Weird Medicine Healthcare for the Rest of Us

October 18, 2014

Why We Know Ebola Still Isn’t Easy to Contract (Commentary)

Filed under: Ebola,Steve's Blog — dr steve @ 4:22 pm

Just some quick math to set your mind at ease:

If Ebola were EASY to transmit, there would be a MUCH larger burden of cases in the world right now. Let me show you with math.

Let’s be conservative and say this outbreak started January 1st with one patient. Let’s say this person infected 10 other people, who then infected 10 other people, and so on. With an incubation period of 21 days, and assuming that people can’t transmit the disease until they are symptomatic, it’s pretty easy to calculate where we would be if the above were anywhere close to reality.  (Remember, I’m oversimplifying how this all works, but the answer will still be right enough to make my point).

On Day 21 there would be 10 cases. (1×10)
On Day 42 there would be 100 cases (1x10x10)
On Day 63 there would be 1000 cases (1x10x10x10)
and so on. You’ll notice that with every incubation period, we simply add another exponent to the pile. Period 3 is 1×103, period 4 is 1 x 104, etc.

So for an outbreak that started on January 1st, there have been 290 days (today is Oct 18th, 2014), or 13.8 incubation periods. Let’s round that to 14 to show that a perfectly transmissible virus under these idealized conditions would have caused:

1 x 1014 cases, or 100,000,000,000,000 cases. That’s ONE HUNDRED TRILLION (in American parlay, where a billion is known as a “thousand million” everywhere else) cases, or enough to wipe us all out several times over.

The reality:

Total Cases: 8997

Laboratory-Confirmed Cases: 5006

Total Deaths: 4493

(from cdc.gov)

Ok, this is the worst outbreak of Ebola in recorded history and we need to contain it, and learn how to treat it more effectively.   Every death is a tragedy, and every illness creates anxiety.   I really want you to pay attention to those numbers and understand them, though.  Despite everything, Ebola is hard to catch…this is why in the US (so far, tomorrow could prove me wrong) the only people who have contracted the disease on our soil were health care workers, basically immersed in the stuff.

What’s scary about Ebola is its mortality rate, and the WAY people die from the virus.  We may very soon have some good news on those fronts, too.  People have been discovered who have antibodies to the virus but never got sick.   These people may provide some very important insights into the inflammatory response of the body to the virus which wreaks such havoc.  In addition, there are labs all over the world with mouse-myeloma hybrid cells churning out monoclonal antibodies RIGHT NOW (more on this later if you’re interested) that may very soon give us an unending supply of antibodies to treat infected people.   A vaccine would set people’s minds at ease, particularly if it worked quickly so we don’t have to vaccinate the whole world and only people who have been exposed to the virus (similar to what was done with smallpox).  Ultimately tracking this piece of crap virus down to the animals that harbor it and vaccinating THEM would kick this virus’s ass once and for all.

Anyway, enjoy.  Follow the Ebola story with interest and watch how we defeat it (Nigeria did it, so can we), but don’t panic about it.  Ok?

 

your obt svt,

 

Dr Steve

 

PS: Here’s the CDC’s take on transmission of Ebola virus.  We discussed some of these issues in our podcast last week, and again on the Saturday, Oct 18 episode of “Weird Medicine” on SiriusXM (Sirius 206, XM 103, 10pm Eastern).

October 14, 2014

RexDart Needs Our Help Again

Filed under: Steve's Blog — dr steve @ 4:29 pm

We have a listener who has been battling terminal bladder cancer since 2011. He’s had to try to continue to work just to keep the lights on despite horrific intractable pain, but hasn’t had a full time job since being laid off in 2012. A few months ago he told me “i’m already $100 away from being homeless. At this point I long for the relief that death will bring.”

He has no family who can help him, and he’s alone, suffering in a cold house trying to live on $700 a month. He finally has an oncologist who will TRY to treat him, but the chemo is keeping him from working and he just got admitted to the hospital with a blood sugar of 700.

He got better for awhile and we stopped raising money for him; he’s again bed ridden and can’t work. Eventually he will need hospice but the docs think they might be able to kick this thing back a bit if he can just make it to the treatments and stay out of the hospital.

Please donate below, $5, $10, $100, whatever you can afford; 100% will go to RexDart who is known to people on the Interrobang website and on twitter as @rexdart936.

