army nurse during World War II as Allied forces stormed the beaches of southern Italy. The nurse was assisting an anesthetist named Henry Beecher, who was tending to US troops under heavy German bombardment. When the morphine supply ran low, the nurse assured a wounded soldier that he was getting a shot of potent painkiller, though her syringe contained only salt water. Amazingly, the bogus injection relieved the soldier's agony and prevented the onset of shock.

Returning to his post at Harvard after the war, Beecher became one of the nation's leading medical reformers. Inspired by the nurse's healing act of deception, he launched a crusade to promote a method of testing new medicines to find out whether they were truly effective. At the time, the process for vetting drugs was sloppy at best: Pharmaceutical companies would simply dose volunteers with an experimental agent until the side effects swamped the presumed benefits. Beecher proposed that if test subjects could be compared to a group that received a placebo, health officials would finally have an impartial way to determine whether a medicine was actually responsible for making a patient better.

In a 1955 paper titled “The Powerful Placebo,” published in The Journal of the American Medical Association, Beecher described how the placebo effect had undermined the results of more than a dozen trials by causing improvement that was mistakenly attributed to the drugs being tested. He demonstrated that trial volunteers who got real medication were also subject to placebo effects; the act of taking a pill was itself somehow therapeutic, boosting the curative power of the medicine. Only by subtracting the improvement in a placebo control group could the actual value of the drug be calculated.

The article caused a sensation. By 1962, reeling from news of birth defects caused by a drug called thalidomide, Congress amended the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, requiring trials to include enhanced safety testing and placebo control groups. Volunteers would be assigned randomly to receive either medicine or a sugar pill, and neither doctor nor patient would know the difference until the trial was over. Beecher's double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial—or RCT—was enshrined as the gold standard of the emerging pharmaceutical industry. Today, to win FDA approval, a new medication must beat placebo in at least two authenticated trials.

Beecher's prescription helped cure the medical establishment of outright quackery, but it had an insidious side effect. By casting placebo as the villain in RCTs, he ended up stigmatizing one of his most important discoveries. The fact that even dummy capsules can kick-start the body's recovery engine became a problem for drug developers to overcome, rather than a phenomenon that could guide doctors toward a better understanding of the healing process and how to drive it most effectively.

In his eagerness to promote his template for clinical trials, Beecher also overreached by seeing the placebo effect at work in curing ailments like the common cold, which wane with no intervention at all. But the triumph of Beecher's gold standard was a generation of safer medications that worked for nearly everyone. Anthracyclines don't require an oncologist with a genial bedside manner to slow the growth of tumors.

What Beecher didn't foresee, however, was the explosive growth of the pharmaceutical industry. The blockbuster success of mood drugs in the '80s and '90s emboldened Big Pharma to promote remedies for a growing panoply of disorders that are intimately related to higher brain function. By attempting to dominate the central nervous system, Big Pharma gambled its future on treating ailments that have turned out to be particularly susceptible to the placebo effect.

The tall, rusty-haired son of a country doctor, William Potter, 64, has spent most of his life treating mental illness—first as a psychiatrist at the National Institute of Mental Health and then as a drug developer. A decade ago, he took a job at Lilly's neuroscience labs. There, working on new antidepressants and antianxiety meds, he became one of the first researchers to glimpse the approaching storm.

To test products internally, pharmaceutical companies routinely run trials in which a long-established medication and an experimental one compete against each other as well as against a placebo. As head of Lilly's early-stage psychiatric drug development in the late '90s, Potter saw that even durable warhorses like Prozac, which had been on the market for years, were being overtaken by dummy pills in more recent tests. The company's next-generation antidepressants were faring badly, too, doing no better than placebo in seven out of 10 trials.

As a psychiatrist, Potter knew that some patients really do seem to get healthier for reasons that have more to do with a doctor's empathy than with the contents of a pill. But it baffled him that drugs he'd been prescribing for years seemed to be struggling to prove their effectiveness. Thinking that something crucial may have been overlooked, Potter tapped an IT geek named David DeBrota to help him comb through the Lilly database of published and unpublished trials—including those that the company had kept secret because of high placebo response. They aggregated the findings from decades of antidepressant trials, looking for patterns and trying to see what was changing over time. What they found challenged some of the industry's basic assumptions about its drug-vetting process.

Assumption number one was that if a trial were managed correctly, a medication would perform as well or badly in a Phoenix hospital as in a Bangalore clinic. Potter discovered, however, that geographic location alone could determine whether a drug bested placebo or crossed the futility boundary. By the late '90s, for example, the classic antianxiety drug diazepam (also known as Valium) was still beating placebo in France and Belgium. But when the drug was tested in the US, it was likely to fail. Conversely, Prozac performed better in America than it did in western Europe and South Africa. It was an unsettling prospect: FDA approval could hinge on where the company chose to conduct a trial.

Mistaken assumption number two was that the standard tests used to gauge volunteers' improvement in trials yielded consistent results. Potter and his colleagues discovered that ratings by trial observers varied significantly from one testing site to another. It was like finding out that the judges in a tight race each had a different idea about the placement of the finish line.

Potter and DeBrota's data-mining also revealed that even superbly managed trials were subject to runaway placebo effects. But exactly why any of this was happening remained elusive. “We were able to identify many of the core issues in play,” Potter says. “But there was no clear answer to the problem.” Convinced that what Lilly was facing was too complex for any one pharmaceutical house to unravel on its own, he came up with a plan to break down the firewalls between researchers across the industry, enabling them to share data in “pre-competitive space.”

