Cholesterol Drug for Kids

I saw the article below and it made me so disgusted. People are more willing to stuff a pill down their kid’s throat than make them exercise and eat healthy food?!? This kiddie version of lipitor has been approved for children as young as 10 years old. Isn’t it tragic that kids that young have high cholesterol? Shouldn’t we think about what is really wrong here?

I also have a hard time buying the whole “it’s nobody’s fault the kid is fat, it’s just bad genetics” argument. Are the overweight families feeding their children fresh produce and taking them to the park? Or are the kids eating the same high-calorie meals that they are eating and sitting in front of the tv?

Advertising has taken away all the personal responsibility. If you want to lose weight, just drink a diet soda or eat a diet chocolate bar. God forbid you actually examine what lifestyle choices got you there in the first place! It’s not your fault you are heavy. Blame your family tree and buy our products. Gah!

By LINDA A. JOHNSON, AP Business Writer – Tue Jul 6, 12:32 pm ET

TRENTON, N.J. – The European Union has approved a new chewable form of cholesterol blockbuster Lipitor for children 10 and up with high levels of bad cholesterol and triglycerides, a type of blood fat, Pfizer said Tuesday.

The approval includes children whose high blood fats are due to an inherited disease that causes extremelyhigh cholesterol levels, familial hypercholesterolemia.

New York-based Pfizer Inc. won U.S. approval for Lipitor use in children 10 to 17 with that condition in 2002.

Lipitor is the world’s top-selling drug, with 2009 sales of about $13 billion, but its U.S. patent expires at the end of November 2011. Pfizer, the world’s biggest drugmaker, will quickly lose most Lipitor revenue once generic competition hits, so the company has been trying to boost sales where possible before then.

Pfizer said last fall that it plans to apply for a six-month extension of its patent in European countries, after doing studies of Lipitor in youngsters.

As in the United States, the European Union allows drug makers to seek an additional six months of patent protection for medications if they test them in children, who generally are excluded from the drug studies performed to win approval for a new medication.

Pfizer already won such an extension for its crucial U.S. patent on Lipitor.

For blockbuster drugs, those extensions can easily bring hundreds of millions of dollars in additional revenue. Normally, they are for drugs that are widely used by different age groups.

Until recently, cholesterol drugs have been primarily taken by adults with heart disease, but their use has expanded to younger patients as more obese, sedentaryteenagers and adolescents develop heart disease and diabetes.

Lipitor is approved to lower risk of heart attack and stroke, but can cause dangerous muscle pain or weakness, and it cannot be taken by patients with liver problems or by nursing or pregnant women.

Feeling Patriotic this July 4th weekend

This weekend we visited friends in Rhode Island. I just did my photo school foible #2 and forgot to pack my camera. Don’t ask me how, but I did. I relied on my friend Jim’s camera and will post some photos once I get the photos from him.

So the photo above isn’t one of mine. When we were driving home in the hellacious traffic that is I-95, we decided to try an alternative route. We turned onto Route 1 and worked our way down towards New Haven. At one point we drove past a little inlet and saw an osprey nest on a platform. And then on a giant telephone-sized perch next to it was a bald eagle. It was pretty unmistakable with its white head. I had never seen an adult one before. I had seen an immature bald eagle (they don’t have the white feathers on their heads when they are young) in Cooperstown, NY many years ago, but it was pretty far away. Somehow this sighting on July  5th felt like an appropriate way to finish Independence weekend.

Happy Independence Day

We got back from the North Fork of Long Island on Monday. The weekend was lovely and we joined hands for Hands Across the Sand at a small, local beach. There were about 2 dozen of us. I haven’t checked the website since Saturday to see photos from other beaches. I didn’t get photos because, well, my hands were linked and I couldn’t push the button. Sigh.

This weekend we are going up to Rhode Island to see good friends of ours. Last year I was an elderberry maniac and we had to pull the car over to pick elderflowers. I think the season has passed, but I’m going to keep my eyes open. I made french toast dipped into the flowers and then fried them up.

I’m also going to keep my eyes peeled for milkweed florets. Stephanie at PureAndStrangeAsWhatISee sauteed the florets in butter and likens them to asparagus or artichokes. Yum!