Let’s see what we can do as a group to keep the lights on and some heat going so our friend can live out his days in peace.




your friend,

Steve

 

October 4, 2014

Finally Some Good Ebola News

Filed under: Ebola — dr steve @ 9:21 am

What Texas can learn from Nigeria when it comes to containing Ebola

By Elahe Izadi October 4 at 7:43 AM

While devastating reports continue to stream out of West Africa, where the deadly virus has overwhelmed already weak public health systems and left thousands of people dead, and anxiety grips the United States over the first case of Ebola diagnosed in the country, one nation serves as an example of hope: Nigeria, which appears to have successfully contained Ebola.

As concerns spread over U.S. hospital readiness, there are some lessons to be learned from Nigeria, where officials managed to get ahead of the fast-moving virus after it was brought into Africa’s most populous country by an Ebola-infected man who’d flown into Lagos. This week, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the outbreak could be coming to an end in Nigeria, with no new Ebola cases since Aug. 31.

As in the U.S. case, Ebola arrived in Nigeria by passenger plane. But unlike Thomas Eric Duncan — who arrived in Dallas before he became symptomatic and was therefore not contagious during his flights from Liberia to Texas through Brussels and Dulles International Airport — Patrick Sawyer was already symptomatic when he landed in Lagos on July 20. At that point, Sawyer, Nigeria’s Patient Zero, was contagious and dying.

It was a nightmare scenario with the potential to spiral out of control, given the bustling city of Lagos, Africa’s largest, is a major transportation hub. As Sawyer was placed in isolation, public health officials had to track down every single person who’d come into contact with him, from the flights he’d boarded to the Lagos airport and the private hospital where he went after landing. And they had to do so quickly, making the process known as contract tracing a priority.

“In the whole system approach in beating the war on Ebola, contact tracing is the key public health activity that needs to be done,” said Gavin MacGregor-Skinner, who helped with the Ebola response in Nigeria with the Elizabeth R. Griffin Research Foundation. “The key is to find all the people that patient had direct close contact with.”

From that single patient came a list of 281 people, MacGregor-Skinner said. Every one of those individuals had to provide health authorities twice-a-day updates about their well-being, often through methods like text-messaging. Anyone who didn’t feel well or failed to respond was checked on, either through a neighborhood network or health workers.

Nigeria took a “whole community approach,” with everyone from military officials to church elders in the same room, discussing how to handle the response to the virus, MacGregor-Skinner said.

Such an approach, and contact tracing in general, requires people be open and forthright about their movements and their health, he said. Stigmatization of patients, their families and contacts could only discourage that, so Nigerian officials sent a message to “really make them look like heroes,” MacGregor-Skinner said.

“This is the best thing people can do for Nigeria: They are going to protect and save Nigeria by being honest, by doing what they need to do, by reporting to the health commission,” he said. This made people feel like they were a part of something extremely important, he said, and also took into account real community needs. “You got real engagement and compliance from the contacts. They’re not running and hiding.”

Sawyer had come into contact with someone who ended up in Port Harcourt. That person, a regional official, went to a doctor who ended up dying from Ebola in August. Within a week, 70 people were being monitored. It ballooned to an additional 400 people in that one city.

Success stories of people coming through strict Ebola surveillance alive and healthy helped encourage more people to come forward, as they recognized that ending up in a contact tracer’s sights didn’t mean a death sentence.

In the end, contact tracers — trained professionals and volunteers — conducted 18,500 face-to-face visits to assess potential symptoms, according to the CDC, and the list of contacts throughout the country grew to 894. Two months later, Nigeria ended up with a total of 20 confirmed or probable cases and eight deaths.

The CDC also pointed to the robust public health response by Nigerian officials, who have had experience with massive public health crises in the past — namely polio in 2012 and large-scale lead poisoning in 2010.

When someone is on a contact list, that doesn’t mean that person has to stay at home for the entire incubation period of 21 days from the last contact with someone who had Ebola. People on contact lists are not under quarantine or in isolation. They can still go to work and go on with their their lives. But they should take their temperature twice a day for 21 days and check in with health workers.

Officials in Texas began with a list of about 100 names; they have whittled the list down to 50 people who had some contact with Duncan. Of those, 10 are considered high-risk.