After prodding by Potter and others, the NIH focused on the issue in 2000, hosting a three-day conference in Washington. For the first time in medical history, more than 500 drug developers, doctors, academics, and trial designers put their heads together to examine the role of the placebo effect in clinical trials and healing in general.

Potter's ambitious plan for a collaborative approach to the problem eventually ran into its own futility boundary: No one would pay for it. And drug companies don't share data, they hoard it. But the NIH conference launched a new wave of placebo research in academic labs in the US and Italy that would make significant progress toward solving the mystery of what was happening in clinical trials.

Visitors to Fabrizio Benedetti's clinic at the University of Turin are asked never to say the P-word around the med students who sign up for his experiments. For all the volunteers know, the trim, soft-spoken neuroscientist is hard at work concocting analgesic skin creams and methods for enhancing athletic performance.

One recent afternoon in his lab, a young soccer player grimaced with exertion while doing leg curls on a weight machine. Benedetti and his colleagues were exploring the potential of using Pavlovian conditioning to give athletes a competitive edge undetectable by anti-doping authorities. A player would receive doses of a performance-enhancing drug for weeks and then a jolt of placebo just before competition.

Benedetti, 53, first became interested in placebos in the mid-'90s, while researching pain. He was surprised that some of the test subjects in his placebo groups seemed to suffer less than those on active drugs. But scientific interest in this phenomenon, and the money to research it, were hard to come by. “The placebo effect was considered little more than a nuisance,” he recalls. “Drug companies, physicians, and clinicians were not interested in understanding its mechanisms. They were concerned only with figuring out whether their drugs worked better.”

Part of the problem was that response to placebo was considered a psychological trait related to neurosis and gullibility rather than a physiological phenomenon that could be scrutinized in the lab and manipulated for therapeutic benefit. But then Benedetti came across a study, done years earlier, that suggested the placebo effect had a neurological foundation. US scientists had found that a drug called naloxone blocks the pain-relieving power of placebo treatments. The brain produces its own analgesic compounds called opioids, released under conditions of stress, and naloxone blocks the action of these natural painkillers and their synthetic analogs. The study gave Benedetti the lead he needed to pursue his own research while running small clinical trials for drug companies.

Now, after 15 years of experimentation, he has succeeded in mapping many of the biochemical reactions responsible for the placebo effect, uncovering a broad repertoire of self-healing responses. Placebo-activated opioids, for example, not only relieve pain; they also modulate heart rate and respiration. The neurotransmitter dopamine, when released by placebo treatment, helps improve motor function in Parkinson's patients. Mechanisms like these can elevate mood, sharpen cognitive ability, alleviate digestive disorders, relieve insomnia, and limit the secretion of stress-related hormones like insulin and cortisol.

In one study, Benedetti found that Alzheimer's patients with impaired cognitive function get less pain relief from analgesic drugs than normal volunteers do. Using advanced methods of EEG analysis, he discovered that the connections between the patients' prefrontal lobes and their opioid systems had been damaged. Healthy volunteers feel the benefit of medication plus a placebo boost. Patients who are unable to formulate ideas about the future because of cortical deficits, however, feel only the effect of the drug itself. The experiment suggests that because Alzheimer's patients don't get the benefits of anticipating the treatment, they require higher doses of painkillers to experience normal levels of relief.

Benedetti often uses the phrase “placebo response” instead of placebo effect. By definition, inert pills have no effect, but under the right conditions they can act as a catalyst for what he calls the body's “endogenous health care system.” Like any other internal network, the placebo response has limits. It can ease the discomfort of chemotherapy, but it won't stop the growth of tumors. It also works in reverse to produce the placebo's evil twin, the nocebo effect. For example, men taking a commonly prescribed prostate drug who were informed that the medication may cause sexual dysfunction were twice as likely to become impotent.

Further research by Benedetti and others showed that the promise of treatment activates areas of the brain involved in weighing the significance of events and the seriousness of threats. “If a fire alarm goes off and you see smoke, you know something bad is going to happen and you get ready to escape,” explains Tor Wager, a neuroscientist at Columbia University. “Expectations about pain and pain relief work in a similar way. Placebo treatments tap into this system and orchestrate the responses in your brain and body accordingly.”

In other words, one way that placebo aids recovery is by hacking the mind's ability to predict the future. We are constantly parsing the reactions of those around us—such as the tone a doctor uses to deliver a diagnosis—to generate more-accurate estimations of our fate. One of the most powerful placebogenic triggers is watching someone else experience the benefits of an alleged drug. Researchers call these social aspects of medicine the therapeutic ritual.

In a study last year, Harvard Medical School researcher Ted Kaptchuk devised a clever strategy for testing his volunteers' response to varying levels of therapeutic ritual. The study focused on irritable bowel syndrome, a painful disorder that costs more than $40 billion a year worldwide to treat. First the volunteers were placed randomly in one of three groups. One group was simply put on a waiting list; researchers know that some patients get better just because they sign up for a trial. Another group received placebo treatment from a clinician who declined to engage in small talk. Volunteers in the third group got the same sham treatment from a clinician who asked them questions about symptoms, outlined the causes of IBS, and displayed optimism about their condition.

Rx for Success

What turns a dummy pill into a catalyst for relieving pain, anxiety, depression, sexual dysfunction, or the tremors of Parkinson's disease? The brain's own healing mechanisms, unleashed by the belief that a phony medication is the real thing. The most important ingredient in any placebo is the doctor's bedside manner, but according to research, the color of a tablet can boost the effectiveness even of genuine meds—or help convince a patient that a placebo is a potent remedy.—Steve Silberman

Yellow pills
make the most effective antidepressants, like little doses of pharmaceutical sunshine.

