Sunday, December 28, 2014

Canadian Women Near Total Enslavement (Servitude, Subjugation). Health Canada decision on abortion pill set for mid-January


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Globe and Mail - December 23, 2014
 
Health Canada decision on abortion pill set for mid-January
 
Health Canada received the application in October, 2012 for approval of mifepristone, already available in 60 countries
 
KELLY GRANT
 
Health Canada has set an internal deadline of mid-January to finally make a decision on the abortion pill, a drug that is already available in 60 countries but has been stuck in Canada’s drug-approval pipeline for more than three years.
 
The pro-choice advocates and researchers who have been helping a small European drug company with its Canadian application say they have encountered an unusual amount of antipathy from the regulators who will decide if Canadian women get access mifepristone, a pill that can end an early pregnancy when combined with a drug that is already sold in this country.
 
More than 700 days have passed since the company resubmitted its application at the request of Health Canada in October, 2012 – that is more than twice as long as the regulator’s 300-day standard for a first decision on a new drug.
 
The lag occurred even though the department’s deputy minister told a House of Commons committee in November of last year that mifepristone “would go faster than normal applications,” because of its widespread use.
 
Despite the delay, the leader of the organization that represents abortion providers in the United States and Canada believes Health Canada is poised to approve the drug. The decision could significantly expand access for women who live far from the urban centres that have most of Canada’s abortion facilities.
 
“Canada is the only developed country in the world without the gold standard for medical abortion care. It makes no sense,” said Vicki Saporta, the Washington-based president of the National Abortion Federation (NAF.) “We have responded and the manufacturer has responded to every concern [the regulators] have raised ... we do expect that they will approve it in January.”
 
Health Canada would say virtually nothing about the mifepristone application, citing confidentiality policies. It refused to divulge internal deadlines, the date the application was filed or the name of the drug company.
 
But The Globe and Mail has learned the applicant is Linepharma International, a small manufacturer based in France and the United Kingdom that makes only two drugs: mifespristone and misoprostol, the second drug required for a medical abortion.
 
One of Linepharma’s advisers and board members is AndrĂ© Ulmann, a French doctor and one of the fathers of medical abortion. He was the international project leader for the development of RU-486 – as mifepristone was originally known – at the French pharmaceutical giant Roussel-Uclaf in the 1980s.
 
The company donated the U.S. rights to mifepristone to a U.S. non-profit organization called the Population Council, which got the drug approved there in 2000.
 
At the time, the director of the organization’s reproductive health program was Beverly Winikoff. She is now the president of Gynuity Health Projects, a U.S. not-for-profit research group that has been providing pro bono support to Linepharma for its Canadian application.
 
“There seemed to be a lot of negativity toward this drug in some of the meetings I attended,” Dr. Winikoff said. “I’ve been in a lot of regulatory meetings and the Canadian one was unusual in that people were attacking in a way I wouldn’t have expected in a regulatory meeting.”
 
A spokesman for Health Canada declined to address that characterization directly, but said in a statement that, “Health Canada undertakes a rigorous review of every drug submission, holding companies accountable for providing detailed and scientifically defensible information.”
 
In October, 2011, Linepharma International filed a new-drug submission for its Mifepristone Linepharma 200 milligram tablet, which it aims to sell in combination with misoprostol, according to Marion Ulmann, the company’s chief operating officer.
 
After Health Canada requested more “quality documentation,” Linepharma resubmitted its application in October, 2012, Ms. Ulmann said by e-mail.
 
In an earlier interview, she called the Health Canada process “very smooth,” and said she had no complaints.
 
Ms. Saporta, on the other hand, echoed Dr. Winikoff’s concerns.
 
Asked about complaints that the review has been slow and difficult, Health Minister Rona Ambrose said: “I think if you talk to any drug company on the drug approval process, they might say the same thing. I’m not involved in any drug approvals. What I hear from drug companies is the process is very rigorous. But I think it needs to be. Drug safety is very important.”
 
Safety concerns have been raised about mifepristone. A 27-year-old Quebec woman died during a Canadian clinical trial of it in 2001, which anti-abortion activists have raised in their campaign against the pill.
 
“It’s anything but perfectly safe ... it’s a deadly cocktail for the baby certainly, but also for the mother,” said Mary Ellen Douglas, a national organizer for the Campaign Life Coalition, which puts on the massive National March for Life at Parliament Hill every year. Last year’s theme was keeping RU-486 out of Canada.
 
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has identified at least 14 deaths after medical abortions in the United States.
 
In six of the most concerning cases, the women died of septic shock after they were infected with an unexpectedly lethal strain of a bacteria called Clostridium sordelli. But the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that strain also killed women during other reproductive events, including surgical abortions, spontaneous miscarriages and births.
 
Clostridium sordelli was responsible for the Quebec woman’s death, and brought an end to the Canadian trials of mifepristone.
 