The CDC recommends that people without symptoms but who have had direct contact with the bodily fluids of a person sick with Ebola be put under either conditional release, meaning that they self-monitor their health and temperature and check in daily, or controlled movement. People under controlled movement have to notify officials about any intended travel and shouldn’t use commercial planes or trains. Local public transportation use is approved on a case-by-case basis.

When symptoms do develop, that’s when the response kicks into high gear. People with Ebola are contagious only once they begin exhibiting symptoms, which include fever, severe headaches and vomiting.

While four people in Dallas are under government-ordered quarantine, that is not the norm. Those individuals “were non-compliant with the request to stay home. I don’t want to go too far beyond that,” Dallas County Judge Clay Lewis Jenkins said Thursday.
On Friday, the four people were moved to a private residence from the apartment where Duncan had been staying when he became symptomatic.

A law enforcement officer will remain with them to enforce the order, and none of the people are allowed to leave until Oct. 19.

Duncan is the only person with an Ebola diagnosis in Dallas, and no one else is showing symptoms at the moment. But, as Nigeria knows, the work in Dallas has just begun.

August 9, 2014

What’s Scary About Ebola, Reasons Not to Fear It

Filed under: Ebola — dr steve @ 6:18 pm

from abc.com

What’s Scary About Ebola, Reasons Not to Fear It

 

The United States’ top disease detective calls Ebola a “painful, dreadful, merciless virus.”

The World Health Organization has declared the outbreak in West Africa an international emergency, killing more than 900 people and spreading.

That’s scary and serious. But it also cries out for context.

AIDS alone takes more than a million lives per year in Africa — a thousand times the toll of this Ebola outbreak so far.

Lung infections such as pneumonia are close behind as the No. 2 killer. Malaria and diarrhea claim hundreds of thousands of African children each year.

In the United States, where heart attacks and cancer are the biggest killers, the risk of contracting the Ebola virus is close to zero.

Americans fretting about their own health would be better off focusing on getting a flu shot this fall. Flu is blamed for about 24,000 U.S. deaths per year.

To put the Ebola threat in perspective, here are some reasons to be concerned about the outbreak, and reasons not to fear it:

———

WHY IT’S SCARY

There is no cure for Ebola hemorrhagic fever.

More than half of people infected in this outbreak have died. Death rates in some past outbreaks reached 90 percent.

It’s a cruel end that comes within days. Patients grow feverish and weak, suffering through body aches, vomiting, diarrhea and internal bleeding, sometimes bleeding from the nose and ears.

The damage can spiral far beyond the patients themselves.

Because it’s spread through direct contact with the bodily fluids of sick patients, Ebola takes an especially harsh toll on doctors and nurses, already in short supply in areas of Africa hit by the disease.

Outbreaks spark fear and panic.

Health workers and clinics have come under attack from residents, who sometimes blame foreign doctors for the deaths. People with from Ebola or other illnesses may fear going to a hospital, or may be shunned by friends and neighbors.

Two of the worst-hit countries — Liberia and Sierra Leone — sent troops to quarantine areas with Ebola cases. The aim was to stop the disease’s spread but the action also created hardship for many residents.

———

WHERE IT IS

The outbreak began in Guinea in March before spreading to neighboring Sierra Leone and Liberia. A traveler recently carried it farther, to Nigeria, leading to a few cases in the giant city of Lagos.

Ebola emerged in 1976. It has been confirmed in 10 African nations, but never before in the region of West Africa.

Lack of experience with the disease there has contributed to its spread. So has a shortage of medical personnel and supplies, widespread poverty, and political instability.

Sierra Leone still is recovering from a decade of civil war in which children were forced into fighting. Liberia, originally founded by freed American slaves, also endured civil war in the 1990s. Guinea is trying to establish a young and fragile democracy.

Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, boasts great oil wealth but most of its people are poor. The government is battling Islamic militants in the north who have killed thousands of people and kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls in April.

This outbreak has proved more difficult to control than previous ones because the disease is crossing national borders, and is spreading in more urban areas.

Tom Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, predicts that within a few weeks, Ebola will sicken more people than all previous occurrences combined. Already more than 1,700 cases have been reported.

Global health officials say it will take months to fully contain the outbreak, even if all goes as well as can be hoped.