Red pills
can give you a more stimulating kick. Wake up, Neo.

The color green
reduces anxiety, adding more chill to the pill.

White tablets
particularly those labeled “antacid”—are superior for soothing ulcers, even when they contain nothing but lactose.

More is better,
scientists say. Placebos taken four times a day deliver greater relief than those taken twice daily.

Branding matters.
Placebos stamped or packaged with widely recognized trademarks are more effective than “generic” placebos.

Clever names
can add a placebo boost to the physiological punch in real drugs. Viagra implies both vitality and an unstoppable Niagara of sexy.

Not surprisingly, the health of those in the third group improved most. In fact, just by participating in the trial, volunteers in this high-interaction group got as much relief as did people taking the two leading prescription drugs for IBS. And the benefits of their bogus treatment persisted for weeks afterward, contrary to the belief—widespread in the pharmaceutical industry—that the placebo response is short-lived.

Studies like this open the door to hybrid treatment strategies that exploit the placebo effect to make real drugs safer and more effective. Cancer patients undergoing rounds of chemotherapy often suffer from debilitating nocebo effects—such as anticipatory nausea—conditioned by their past experiences with the drugs. A team of German researchers has shown that these associations can be unlearned through the administration of placebo, making chemo easier to bear.

Meanwhile, the classic use of placebos in medicine—to boost the confidence of anxious patients—has been employed tacitly for ages. Nearly half of the doctors polled in a 2007 survey in Chicago admitted to prescribing medications they knew were ineffective for a patient's condition—or prescribing effective drugs in doses too low to produce actual benefit—in order to provoke a placebo response.

The main objections to more widespread placebo use in clinical practice are ethical, but the solutions to these conundrums can be surprisingly simple. Investigators told volunteers in one placebo study that the pills they were taking were “known to significantly reduce pain in some patients.” The researchers weren't lying.

These new findings tell us that the body's response to certain types of medication is in constant flux, affected by expectations of treatment, conditioning, beliefs, and social cues.

For instance, the geographic variations in trial outcome that Potter uncovered begin to make sense in light of discoveries that the placebo response is highly sensitive to cultural differences. Anthropologist Daniel Moerman found that Germans are high placebo reactors in trials of ulcer drugs but low in trials of drugs for hypertension—an undertreated condition in Germany, where many people pop pills for herzinsuffizienz, or low blood pressure. Moreover, a pill's shape, size, branding, and price all influence its effects on the body. Soothing blue capsules make more effective tranquilizers than angry red ones, except among Italian men, for whom the color blue is associated with their national soccer team—Forza Azzurri!

But why would the placebo effect seem to be getting stronger worldwide? Part of the answer may be found in the drug industry's own success in marketing its products.

Potential trial volunteers in the US have been deluged with ads for prescription medications since 1997, when the FDA amended its policy on direct-to-consumer advertising. The secret of running an effective campaign, Saatchi & Saatchi's Jim Joseph told a trade journal last year, is associating a particular brand-name medication with other aspects of life that promote peace of mind: “Is it time with your children? Is it a good book curled up on the couch? Is it your favorite television show? Is it a little purple pill that helps you get rid of acid reflux?” By evoking such uplifting associations, researchers say, the ads set up the kind of expectations that induce a formidable placebo response.

The success of those ads in selling blockbuster drugs like antidepressants and statins also pushed trials offshore as therapeutic virgins—potential volunteers who were not already medicated with one or another drug—became harder to find. The contractors that manage trials for Big Pharma have moved aggressively into Africa, India, China, and the former Soviet Union. In these places, however, cultural dynamics can boost the placebo response in other ways. Doctors in these countries are paid to fill up trial rosters quickly, which may motivate them to recruit patients with milder forms of illness that yield more readily to placebo treatment. Furthermore, a patient's hope of getting better and expectation of expert care—the primary placebo triggers in the brain—are particularly acute in societies where volunteers are clamoring to gain access to the most basic forms of medicine. “The quality of care that placebo patients get in trials is far superior to the best insurance you get in America,” says psychiatrist Arif Khan, principal investigator in hundreds of trials for companies like Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb. “It's basically luxury care.”

Big Pharma faces additional problems in beating placebo when it comes to psychiatric drugs. One is to accurately define the nature of mental illness. The litmus test of drug efficacy in antidepressant trials is a questionnaire called the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. The HAM-D was created nearly 50 years ago based on a study of major depressive disorder in patients confined to asylums. Few trial volunteers now suffer from that level of illness. In fact, many experts are starting to wonder if what drug companies now call depression is even the same disease that the HAM-D was designed to diagnose.

Existing tests also may not be appropriate for diagnosing disorders like social anxiety and premenstrual dysphoria—the very types of chronic, fuzzily defined conditions that the drug industry started targeting in the '90s, when the placebo problem began escalating. The neurological foundation of these illnesses is still being debated, making it even harder for drug companies to come up with effective treatments.

What all of these disorders have in common, however, is that they engage the higher cortical centers that generate beliefs and expectations, interpret social cues, and anticipate rewards. So do chronic pain, sexual dysfunction, Parkinson's, and many other ailments that respond robustly to placebo treatment. To avoid investing in failure, researchers say, pharmaceutical companies will need to adopt new ways of vetting drugs that route around the brain's own centralized network for healing.