“A lot of smart people worked so hard trying to figure this one out and decided that there had been a mutation in the bacteria,” said Ellen Wiebe, the Vancouver doctor who led the Canadian trials. “It was one in a million, but still, there’s a lot more than a million people around, and so we had those deaths. There haven’t been any recent ones.”
 
On the whole, mifepristone is considered extremely safe. A review of 45,000 medical abortions published last year in the journal Contraception found serious complications in just 0.4 per cent of cases.
 
“Every other developed country in the world has this drug,” Dr. Winikoff said. “Why not Canada?”
 
2014 All material Copyright (c) Bell Globemedia Publishing Inc. and its licensors.

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Near Final Enslavemet For Women : Are You for Hate and Sick R U-486

Bloggers note: Dead Conscience. Dead Baby. Dead women                  4924 5065

R U 4 hate and sick...86 the capital enslavement of women is near complete RU-486 would guarantee their absolute subservience to MAN ..and there maybe NO going Back ....Time is now NOW, to reject this bodily poison, this subservience to the Anti women rhetoric this end in all for women freedom .... RU 486 = Women will forever regret , 4ever be the soul object of their sure demise, 4ever self destruct there reproductive abilities. 4ever hate them selves, 4ever be sick..= 4 8 6...For hate and be forever sick ....nothing but a massive wholehearted rejection of this drug will suffice......this will become an election issue want it or not ...i see and NDP-LIBERAL coalition on the approved side and I am waiting to see what Rona Ambrose will do. GodSpeed!

see report 2 after this article

 

Health Canada decision on abortion pill set for mid-January

KELLY GRANT - HEALTH REPORTER
The Globe and Mail
Published Tuesday, Dec. 23 2014, 6:00 AM EST Last updated Tuesday, Dec. 23 2014, 11:56 AM EST

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health-and-fitness/health/health-canada-decision-on-abortion-pill-set-for-mid-january/article22183863/

Health Canada has set an internal deadline of mid-January to finally make a decision on the abortion pill, a drug that is already available in 60 countries but has been stuck in Canada’s drug-approval pipeline for more than three years.

The pro-choice advocates and researchers who have been helping a small European drug company with its Canadian application say they have encountered an unusual amount of antipathy from the regulators who will decide if Canadian women get access to mifepristone, a pill that can end an early pregnancy when combined with a drug that is already sold in this country.

More than 700 days have passed since the company resubmitted its application at the request of Health Canada in October, 2012 – that is more than twice as long as the regulator’s 300-day standard for a first decision on a new drug.

The lag occurred even though the department’s deputy minister told a House of Commons committee in November of last year that mifepristone “would go faster than normal applications,” because of its widespread use.

Despite the delay, the leader of the organization that represents abortion providers in the United States and Canada believes Health Canada is poised to approve the drug. The decision could significantly expand access for women who live far from the urban centres that have most of Canada’s abortion facilities.

“Canada is the only developed country in the world without the gold standard for medical abortion care. It makes no sense,” said Vicki Saporta, the Washington-based president of the National Abortion Federation (NAF.) 

“We have responded and the manufacturer has responded to every concern [the regulators] have raised ... we do expect that they will approve it in January.”

Health Canada would say virtually nothing about the mifepristone application, citing confidentiality policies. It refused to divulge internal deadlines, the date the application was filed or the name of the drug company.

But The Globe and Mail has learned the applicant is Linepharma International, a small manufacturer based in France and the United Kingdom that makes only two drugs: mifespristone and misoprostol, the second drug required for a medical abortion.

One of Linepharma’s advisers and board members is AndrĂ© Ulmann, a French doctor and one of the fathers of medical abortion.

 He was the international project leader for the development of RU-486 – as mifepristone was originally known – at the French pharmaceutical giant Roussel-Uclaf in the 1980s.

The company donated the U.S. rights to mifepristone to a U.S. non-profit organization called the Population Council, which got the drug approved there in 2000.

At the time, the director of the organization’s reproductive health program was Beverly Winikoff. She is now the president of Gynuity Health Projects, a U.S. not-for-profit research group that has been providing pro bono support to Linepharma for its Canadian application.

“There seemed to be a lot of negativity toward this drug in some of the meetings I attended,” Dr. Winikoff said. “I’ve been in a lot of regulatory meetings and the Canadian one was unusual in that people were attacking in a way I wouldn’t have expected in a regulatory meeting.”

A spokesman for Health Canada declined to address that characterization directly, but said in a statement that, “Health Canada undertakes a rigorous review of every drug submission, holding companies accountable for providing detailed and scientifically defensible information.”

In October, 2011, Linepharma International filed a new-drug submission for its Mifepristone Linepharma 200 milligram tablet, which it aims to sell in combination with misoprostol, according to Marion Ulmann, the company’s chief operating officer.