———

REASONS NOT TO BE AFRAID

Ebola is devastating for those it affects. But most people don’t need to fear it. Why?

—Ebola doesn’t spread easily, the way a cold virus or the flu does. It is only spread by direct contact with bodily fluids such as blood, saliva, sweat and urine. Family members have contracted it by caring for their relatives or handling an infected body as part of burial practices. People aren’t contagious until they show symptoms, Frieden said. Symptoms may not appear until 21 days after exposure.

“People should not be afraid of casual exposure on a subway or an airplane,” said Dr. Robert Black, professor of international health at Johns Hopkins University.

—Health officials around the developed world know how to stop Ebola. Frieden described tried-and-true measures: find and isolate all possible patients, track down people they may have exposed, and ensure strict infection-control procedures while caring for patients. Every past outbreak of Ebola has been brought under control.

The CDC is sending at least 50 staff members to West Africa to help fight the disease, while more than 200 work on the problem from the agency’s headquarters in Atlanta. The WHO is urging nations worldwide to send money and resources to help.

—It’s true that Ebola could be carried into the United States by a traveler, possibly putting family members or health care workers at risk. It’s never happened before. But if the disease does show up in the U.S., Frieden said, doctors and hospitals know how to contain it quickly.

“We are confident that a large Ebola outbreak in the United States will not occur,” Frieden told a congressional hearing Thursday.

———

OTHER THINGS TO WORRY ABOUT

Ebola’s toll is minuscule compared with other diseases that killing millions of people.

“The difference is the diseases that do kill a lot of people — malaria, diarrhea, pneumonia — they cause their problems over time,” Black said. “They’re not generally epidemic. They’re not the kind of sudden burst of disease and death that creates fear like this.”

The common diseases have far lower mortality rates. They kill so many people because such huge numbers are infected.

In comparison, Ebola is manageable.

“The order of magnitude of the resources to control Ebola in small communities in three or four countries is very small compared to controlling malaria in all of Asia and Africa,” Black said. “I don’t at all think we should hold back on the resources to control Ebola, but we need more resources to control these major killers of children and adults that we’re making too little effort against.”

———

Associated Press writers Lauran Neergaard in Washington, Marcia Chen in London, and Michael Stobbe in New York contributed to this report.

———

Online:

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola

World Health Organization: http://www.who.int/csr/disease/ebola/en

 

August 5, 2014

Ebola News 08-05-14: Isolating Possible US Cases

Filed under: Ebola — dr steve @ 3:36 pm

From ABC News

 

Hospitals across the country are isolating and testing potential Ebola patients, erring on the side of caution as the largest Ebola outbreak to date rages in West Africa.

A 46-year-old Columbus, Ohio, woman who recently traveled to one of the three countries affected by the outbreak is being held in isolation at a local hospital, the Columbus health department said today. She was hospitalized several days ago but is “doing well” as she awaits Ebola test results from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which are expected today or Wednesday, the health department said.
(more…)

Doctor Scott’s IndieGoGo Launch

Filed under: Steve's Blog — dr steve @ 3:30 pm

If you’re interested in Dr Scott’s Traditional Chinese Medicine approach, check out his IndieGogo launch for his “Simply Herbals” products.   We give him a hard time on the show but he’s a good feller.  So give it a look;   this is not a claim for any medical benefit or anything, he’s just our bestest pal and we wish him all success.

Click here to go to his IndieGogo Site!

 

your pal,

 

 

Dr Steve

 

July 15, 2014

TomPapa: The Movie

Filed under: Steve's Blog — Tags: , , — dr steve @ 2:14 pm

TomPapa The Movie

 

“The more biting the satire, the narrower the audience…”, a friend of mine taught me that years ago.  I’m thinking 3 people will get the joke, then I realize, there’s really not a JOKE here, it’s just a movie called “Tampopo” and I got a friend on twitter to turn it into “Tompapa”.  It even has his face.   But now it’s just Juzo Itami’s “Tompapa” but without a joke to make it pop.

So.