Ten years and billions of R&D dollars after William Potter first sounded the alarm about the placebo effect, his message has finally gotten through. In the spring, Potter, who is now a VP at Merck, helped rev up a massive data-gathering effort called the Placebo Response Drug Trials Survey.

Under the auspices of the FNIH1, Potter and his colleagues are acquiring decades of trial data—including blood and DNA samples—to determine which variables are responsible for the apparent rise in the placebo effect. Merck, Lilly, Pfizer, AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi-Aventis, Johnson & Johnson, and other major firms are funding the study, and the process of scrubbing volunteers' names and other personal information from the database is about to begin.

In typically secretive industry fashion, the existence of the project itself is being kept under wraps. FNIH staffers2 are willing to talk about it only anonymously, concerned about offending the companies paying for it.

For Potter, who used to ride along with his father on house calls in Indiana, the significance of the survey goes beyond Big Pharma's finally admitting it has a placebo problem. It also marks the twilight of an era when the drug industry was confident that its products were strong enough to cure illness by themselves.

“Before I routinely prescribed antidepressants, I would do more psychotherapy for mildly depressed patients,” says the veteran of hundreds of drug trials. “Today we would say I was trying to engage components of the placebo response—and those patients got better. To really do the best for your patients, you want the best placebo response plus the best drug response.”

The pharma crisis has also finally brought together the two parallel streams of placebo research—academic and industrial. Pfizer has asked Fabrizio Benedetti to help the company figure out why two of its pain drugs keep failing. Ted Kaptchuk is developing ways to distinguish drug response more clearly from placebo response for another pharma house that he declines to name. Both are exploring innovative trial models that treat the placebo effect as more than just statistical noise competing with the active drug.

Benedetti has helped design a protocol for minimizing volunteers' expectations that he calls “open/hidden.” In standard trials, the act of taking a pill or receiving an injection activates the placebo response. In open/hidden trials, drugs and placebos are given to some test subjects in the usual way and to others at random intervals through an IV line controlled by a concealed computer. Drugs that work only when the patient knows they're being administered are placebos themselves.

Ironically, Big Pharma's attempt to dominate the central nervous system has ended up revealing how powerful the brain really is. The placebo response doesn't care if the catalyst for healing is a triumph of pharmacology, a compassionate therapist, or a syringe of salt water. All it requires is a reasonable expectation of getting better. That's potent medicine.

Contributing editor Steve Silberman (steve@stevesilberman.com) wrote about the hunt for Jim Gray in issue 15.08.

I was thinking about the placebo effect the other day, and it reminded me of this excellent article on the matter at Wired Magazine. The article points out that:

It’s not that the old meds are getting weaker, drug developers say. It’s as if the placebo effect is somehow getting stronger.

And that seems to be true across the board. It is not that people seem to believe in the healing power of pills so much that they get better, regardless. It is that they believe in modern medicine in general.

And that belief is getting stronger. It is simply amazing how many patients walk out of my consulting room feeling immediately better, simply because they have “seen the doctor” and are clutching a script. Some feel so good, they don’t even collect the script! Least you think I am bragging, this is true for any doctor who instills confidence in his patient. And this placebo effect appears to work well on children as well, even small children and babies who have no understanding of medicine (in their case, I assume they are just collecting the good feelings from their parents and feel comforted).

Admittedly, when I am talking about placebo effect in this context, I am talking about a feeling of well-being, rather than the alleviation of a specific symptoms. But both types of placebo effect seem to rely on that same unwavering belief in the efficacy of medicine.

It is all a little humbling.

It is for this reason that I tend to have a relaxed attitude to the large number of people who come through my consulting room every day who have little or nothing wrong with them. Chances are that I will do them good, even if I provide them with a bit of symptomatic relief. And as long as I can still get to the people who really need to see me, I don’t have much of a problem with this.

You might consider it a waste of money, but these people have as much right as anyone else to feel well – and medicine is really about making people well, rather than simply curing disease.

It is also for this reason that I have a fairly relaxed attitude towards my patients accessing alternative medical therapies. If it makes them feel better, then I consider it a good expenditure of time and money, regardless of what our evidence based world-view says. My only problem with alternative medicine is that it sometimes attempts to use its placebo influence on a truly serious medical disease that needs proper conventional treatment. At that point complementary alternative medicine (CAM) and I part company. It does not impress me to watch a diabetic patient destroy his kidney function because some charlatan thinks that waving a few crystals over him will cure him of his diabetes. When CAM does no harm, then they and I are just fellow snake-oil salesmen, doing a bit of placebo placating. When CAM gets in the way of  the need for real treatment, then they break the first rule of healing – the rule that has lasted nearly 2,500 years – “First do no harm”.

That’s the trouble with belief. It is a powerful force when focused on something that is true, but a dangerous one when focused on falsehood. The placebo effect can be a powerful tool for healing when harnessed. But it is still doing nothing.

When you hear the word “placebo,” you usually think of a phony medicine or other type of medical care that makes people think they are getting real treatment when they aren't. But can a “placebo” actually help someone get better? The answer, according to a new study, appears to be “yes.”

Researchers at the University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry in New York and Stanford University in California studied 46 patients with mild to moderate cases of psoriasis, which causes red, scaly patches of dead skin. For three weeks, the volunteers smeared cream on two patches of psoriasis twice a day. One cream contained a steroid medication known to help alleviate the condition, while the second did not. The volunteers didn't know which was which.

Then the test subjects were divided into three groups. One continued to receive 100 percent of the sterioid at each treatment for the next eight weeks. The second also received a full dose, but only one-quarter to one-half the time. The rest of the time they used a substitute that did not contain any steroid. The third group received the active substance every time but at one-quarter to one-half the full dose.

