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Things that NZ did after the shooting.

Days post hate crime massacre & NZ has:

• hosted vigils across the country

• raised around $9 million for victims families & the muslim community

• civilians handing in own weapons to be destroyed

• NZ banks pull advertising from social media sites

• the 3 major NZ telco’s band together to write a letter to Facebook, Twitter & Google to ask for change

• PM announces there WILL be gun reform

• Little media reporting on perpetrator

• PM announces she will never say his name

• Hunting & Fishing announce they are against selling firearms online & pulls all semi-automatic weapons from their stores

• TradeMe auction site halts all firearm auctions

• Little sensationalist media surrounding the shooter

• NZ parliament opens first day after shooting with an Islamic prayer with leaders from most religions represented

• PM announces funeral & repatriation costs will be funded by the Government

• A woman will be charged for inciting racial disharmony under Human Rights legislation for a hateful post on social media.

• A man has been charged for sharing footage

• NZ Police now required to be armed due to the national High Security Risk level and they are putting flowers in their holsters to take the focus off the firearms.

To explain the bottom point:

As a nation they aren’t used to seeing their officers armed. I’m not sure if all are armed, but those posted at mosques & vigils are armed. Form My understanding is that when the terrorist threat level is lowered they will no longer be armed, Whilst seeing firearms is scary/ at present it is a necessity, Once the threat level is lowered they will no longer carry firearms on their person. If you’ve perceived it as “cute”, so be it. That’s fair. I perceive it as officers trying their best to show they are there to maintain peace, despite the arms.

Other places and learn from this.

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The Dangers of Self Diagnosis

In this day and age of limited time with doctors coupled with ample opportunity to google anything, the temptation for people to reach their own conclusions about their illness is strong. In this piece, I will describe when self-diagnosis is dangerous, and what you might know overtly about this danger. Here are a few truths to consider and how self-diagnosis affects this.

When you self-diagnose, you are essentially assuming that you know the subtleties that diagnosis constitutes. This can be very dangerous, as people who assume that they can surmise what is going on with themselves may miss the nuances of diagnosis. For example, people with mood swings often think that they have manic-depressive illness or bipolar disorder. However, mood swings are a symptom that can be a part of many different clinical scenarios: borderline personality disorder and major depression being two examples of other diagnoses. The clinician can help you discern whether you swing from normal to down or down to up, and by considering how long the mood swings last, the clinician can make the appropriate diagnosis. Here, the danger is that you may misdirect the clinician or even yourself.

One of the greatest dangers of self diagnosis in psychological syndromes, is that you may miss a medical disease that masquerades as a psychiatric syndrome. Thus, if you have panic disorder, you may miss the diagnosis of hyperthyroidism or an irregular heart beat. Even more serious is the fact that some brain tumors may present with changes in personality or psychosis or even depression. If you assume you have depression and treat it with an over-the-counter preparation, you may completely miss a medical syndrome. Even if you do not want conventional treatment for depression, you may want conventional treatment for a brain tumor.

Self-diagnosis also undermines the role of the doctor-which is not the best way to start the relationship. While doctors are generally very enthusiastic about getting packaged information, it would help if you actually trusted your doctor. If your doctor is someone whom you cannot trust, then think again about why you see this doctor. Your doctor should respect your opinion, but the discussion should be an active one. If you doubt the doctor’s diagnosis, tell him or her that you do and say why. This is much better than silently diagnosing your own syndrome.

Then there is the fact that we can know and see ourselves, but sometimes, we need a mirror to see ourselves more clearly. The doctor is that mirror. By self-diagnosing, you may be missing something that you cannot see. For example, you may be overwhelmed by anxiety and think that you have an anxiety disorder. The anxiety disorder may be covering up a major depressive disorder. Approximately 2/3 of people who present to outpatient clinics with anxiety have depression as well. In general, when two or more syndromes occur in the same person, we call this comorbidity. When people self-diagnose, they often miss the comorbidity that exists.

Another danger of self diagnosis is that you may think that there is more wrong with you than there actually is. For example, if you had insomnia, inattention and depression, you may believe that you have a sleep disorder, ADHD and major depression. However, major depression can account for all of these symptoms. Thus, you may make things worse by worrying more as well.

Self-diagnosis is also a problem when you are in a state of denial about your symptoms. You may think that you have generalized body aches that started when your mood got worse, but a doctor may elect to do an EKG for chest pain that reveals possible coronary artery disease. You may have been trying to avoid the chest pain or you may have minimized this.

Lastly, there are certain syndromes that may not seem like problems to you even though they are very disruptive to your life. For example, with delusional disorder people do not think that they are delusional and because they are not overtly psychotic, they may not think to report paranoid symptoms that add up to delusional disorder. Also, many personality disorders are not spontaneously reported since they are usually problematic to other people.


Thus, self-diagnosis can have tremendous negative repercussions on the patient. For this reason, while reading is helpful and informative, it is always best to discuss your impressions with a doctor before you decide on the treatment you want.

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The most evil women in Ireland

If you are the parent of a child with Autism and get approached by this woman do not engage with her. Once she gets your child’s details she tries to get your services removed.