Make it FUNNY and email it to me (w e i r d m e d i c i n e at riotcast dot com) and if we like it maybe we’ll send you a Bristol Stool Scale mug or something.   That’s IF.  This is NOT a contest.   I just want to laugh at Tom Papa’s expense, or maybe get his attention or something I dunno.  See, if Tom Papa was my friend, then I’d be one step closer to Jerry…

 

your obt svt,

 

Dr Steve

 

June 3, 2014

The Worst Circumcision Story Ever

Filed under: Steve's Blog — Tags: — dr steve @ 10:45 pm

I got this on my reddit page today and had to share it with you.   Half-way through I was saying to myself, “this is going to end with his penis sloughing off” but thankfully it has a happy ending with horrific scars instead of a stump.

When I was 19, mid last year I was in a relationship with a girl in North Sumatra, Indonesia and we decided we wanted to get engaged, but her parents told me I need to be circumcised.

In her sect, circumcision is a must and it’s unacceptable to not be circumcised. I was always anti-Circumcision but I was dumb enough to do it for her.

Her aunt is a nurse and recommended a doctor at the hospital. I went there, he explained to me that circumcision is painless, he will cut off less skin than the size of my fingernail, and he will not do stitches and I will not bleed. And my girlfriends aunt said that he uses a laser, and not a scalpel, I wanted the laser because I bleed a lot.

I dropped my pants, he told me “Nice size, Big size”. I didn’t think too much of it, but I was thinking it’s strange.. His nurse and him started talking in Indonesian. He inspected me and cleaned me up a bit.

Then he started injecting me with anaesthetic. We used maybe 4 or 5 syringes and I could still feel everything. I was trying to tell him that I can still feel everything and nothing is numb… But it was too late. He started cutting me open, I was shaking and in pain. He stopped and tried again with another syringe and it didn’t help. It was too late to stop, so he just continued. I had a pool of blood under me, I’m sweating and this is the most religious experience in my life with all of my thoughts being “OH GOD PLEASE LET IT BE OVER, OH GOD OH GOD OH GOD LET ME BE OKAY” and the like.. The stitches were worse than the cutting. I had maybe 30 or 40.

After about 30 minutes of cutting me and burning me with a machine like a big soldering iron, He was finished. I was still bleeding a little bit.

Anyway, we paid him the 200 dollars and left. My girlfriends aunt told me I’m a liar, because he uses laser and not a scalpel… but I was trying to tell her that I saw him cutting me with a fucking scalpel.

We went back home to my girlfriends house and I went to sleep. The next morning I woke up with like 2 cups worth of congealed blood in my pants. I took a shower and I ended up bleeding all over the floor and I was dizzy and feeling sick in the stomach. The floor was covered with droplets of blood. I had to wait for about 2 hours for my girlfriends aunt to get there and take us to the hospital.

When she did come, we went to the hospital. They told me I had broken some stitches. And I was the last patient of the day by time I got there. For some reason there were 8 female nurses and 1 female doctor and they all had turns touching me and talking about me. I was surrounded by these late teen to 35 year old women, touching me and talking about me.

I tried to stop getting an erection when a cute girl, maybe 18 or 19 wearing the nurse outfit with the hat was holding me. I just tried to focus on the pain. It worked.

Anyway, they ended up fixing my stitches. They failed about 4 times and ripped my skin open even more. After screaming my balls off from that for an hour or two, we went back home.

After a few days of resting, I was still bleeding non-stop. I decided I had to fly back to Kuala Lumpur and back to my city in Australia. I booked my flight, and went on the plane, with a bleeding dick. I spent my whole flight in the toilet with diarrhea and blood clots. I got back to KL, went to the house there and had to get myself well enough to fly for 7 hours to my city.

I made the decision to get some detol. I put the detol on my penis, and that was a fucking BAD idea… I didn’t know you had to dilute a cap of detol with like a bucket of water.

My whole holiday was fucked. Everything was horrible. I got well enough to go home. I flew back to my city, and I went to the hospital. They told me it looks pretty bad and there’s an infection. They gave me some tablets and finally I stopped bleeding. I became better, but after a few weeks my girlfriend and I broke up for other reasons. FUCK. All that for nothing.

After about 3 weeks, it had healed up pretty well. And after about 3 months, it was looking much better. but you can see every single stitch mark. And you can see the cut lines and its very obvious.

I want to know if that will go away, and how I can fix that.. It’s been maybe 5 months now.

Anyway. I doubt you’ll read this, but I think it’s a good story for anyone who reads it.