Among the subjects in Rochester, N.Y., those who received the lower dose had a much greater recurrence rate of their psoriasis. But the recurrence rate was virtually identical among those who got the full dose all the time and those who received it only one-quarter to one-half the time.

The findings, published in the journal Psychosomatic Medicine, suggest that just thinking you are getting something that works may actually have an effect–an idea that has been gaining credence in recent years. It could be because emotions are thought to play a role in psoriasis, which often becomes worse when someone is under stress, by affecting the immune system.

The findings indicate that doctors may be able to maximize benefits and decrease side-effects by combining a placebo with a real drug, the researchers say.

By

Rob Stein
 | 
December 30, 2009; 7:00 AM ET

Categories: 

Alternative and Complementary Medicine
,
Chronic Conditions
,
General Health

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Dec 14

Most Popular Photography Hacks of 2009

By Dan Spelzmann

Whether making your own lens hood to create custom bokeh, breathing like a sniper to get a blur-free photo, or angling your body to look the best in pictures, we shared some great photography hacks this year.

Software and Photoshop tricks are great, but they're a poor substitution for doing things in-camera. Over the last year we shared a variety of hacks for taking better photos, looking better in photos, and ways to get professional results without spending your rent money on camera accessories.

Create Your Own Bokeh for Beautiful Photo Effects

What's a bokeh you say? It's that oh-so-wonderful fuzziness in the background of photographs with a shallow depth of field and accompanying starry highlights. You can create you own bokeh effects with a little craftiness.

Position Your Tongue Properly to Look Good in Photos


We live in a culture of oversharing, so odds are someone, somewhere will be snapping and posting photos taken of you at various events. To help ensure you look your best, heed where you position your tongue.

Take Better Pictures by Treating Your Still Camera Like It's Video


People often lament that they “just missed it!” upon seeing they failed to capture a pivotal moment in the action. You can avoid missing the action by treating your still camera like a video camera.

Avoid Mediocre Portraits with These Tricks


You have a camera and a willing subject, but you're not sure how to break your portraits out of the flat blandness that plagues many snapshots. Avoid boring compositions with these tips.

Set Up a High Speed Photography Studio in Your Garage


Many a photography enthusiast has assumed the equipment necessary is far too expensive for quality high speed photography captures. A high speed capture studio on the cheap can be had with this handy guide.

Create Abstract Light Art by Snapping a Camera-Toss Photo


Making abstract wallpaper and gorgeous slow-exposure shots doesn't require a bunch of design apps or photography lessons. Learn how to literally toss your camera to make abstract light art.

Be A Better Photographer On Vacation

Whether you head 30 or 3000 miles away, you'll want to bring back great photos of your vacation. The New York Times posts questions and answers on how to achieve great vacation photos.

Take Better Self-Portraits

Taking a good self-portrait is both a handy skill and a way to expand your photographic repertoire. Save your next profile picture from the camera-held-at-arms-length cliche with these tips.

DIY Tennis Ball Photography Stabilization Unit


DIY web site Instructables details how to make an image stabilizing unit to supplement your steady hand using a tennis ball and a few nuts and bolts.

Shoot Better Nighttime Pictures

Daytime photo tricks don't always translate when you're trying to capture the perfect night shot. The Photography Bay web site outlines tips for taking a stellar post-sunset shot without relying on a tripod or expensive flash system.

Be More Photogenic by Forgetting About the Camera


When the camera comes out, a lot of people instinctively declare that they look awful in pictures. Learn how to be more photogenic and put your best face forward.

Breathe Like a Sniper to Take Better Photos in Low Light


Steady hands are critical to taking low light photographs. Breath like a sniper to make sure you snap the shot when your hand is least jittery.

Create a Basic Ring Flash

If the DIY Fiber Optic Ring Flash we wrote about required too many specialist parts for your taste, check out this much simpler remix. The construction is easy and done with common household items.

Use Composition Rules to Take Better Photos

Photography is a creative art, no doubt, but creative doesn't mean doing everything willy-nilly however you want. Use these basic rules of composition to give your photos an extra boost of visual appeal.

DIY Beauty Dish Enhances Your Portraits


Beauty dishes are great flash modifiers for portrait photographs, but even a cheap model will set you back at least $100. Skip it—a surprisingly effective DIY beauty dish costs less than $20.

Create Stunning High Dynamic Range (HDR) Photos


Gizmodo's John Mahoney explains how to take high dynamic range (HDR) photos so that the results of your photograph more accurately recreate what you were seeing when you snapped the shutter.

Create Studio Quality Photos Using Natural Light


You don't need a blockbuster budget to get high-quality light for your portraits. By coaxing the sun to help in your photographic endeavors, you can create stunning portraits on a tiny budget.

Make a DIY Photography Light Box with K'Nex


Lightboxes aren't just for the professionals any longer. Using them to illuminate your Craigslist and eBay listings can help make a sale, and amateur photogs can get professional-looking shots with one. Create your own using K'nex and a little know how.

Take Great Panoramic Pictures with Any Camera


Panoramic software has come a long way toward making panoramic images child's work. Great software or not, there's no substitution for good source material. Take better panoramic pictures with these tips

Take Better Pictures by Studying Studio Layouts


Whether you're interested in learning more about lighting to add to your photography skill set or you're just curious how proper studio lighting works, this handy guide will provide some photo-enhancing insight.