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Fiona O’Leary is an Autistic woman with severe ideas about Autism. She demands the children are left in their natural Autistic state. She derides parents for wanting a better quality of life for their children or trying to make them independent for when we pass away. She is Autistic herself and fights anyone who does not agree with her about Autistic children.

She has made a campaign over the past three years to get rid of all private diagnosis in Ireland so that children cannot get assessed, cannot get treated, cannot get interventions or get a diagnosis.

In the guise of helping and advising parents pretending to be an Autism Advocate she gets all the information about the parents, the child and the diagnosis. Then contacts all services involved to convince them not to accept reports or give out services. This then turns the parents back on the professionals who have helped them and chaos ensues with her in the middle of it playing the parents off against everyone.

TARGETING AUTISM PROFESSIONALS

Autism professionals have been targeted by Fiona O’Leary including Autism Education Providers, health care practitioners, school teachers, psychologists, doctors, researchers and academics. Her targets for vilification are anyone who has taken a stand on, or is connected with Autism research, treatment or diagnosis. Fiona has some like-minded people who aid her in these campaigns and do the same. Together they join Special Needs facebook pages and groups and work on blackening the names of anyone who opposes their agenda. Anyone raising an objection is set upon by the group who act in a vigilante style to silence the objector.

Parents be aware that this woman is not offering any alternatives to help our children she is just condemning everything we do to aid them. Do not hand over any personal information to this woman if you have an Autistic child.

STOPPING RESEARCH


Fiona O’Leary attacked the research at UCC investigating Autism and Microbiome connections headed by Professor John F. Cryan, unsuccessfully trying to stop the research going ahead. She got an article published in the press stating the research was supporting quackery.


She started a campaign against Autism Speaks the worlds’ biggest Autism research body that is concerned with Autism and furthering genetic research, understanding and treatments.










STOPPING PRIVATE SERVICES BY LYING TO THE AUTHORITIES


Fiona O’Leary has besieged HSE departments and Education Departments to try and get reports rejected for children. This is done in her role as an Autism Advocate by appealing to parents to give information about their children. She set up a Tumblr page called Autistic Rights Together (ART) and calls herself ‘the director of an Autism Organisation’ She has a list of professionals she has campaigns against and has attempted to ruin their standing in the Autism community by continuous mud-slinging until some of it sticks.

Authorities have been constantly lied to by this woman who will say anything no matter how ridiculous it sounds in order to convince them to go against private reports.

If you are approached by her ask for proof of her claims. She claims to be the head of many investigations going on and have links to the police but can provide no names of anyone doing investigations. She claims to be in touch with Interpol but cant give any name of anyone connected to it. She claims to be in touch with government yet can give no contacts of anyone who works with her. All she can prove is that she sends lots of emails and that is all she can show. Most of her campaigns are just gossip and fear mongering to parents who have enough to deal with without false advocates sticking another spoke in the wheel.

For the past three years this woman has done nothing but try and stop intervention and progress for Autistic children in Ireland.

It is your right to get help for your child as much as you can. Get early intervention, try as many things as you can that can improve your child’s life.

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provaccinemovement

My disorder wasn’t caused by a vaccine.

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Some people have wondered whether vaccinations cause attention deficit disorder (ADD) or attention-deficit, hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The diseases that vaccines prevent do not cause these disorders, so it is not likely that vaccines to prevent them would. However, concerns were related to thimerosal, a mercury-containing preservative, which was in several vaccines commonly given during the first few years of life.

The detrimental health effects caused by mercury are dependent on a variety of factors including the form and dose of mercury and the developmental age of the person being exposed. Most of the data from mercury exposures has resulted from the type commonly ingested when we eat fish, known as methyl mercury. The type of mercury in vaccines is called thimerosal [PDF, 193KB], which is made of ethyl mercury. Ethyl mercury is less likely to accumulate and cause ill effects compared to methyl mercury because it is eliminated from the body much more quickly. However, when concerns about an association between mercury exposure from vaccines and conditions related to attention deficit disorders arose, researchers tested this hypothesis.

Three large studies provided assurance that vaccines didn’t cause attention deficit disorders:

•Verstraeten and colleagues compared thimerosal exposure and a variety of neurodevelopmental delays, including attention deficit disorders, in more than 124,000 infants from two larger HMO databases and an additional 16,700 children in a third HMO. Children who received thimerosal-containing vaccines were not at greater risk of attention deficit disorder than those who didn’t receive these vaccines.

•Andrews and colleagues compared thimerosal exposure from DTP/DT vaccines in the first six months of life in about 110,000 children. Again, receipt of thimerosal-containing vaccines was not associated with the development of attention deficit disorder.

•Another concern was related to children getting “too many vaccines too soon,” so Smith and Woods compared children who got vaccines according to the recommended schedule (the timely group) with those whose parents had chosen to delay or withhold vaccines (the untimely group). The study included more than 1,000 children. The researchers used statistical analyses to compare these two groups for a variety of outcomes, some of which were attention deficit-related characteristics. They found no association between timely receipt of immunizations and developmental delays.

Therefore, parents can be reassured that vaccines do not cause ADD/ADHD or related conditions.

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