No better way to celebrate your independence than by foraging for some food from the wild! Oh, and going to a polo match. Hope you have a great weekend.

Father’s Day

On Sunday Neil wanted to go for a bike ride. We decided to go along a path he’s always been interested in, which runs along the water in Brooklyn. We drove to a spot right by the Verrazano bridge and headed toward Coney Island. Sunday was very hot, but being by the water we had a nice breeze. Much to Lindsay’s delight, our ride took us past an amusement park. We stopped there and ate our picnic lunch and Lindsay went on a few rides. It was practically empty (I guess dads don’t choose to go to amusement parks on father’s day) and the guy running the swing ride kept the ride going and going and going.

One of the things I packed was beef jerky. Don’t know why, but I saw a new kind called Go*ggi at our local cheese shop Stinky, which is a Korean-style bulgoggi flavored beef jerky. I would recommend it as an alternative to the usual teriyaki flavored ones.

The next time we’re going to explore the bike path higher up by the old airstrip Floyd Bennett Field. I hope everyone had a nice father’s day.

Yankees vs. Mets

It’s almost the weekend and I’m just now posting about last weekend. For some reason I’m feeling very overwhelmed and can’t really pinpoint why.

Anyhoo, on Saturday Neil and I went to see the Yankees play the Mets. Our friends graciously took Lindsay for the day, so we could play grown up. It was a gorgeous, sunny day and our seats were high above home plate. I actually love being high up because it gives a really nice perspective of what everyone is doing. We were also right behind home plate, so you could really see how the ball was in relation to it. Being high up also had the added benefit of being shaded by a bit of roof, which was very appreciated.

The game was great and the Yankees won. As we were driving home we passed a building with a green roof. It’s the first green roof I’ve seen out in the wild. I’m going to have to figure out what the building is. And no, 4 years in photo school didn’t teach me not to put my finger over the lens. Actually I’m just glad I got anything because I was frantically trying to get my phone’s camera working before we drove by the building (and we were on the highway).

Holiday Weekend

I hope everyone had a nice Memorial Day weekend. We went up to the Berkshires to visit Neil’s parents. They live in a very pretty, rural area near Great Barrington, MA. Behind their house is a beaver pond/wetland area. They always have more than their share of mosquitoes, but have always had loads of bats living in their open wood shed. Last year the bats did not come back. That, of course, means that there are zillions of mosquitoes. It seems as though the barn swallows have increased in number a bit. Neil’s parents wanted to be able to enjoy their yard, so they found a small tent as a possible solution. Lindsay loved it because of the playhouse aspect. She also found a little green caterpillar, which is a rarity in our lives in Brooklyn.

Tell me when the scary part is over

I am not usually one to shrink from learning about difficult topics. I’ve read or seen films about global warming, the horrors of industrial farming, native habitat destruction, etc. But my brain is just shutting down when it comes to the oil pouring into the Gulf of Mexico. I can’t handle the thought of the zillions of innocent animals that will die (immediately, or long-term) from another human mess. I feel like I’m in a horror movie and even though I have my hands over my eyes, and my fingers in my ears I keep hearing impossible horrors: 200,000 gallons spilling out a day, BP expending more effort to hide the impact instead of stopping the leak, endangered sea turtles dying, the oil reaching up the Eastern seaboard.

Why did this happen? Greed seems to be the answer to most of our environmental problems. What I don’t understand is the people who push for more drilling, even when they’ve been warned that the equipment can’t handle it. Do they have some Plan B to live in a colony in space when they’ve completely mucked up the Earth? What am I missing? Don’t they breathe the same air as I do? Isn’t the sight of a verdant, green forest soothing on their eyes also? Don’t they want their children to be able to go camping and find wildflowers and mushrooms and salamanders?

The honeybees are dying, the bats are dying, the frogs and toads are dying. Birds migrate back to their homes only to find a new clear-cut (gotta send out more catalogs!) Why are the birds and bats and frogs dying? Most likely because they just hit a tipping point where their little bodies can’t handle all the pesticides and crap we’ve thrown at them.

So I’m being a coward and shutting down. I take periodic peeks between my fingers, but I really am unable to deal with the magnitude of this spill and what we’ve done to muck up our world.