After Health Canada requested more “quality documentation,” Linepharma resubmitted its application in October, 2012, Ms. Ulmann said by e-mail.

In an earlier interview, she called the Health Canada process “very smooth,” and said she had no complaints.
Ms. Saporta, on the other hand, echoed Dr. Winikoff’s concerns.

Asked about complaints that the review has been slow and difficult, Health Minister Rona Ambrose said: “I think if you talk to any drug company on the drug approval process, they might say the same thing. I’m not involved in any drug approvals. 

What I hear from drug companies is the process is very rigorous. But I think it needs to be. Drug safety is very important.”

Safety concerns have been raised about mifepristone. A 27-year-old Quebec woman died during a Canadian clinical trial of it in 2001, which anti-abortion activists have raised in their campaign against the pill.

“It’s anything but perfectly safe ... it’s a deadly cocktail for the baby certainly, but also for the mother,” said Mary Ellen Douglas, a national organizer for the Campaign Life Coalition, which puts on the massive National March for Life at Parliament Hill every year. Last year’s theme was keeping RU-486 out of Canada.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has identified at least 14 deaths after medical abortions in the United States.
In six of the most concerning cases, the women died of septic shock after they were infected with an unexpectedly lethal strain of a bacteria called Clostridium sordelli

But the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that strain also killed women during other reproductive events, including surgical abortions, spontaneous miscarriages and births.

Clostridium sordelli was responsible for the Quebec woman’s death, and brought an end to the Canadian trials of mifepristone.

“A lot of smart people worked so hard trying to figure this one out and decided that there had been a mutation in the bacteria,” said Ellen Wiebe, the Vancouver doctor who led the Canadian trials.

 “It was one in a million, but still, there’s a lot more than a million people around, and so we had those deaths. There haven’t been any recent ones.”

On the whole, mifepristone is considered extremely safe. A review of 45,000 medical abortions published last year in the journal Contraception found serious complications in just 0.4 per cent of cases.

“Every other developed country in the world has this drug,” Dr. Winikoff said. “Why not Canada?”

END 
________________________________
report 2 



READ OTHER REPORT:

http://impeachmatthewhill.blogspot.ca/2005/12/morning-after-pill-gregory-hill.html

Monday, December 22, 2014

Hey Toronto Councillors – Please Stand Up for Marginalized Women

Headshot 4870

Joy Smith   MP, Kildonan – St. Paul

It’s appalling that 25 Toronto Councillors have jointly sent a letter to Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, asking her to refer Bill C-36 to the Ontario Court of Appeal. Even more shocking, these Councillors are requesting that the Premier actually direct police officers to not uphold the law that was just passed by the federal government.
The letter from the Councillors cites the concern that Bill C-36 will be ‘dangerous for sex workers’ and ‘will recreate harms that previously existed under the old laws.’
 
Their evidence of this – well they talk about experts, but provide no actual documentation. Rather, the Councillors have bought into the fear mongering by pro-legalization lobbyists – the same ones that stand to make significant financial gains off vulnerable and exploited women if prostitution is legalized. Sadly it appears the Premier has taken the bait as she mulls over her options.
 
The media has also jumped on the bandwagon over the weekend with multiple outlets covering the coming into force of Bill C-36 and the impending doom it will have.
 
Many articles highlighted the ‘over 60 organizations’ calling for the repeal – but only ever named three organizations. The articles reiterated the call for repeal or non-enforcement without actually providing any consideration to the impact of legalized prostitution.
 
As countries like Germany and the Netherlands have discovered, legalizing prostitution leads to increased violence against women, increased child prostitution, and increased human trafficking. This is not the future we want to create for our youth.
At least one media organization is more forthright about their motivations. For NOW Magazine, it’s all about the profits. In a statement posted on December 7, 2014, NOW Magazine Editor Alice Klein defends their position of continuing to run advertising for sexual services in the name of ‘feisty journalism.’ Klein admits that NOW Magazine benefits from this type of advertising and “has made a principled choice to stand against discrimination and further marginalization of sex workers.”
 
 But nothing about their decision is principled. NOW Magazine enjoys the financial gain it receives from advertising marginalized and vulnerable women and there is term for that – it’s called exploitation. Alas, could we expect anything different from a paper that defends men who buy women as an ‘oppressed sexual minority.’
 
The editor of Feminist Current, Meghan Murphy, is absolutely correct when she points out the hypocrisy of NOW Magazine’s self-defense of standing up for rights, writing “Profiting from ads that objectify and sell women has nothing to do with human rights.” Anyone who has opened up a NOW Magazine, cannot miss the pages of advertising, most of which is for sexual services through body rub parlours or ‘independent sex workers.’
 