DIY Tilt-Shift Photography Lens


Tilt-shift lenses create a great miniature effect on photographs of everyday things. The problem? These specialized lenses are insanely expensive (think $1,000 range). This video from Make demonstrates how to make a DIY tilt-shift lens on the cheap.

Take Awesome Sunset Photographs


Sunsets are one of nature's more spectacular displays, and a good one is worth preserving with a photograph. Take pictures that will capture the perfect dusk moment with these photography tips.

Create a Flash Diffuser Using An Empty Cigarette Packet


The right flash can make or break your shot. Unfortunately, not all built-in flashes are created equal. DIY web site Instructables demonstrates how to create a worthy on-the-spot flash diffuser using an empty cigarette packet.

Make a DIY Macro Lens from Old Binoculars

A high-end macro lens for your camera can easily run upwards of a thousand dollars, but you can make a super-simple macro lens for a few bucks out of old binoculars.

This week's Big
Picture
winner – and recipient of a Nikon Coolpix P90 camera worth
£379.99 – is Andrew Back from Norwich, for this photo of a
solar-powered kettle at the Drepung Monastery outside Lhasa, Tibet.

Read on to see this week's other shortlisted entries…

  • The
    Big Picture: previous winners and how to enter
  • More
    travel picture galleries

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  • Original material is licensed under a Creative Commons License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution.


     

    Nov 30

    Chinese drywall: Florida hasn’t committed to using federal money for repairs [South Florida]

    The Louisiana Legislature passed a law that allows the state to use $5 million in federal grants to repair homes with tainted Chinese drywall. So far, Florida lawmakers have failed to follow suit.

    “If Louisiana can do it, why can’t we?” asked Sen. Bill Nelson, a Florida Democrat, at a state drywall symposium in Tampa this month.

    In October, Nelson wrote to the Florida Legislature, asking it to determine if the state has unspent disaster block grant money that affected residents could use for home repairs. Nelson said he’s still waiting for a response.

    Also in October, Shaun Donovan, secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, toured homes west of Boynton Beach that were built with Chinese drywall. Donovan mentioned then the use of block grants as a possible solution for homeowners.

    As thousands of homeowners around the country have complained of health problems, corroded electrical wiring and a noxious rotten-egg smell, Chinese drywall has been fingered as the culprit. The Consumer Product Safety Commission recently released a report linking the problems with hydrogen sulfide gas emitted from Chinese drywall, which was imported by home builders during the construction boom when domestic supplies were tight.

    But a recent investigation by CBS News suggests that domestically produced drywall may be a culprit as well.

    In fact, CBS News found that 10 out of 44 cases studied by the CPSC and categorized as “imported drywall,” actually involved domestically-made drywall.

    In addition, a team of researchers at the University of Florida spent five months examining samples of both American and Chinese-made drywall. The surprising results: all but one of the U.S. samples emitted sulfur gasses. Although the American-made drywall generally had lower levels of gas emissions than the Chinese-made material, in some cases it was higher than some Chinese samples.

    The CPSC and other agencies are continuing to study the issue. In a statement released on Nov. 23, the CPSC said it “is investigating drywall from other sources that may mimic the problems found with Chinese drywall.” It added that the agency is meeting with drywall manufacturers and others who are studying the issue.

    In an email, a CPSC spokesman said, “Our researcher pointed out that not all drywall is alike and not all Chinese drywall may be alike. It depends on what it's made of, not necessarily the country it comes from.”

    The drywall issue is more than a headache for affected homeowners – some have had their insurance policies cancelled as a result. In the meantime, lawmakers and the CPSC are pressing the Internal Revenue Service to allow affected homeowners to deduct drywall-related costs.

    Drywall, made from gypsum, a chalky white mineral, is considered safe in its pure form. Drywall alternatives include plaster (which also contains gypsum), as well as new eco-friendly options such as EcoRock.


    Click here to read our story on how to detect the presence of toxic drywall in your home.

    Federal investigators are now saying defective drywall manufactured in China and used to build homes in the Southeast during the housing boom is the cause of serious structural defects in a number of homes.

    “We now can show a strong association between homes with the problem drywall and the levels of hydrogen sulfide in those homes and corrosion of metals in those homes,” the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) said in a statement (available to download here).

    The drywall has long been suspected of causing pipe corrosion and emitting toxic gases, but government agencies have shied away from publicly acknowledging the drywall is the cause of the problems until the claim could be scientifically proven.

    An inter-agency task force led by the CPSC and including the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, and the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) as well as the Florida and Virginia health departments and the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, among others recently completed tests on 51 homes and three preliminary reports were released detailing the effects of the defective drywall.

    According to the reports, hydrogen sulfide gas is the essential component causing copper and silver sulfide corrosion found in the affected homes, along with other factors, including air exchange rates, formaldehyde and other air contaminants.

    In ways still to be determined, hydrogen sulfide gas is being created in homes built with Chinese drywall, the report added, and the task force is investigating other non-Chinese drywall to see if they mimic the results found in the defective materials.

    More than 2,000 homeowners in 32 states contacted the CPSC with complaints of corrosion, or blackening, of indoor metals, such as electrical components and central air conditioning system evaporator coils and various health symptoms, including persistent cough, bloody and runny noses, headaches, difficulty in breathing and irritated and itchy eyes and skin.

    “We now have the science that enables the task force to move ahead to the next phase — to develop both a screening process and effective remediation methods. Ongoing studies will examine health and safety effects, but we are now ready to get to work fixing this problem,” said UCPSC chairman Inez Tenenbaum.