Moral of the story: Don’t do ANYTHING special for your girlfriend, EVER.

Wow, what a story;  makes the Sam Roberts circumcision seem like “My Little Pony”.

yr obt svt,

Steve

May 31, 2014

A Letter from a Listener

Filed under: Steve's Blog — dr steve @ 10:28 am

I got this email the other day and thought I’d share it with you.  One never knows who is listening, or the impact one is having.   When I got this, I’d had a shitty day at work and this email made it much, much better.

“Hello, I am a Anonymous Physical Therapist from somewhere in the USA. I am a long time listener. I feel that you are providing a great service to the general public in a forum that is non judgmental, educational and entertaining.

I wanted to share a story that you might appreciate.

I work for a home-care company that provides services to patients (Nursing , Physical therapy, Occupational therapy, Home health aids Etc..)

In this occupation I am driving from one patient’s home to the next patient’s home. I spend 3 to 4 hours on the road every day. Your podcast are perfect for me on the car rides between patients.

I started downloading and recording your show onto CDs. When I was finished listening to the show I would pass the CD to my co-worker Tim ( a male nurse).

This has been going on for the past 15 months…

Which takes me to Wednesday of last week…

We had a Continuing Education Seminar at my work. I got to the seminar room early and took a seat in the back where the presenter would not be able to see me playing candy crush on my I-phone. This meeting had about 55+ health care professionals piled into a seminar room that seated 25 people comfortably.

I took a seat next to an attractive nurse named Sara. I engaged in the normal office chit chat and weather conservation. She took out her lap top to take notes. Among her belonging was a CD titled Weird medicine  #77 butt goo ( in my hand writing).

” OH SHIT ” I thought to myself…. This was one of the CDs that I burned….

“Where did you get that!” I asked

Sara Answered “Oh, I got is from Carol, she gives me a new one every week. It is really funny, have you ever herd of Dr. Steve?”

Apparently unbeknownst to me Tim was listening to the podcast and passing the disks to the nurse Rachel, and she would listen to it and pass it to the nurse Denise, and she would listen to it and pass it to the nurse Jenn and so on..

Others in the room overheard us talking about your podcast…

It was so surreal,, this whole room of people completely ignored the presenter and started talking about your show….
The speaker stopped the seminar because no one was listening …and the entire room started talking about WEIRD MEDICINE with Dr Steve,,,,

More than half the professionals in this room had listened to your show from the CDs that I burned.

I am talking Physical Therapists , Occupational Therapists, Registered Nurses , Physician Assistants, Nurse Practitioners,  Palliative Physicians.

People were sharing lines from their favorite Weird Medicine episodes. There was two nurses in the corner singing  CITRUCEL…

Laughter overcame the whole room. I could not keep track of all the side conservations… I could only make out muddled words and phrases like CHECK YOUR STUPID NUTS and BIG JO and RURAL ESCORT….

This was great !! The energy is the room was alive with excitement and laughter..

Everyone was having fun talking about Weird Medicine Podcast except for the Presenter, who had no idea, who or what Dr.Steve was…

Your doing a great job with the podcast, Keep up your hard work… Your show appreciated by fellow health care providers. Thanks for all the laughs…

Sincerely,

Anonymous PT”

May 13, 2014

Continue to Help RexDart: A Listener with Terminal Cancer

Filed under: Steve's Blog — dr steve @ 6:11 pm

We have a listener who has been battling terminal bladder cancer since 2011. He’s had to try to continue to work just to keep the lights on despite horrific intractable pain, but hasn’t had a full time job since being laid off in 2012. The last tweet I got from him said “i’m already $100 away from being homeless. At this point I long for the relief that death will bring.”

He has no family who can help him, and he’s alone, suffering in a cold house he may be evicted from soon due to back taxes. He has about 30 days of insulin left, which will cost him almost $700 to refill.

He got better for awhile and we stopped raising money for him; he’s again bed ridden and can’t work. We’re trying to get free hospice care for him but it has been a struggle.

Please donate below, $5, $10, $100, whatever you can afford; 100% will go to RexDart who is known to people on the Interrobang website and on twitter as @rexdart936.

Let’s see what we can do as a group to keep the lights on and some heat going so our friend can live out his days in peace.




your friend,

Steve

 

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