 Except when you speak to survivors and law enforcement, you will quickly discover that many massage parlours – licensed and unlicensed – are fronts for sex trafficking operations and organized crime.
The most glaring absence from both the Councillors’ letter to the Premier and media reports – the voices of survivors of prostitution. During the review of Bill C-36 this past summer by the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights, many survivors testified about the violence inherent in prostitution.
 
Some entered by choice, some were coerced, but all were unanimous in their call for the government to target the demand for sexual services and pimps. I would encourage the Premier and all Councillors to meet with survivors of prostitution and hear their concerns.
 
Law enforcement agencies, communities, and women's groups have welcomed our approach in Bill C-36 because they know first-hand that activities around prostitution are harmful to women and for society. They are not harmful because they are illegal; they are illegal because they are harmful.
 
We must continue to criminalize the activities of pimps and johns. The legalization of their activities is unacceptable to Canadians as are elected officials who call for police to be ordered to ignore laws. It’s time for Toronto Councillors to stand up for the marginalized and vulnerable.


Wednesday, December 3, 2014

The Motherload

The Motherload

Thursday, December 4, 2014 at 9 PM on CBC-TV

Clik on the link for the video:
http://www.cbc.ca/doczone/episodes/motherload?cid=Dec+3+2014
 
Video placeholder
 
 
 
4767
Episode available within Canada only. Video help?

 
Why would a recent article in The Atlantic called Why Women Still Can’t Have It All” create such an international sensation? Why does the announcement of a new CEO of a Fortune 500 company make headlines because she is also pregnant? Why does a billionaire Facebook boss feel compelled to break her silence and speak out about the lack of women at the top? Why all the fuss?
"I made this documentary, in part, because it was only when I had a child 5 years ago did I realize that things were not the same for men and women. And it was – strangely - shocking to me." – Cornelia Principe, Director/Producer
Watch an
interview on Katie Chats.
Perhaps it’s because it was all supposed to have changed by now. Dads were supposed to carry more of the load. Motherhood was not supposed to become so idealized. Employers were supposed to be more flexible. Women were supposed to climb higher up the ladder, but feel less guilty. Society was supposed to live up to the promises our mothers made. From single moms to CEOs – a generation of burnt-out, disillusioned moms are waking up and smelling the coffee. Forget having it all – today’s working moms are doing it all. Call it “The Motherload”.

“If you ratchet up the standards at work, and you ratchet up the standards of motherhood, you're gonna get to be overwhelmed,” notes Joan C. Williams, Law Professor and advocate for better workplace practices for both women and men.

Washington Post reporter Brigid Schulte
THE MOTHERLOAD takes an in-depth and new look at the subject of working mothers - the current issues, challenges and triumphs that come from trying or having to do it all. And compares Canadian women’s lives to their even more troubled American counterparts – where women are struggling with work-life balance and paying a heavy price with their health.

And it doesn’t stop with women, as now men are starting to feel the weight of “The Motherload”. As writer and Washington Post reporter, Brigid Schulte says “this is not just a mommy issue. This is a human rights issue.” When we meet Brigid, she is working on a book called “Overwhelmed” about her struggles to maintain a demanding career and be an attentive mother of two.

As a key foreign policy advisor to the U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Anne-Marie Slaughter appears to have it all. Some would say a dream job, a real position of power. But when time comes to sign up for another two years, Anne-Marie, a mother of two, surprises her boss and herself- she quits. “You cannot tell Egypt to hold the revolution because your policy planner has to go home for the weekend”. She returns home to her family and her job as a University Professor and writes “Why Women Still Can’t Have It All” for The Atlantic Magazine. The article becomes an international sensation, sparking debate, discussion and a whole lot of controversy.

Facebook COO Sherly Sandberg
Sheryl Sandberg is the billionaire COO of Facebook, but she is also a mom – one who was afraid to admit that when she leaves work at 5:30 pm, it’s to have dinner with her kids. Her best-selling book “Lean In” is, she hopes, a call to arms for women to not give up on their ambition. ”The revolution has stalled” states Sandberg and that “It’s important we acknowledge this stagnation for women.”

In the documentary THE MOTHERLOAD, we profile several working mothers struggling to just keep working – much less advance in their careers. Emilie, a prosecutor for the federal government and mother of three, who has just returned to work after her third and final maternity leave (Emilie also happens to be the daughter of former Canadian Supreme Court Justice Louise Arbour), Kimeiko, also a mother of three, on a year leave from her job as a college professor, and Helen, a divorced mother of two, who chose to be let go of her position as a plant manager instead of continue to strain under the high expectations at work while trying to care for her kids. We also meet the ultimate in doing it all mothers -- divorced, single mom Cathy is on her own – she works two jobs when we first meet her while also caring for her two young sons.

THE MOTHERLOAD is produced and directed by Cornelia Principe for Border City Pictures. Executive producer is Bob Culbert.