    The task force established a team of scientists and engineers to develop a cost-effective identification and remediation screening protocol for homeowners who believe their home may have defective drywall and is working with state consumer groups and federal officials to develop a plan of action to help homeowners.

    The drywall was manufactured and used in homes built between 2005 and 2007 and since the problems arose earlier this year, a number of initiatives were proposed to help homeowners with mortgages on defective homes, as well as legislation that would regulate standards for imported construction materials. While homeowners and builders look for recourse, a Fitch Ratings report warns it will be difficult to recovery losses from the foreign drywall manufacturers.

    Write to Austin Kilgore.

    CPSC Ties Drywall, Corrosion

    By MELANIE TROTTMAN and M.P. MCQUEEN

    WASHINGTON — Federal regulators said Monday there is a “strong association” between chemicals emitted by Chinese drywall and metals corrosion, a finding that could pave the way for the government to help homeowners facing billions of dollars in repair bills. But who will pay for the damages remains unclear.

    The Consumer Product Safety Commission said an investigation by the CPSC and other federal agencies has shown levels of hydrogen sulfide to be higher in some houses built with Chinese drywall than in those without it. The findings include results from an indoor-air study of 51 homes and two other preliminary studies on home corrosion.

    “We are now ready to get to work fixing this problem,” said CPSC chief Inez Tenenbaum.

    Nearly 2,100 homeowners in 32 states and Washington, D.C., have claimed their homes were damaged by chemicals emitting from Chinese drywall. Many of the affected homes were built in 2006 and after in areas of the Southeastern U.S., and most of the complaints have come from Florida and Louisiana. Some builders used the Chinese product because of a domestic shortage during the housing boom.

    Homeowners have also complained of health problems such as bloody noses, headaches and asthma attacks. Regulators said more studies are needed to determine if there is a link between the drywall and health or safety issues, such as fire hazards possibly from damaged electrical wiring.

    Another finding from the studies: While hydrogen sulfide gas was the “essential component” that caused copper and silver corrosion in homes where the owners complained of problems, “other factors” including air circulation, formaldehyde and other air contaminants also contributed.

    The CPSC said an interagency drywall task force is working with congressional and White House officials to determine how to identify and fix affected homes and fund repairs. But it remains unclear what the remedies will be and where the money will come from. Consulting firm Towers Perrin estimates drywall damages of $15 billion to $25 billion, including litigation costs….

    To read the full Wall Street Journal article click HERE!

    The Chinese Drywall Complaint Center says,”it’s absolutely imperative, that homeowners who have a specific type of drywall, called Knauf Plasterboard Tianjin, in their new homes, built since 2004, get identified by December 2nd 2009, because of a US Federal Court ruling.” The group is saying, “because of this court ruling, it is critically important that we get the word out, to any US homeowner …
    (read on…)

    “Results from a major indoor air study of 51 homes are being released today along with initial reports from two studies of corrosion in homes with Chinese drywall,” the CPSC said in a statement.

    “We now can show a strong association between homes with the problem drywall and the levels of hydrogen sulfide in those homes and corrosion of metals in those homes.”

    The agency contracted with a private health and engineering firm for the initial study of 35 homes using Chinese drywall and additional “control” homes.

    CPSC said it is “leading the federal investigation and is working with other federal and state agencies to determine exactly what substances are in the drywall, what substances are emitting odors into the air and whether identified substances found in the air pose a safety or health hazard to families.”

    “This is a complicated investigation and the data must be evaluated before conclusions are made; nonetheless, the agencies and states involved share a sense of urgency in informing the public of their findings and developing safe and effective solutions,” the statement said.

    Federal and state officials had received some 2,000 complaints about the drywall for health impacts as well as corrosion of electrical components.

    “We now have the science that enables the Task Force to move ahead to the next phase — to develop both a screening process and effective remediation methods,” said Consumer Product Safety Commission chairman Inez Tenenbaum.

    The study concluded that hydrogen sulfide gas “is being created in homes built with Chinese drywall,” although the exact methods were unclear.

    Real estate has been the shining beacon in an otherwise dreary economy the last several years. It comes as no surprise, then, that many people have changed careers and become real estate agents.

    The more cynical are likely to see it as merely jumping on the latest bandwagon. As soon as the market calms down, or other sectors of the economy heat up, they sneer, those same people will be off doing something else.

    That may be true for some, but don't tell that to Aparna Verma. To put it more precisely, you may not have the chance to tell this Fremont-based agent, even if you wanted to. “I can't talk now,” she says. “I had several houses sell over the weekend, and I have a lot to do.” Verma, who changed to real estate from the tech sector about two years ago, is clear proof that a “new” real estate agent doesn't mean a sub-standard one.

    In fact, many new agents bring skills that bring an additional competitive edge. “Real estate gives me the ability to use my coaching skills when I help someone buy or sell a home,” explains Oakland-based agent Sharon Whipkey, another newer real estate agent.

    That approach gives Whipkey an advantage over more traditionally-focused agents. “I think there are real estate people who sell,” she explains. “I don't sell. For me, it is my job to sort out what my clients really want, and to help them find it. With buyers, that means making sure they find a house they'll enjoy, rather than just trying to make a sale.”

    For Whipkey, that means really listening to what clients tell her, and offering options they may not have considered. “I had one client who said, �I could be here, I could live here,' in each house they saw. But they never made an offer. Then, I took them to an older home, and they became much more animated. �This is really terrific,' they said. It was obvious that that was what they were looking for, but you have to really listen to realize the difference,” she says.

    Whipkey gives another example of a client who is on the fence about whether to look at condominiums or small homes. “If you don't want the work, you might still want to work out how much it would cost you to buy the house and hire people, such as a gardener, to do the work your HOA dues would pay for. If you're willing to do some hiring, and the costs work out, it might be more cost-effective and more enjoyable for you to purchase the house,” Whipkey notes.

    Of course, she adds, the decision is up to the client. “I had one client who definitely wanted the condo, no doubt about it. She really wanted things clean, simple. But by bringing up this observation, she clarified what she wanted, and I was more certain she would be happy with her choice.”

    In fact, Whipkey's approach of “not selling” explains precisely why she and other new real estate agents are so successful.

    Jeff Herrmann, a career change and resume consultant based in Tracy, says that the traditional sales background might even be a bad fit for a career in real estate.

    “In most industries, you don't need a license to sell,” Herrmann explains. “But you do for real estate. And that introduces an entire dynamic to the industry that many people with traditional sales backgrounds struggle with – they have to sit and learn.”

    Herrmann says the very nature of real estate work often conflicts with the nature of someone who has been a successful salesperson in other fields. “Salespeople tend to live off activity, and you have that in real estate, too, but you also have to be meticulous,” he notes.

    “And in real estate, it is less likely that a salesperson can delegate the detail work of putting together a proposal, going over a contract line by line, and so on. Someone who has been a salesperson in the corporate arena is used to having an assistant, if not a whole team of people, who are busy doing the more detailed, nitty-gritty work.”

    “It's the combination of being a people person, and also paying attention to detail, that makes someone a better real estate agent. So someone from a people-oriented, customer service background will probably make a much better agent,” he explains.

    Killer Bad News for Huckabee – Real Clear Politics – TIME.com

    Opinion, News, Analysis, Videos and Polls.

    Stocks in the news: Apple, Best Buy, Deere, U.S. Steel, American

    (CELG) can more than triple sales for its best-selling cancer pill Revlimid on new data that may convince doctors to choose the drug as a first option, rather than the backup for Johnson & Johnson's (JNJ) intravenous medicine, Velcade. …

    Media Molecule hails BAFTA success // News

    Another awards night, another prize for Media Molecule, which last night collected the BAFTA for Best Videogame at the 20…

    How to go about fixing your drywall issues.

    When considering how to remediate a home affected by Chinese drywall there is much more to the issue than merely replacing all the drywall.

    The gases emitted by the plasterboard also corrodes metals, especially copper, which means appliances may be damaged along with air conditioners and the wiring.  Wire is made up of copper strands inside a rubber insulation layer and it runs all over the house between the external and the partition walls.  Even if the plasterboard is removed, if the corroded metals are left, they could in turn also emit small amounts of the gas to corrode their surroundings further.

    There are also experts who believe that any metal used in the construction of the property may have suffered at the hands of these gases.  This could include metal brackets, framing components, nails, screws and any other building item made of metal.  They say it may not be enough to merely removed the drywall on its own.  It may be necessary to check the overall construction too as degraded steels or other metal components can impact structural integrity.

    While this has yet to be proven, it is a logical assumption and something to be borne in mind when considering any remedial work on the home.

    Homeowners are in a difficult position if they are affected by this issue.  On the one hand their health is put at risk if they stay in the home.  Insurers are generally not paying out claims for it under the pollution exclusion so unless the family has the money they have no option but to stay put.  On the other hand, if they intend on filing a suit against the builder or supplier, they can’t remediate the home because that would be destroying evidence.

    In any lawsuit, the defendant has the right to examine the evidence being used against them.  If a homeowner has work done on their home to remove the drywall, i.e. the evidence, the claim might not be allowed because it was destroyed.  The claim seeks to prove that the Chinese drywall damaged the property and the health of the occupants, not just that the home contained Chinese drywall.

    So what’s the answer?  Unfortunately there isn’t an easy one.  If a homeowner can’t afford to stay in the property for health reasons, and can’t afford to rent somewhere else in the meantime, there isn’t much they can do.  The house can’t be rented out or sold in that condition.

    Residents just have to hope that any suit they plan to file is addressed promptly so they can resume their lives.  As the number of suits filed is increasing all the time, the likelihood of this happening are slim.

    In the meantime there may be assistance coming from Federal government as requested by Senator Nelson in his letter to the President last month.  What will come of it remains to be seen, and how quickly any help may arrive is unfortunately anyone’s guess.

    Nov 23

    A car crash victim has spoken of the horror he endured for 23 years after he was misdiagnosed as being in a coma when he was conscious the whole time.

    Rom Houben, trapped in his paralysed body after a car crash, described his real-life nightmare as he screamed to doctors that he could hear them – but could make no sound.

    'I screamed, but there was nothing to hear,' said Mr Houben, now 46, who doctors thought was in a persistent vegatative state.

    'I dreamed myself away,' he added, tapping his tale out with the aid of a computer.

    'I dreamed myself away': Rom Houben, now 46, has told of the nightmare of being trapped in a paralysed body, unable to tell doctors that he was awake, for 23 years

    'I dreamed myself away': Rom Houben, now 46, has told of the nightmare of being trapped in a paralysed body, unable to tell doctors that he was awake, for 23 years

    Doctors used a range of coma tests before reluctantly concluding that his consciousness was 'extinct'.

    But three years ago, new hi-tech scans showed his brain was still functioning almost completely normally.

    Mr Houben described the moment as 'my second birth'. Therapy has since allowed him to tap out messages on a computer screen.

    msxsecurity