Start paying attention to women’s health

Unless you’re interested in the field or have had need for specific information, it has been easy to miss the incredible changes that have occured at the FDA, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services — basically every government organization that touches on women’s health issues — in the past six years.

_Glamour_ provides an excellent and in-depth rundown of what has been going on. Over the past few years my opinions on this matter have changed, and it has had almost everything to do with HPV.

The Bush administration engages in a whole lot of practices that I find highly morally objectionable, and one of the most long-lasting harms the administration and its allies in Congress are causing is the complete implosion of some of the most effective and important science-based arms of the government. In the past, though, I’ve stated that while I find concerted efforts to outlaw abortion, withhold contraception, and spread misinformation about STDs and other diseases to be morally reprehensible, at least it is a practice that, while highly detrimental to the people of today, can be quickly corrected within a few years of the next administration coming into office. This in contrast with the accellerating pace of global warming, which has the potential to affect generations of human beings throughout the entire world.

But my view has shifted, and while I still agree to the fundamental principle I’ve espoused, I now also believe the the religiously motivated shenanigans at the FDA and elsewhere are incredibly harmful and bordering on criminal, for one simple reason: *they are trying to kill people*. Inaccurate information about treatable STDs is one thing, inaccurate information and lack of contraception ahd lack of abortions is strange and self-defeating and wrong, but *withholding the cure to a life-threatening disease on moral grounds is unthinkable.* Yet that is exactly what is happening with a new HPV vaccine that Merck is trying to bring ot market.

HPV, a sexually-transmitted disease, is the major cause of cervical cancer among women. This simple vaccine, incredibly effective, cheap to produce, easily administerd, should be included the vaccine cocktails given to all children in the early years of their lives. But some radical religious conservatives, always looking for ways to stop “immoral” premarital sex, have latched on to HPV as their latest weapon, and object strongly to any vaccine that might somehow “encourage” teenages to have premarital sex by lessening their risks of catching various diseases. Their goal, it seems, is to derail Merck’s drug application in much the same way that they have successfully derailed the over-the-counter version of the Plan B emergency contraceptive pill.

Now, admitted, cervical cancer is not in the top 10 or even top 20 cancers. And in many cases the immune system can itself stop HPV before it causes cancerous cells to develop. Additionally, cervical cancer can generally be detected in women who have regularily gynacological exams. But I find these points immaterial next to the moral absurdity of a political position, supposedly based in deeply held religious beliefs, that is saying, in effect, that *people who have premarital sex deserve to die.* I believe these people are completely morally bankrupt, and I don’t think anything anyone can say is going to convince me otherwise. I can’t even imagine how they might react if a cure to HIV/AIDS was found.

And so while I think global warming and other major environmental problems may be a larger problem than the corruption of science relating to sexual health, when people start getting *cancer* because some blowhard doesn’t like the concept of teenagers having sex, I really start to worry about what other sorts of science is being adversely affected, and what lasting consequences it will be having both to my generation and my children’s generation.

The new blog Hating On TextDrive makes me happy, because its about time *someone* talk about the TextDrive web hosting company who has not been drinking the disgusting Kool-Aid. The anonymous author is right on — in theory TextDrive is awesome, in reality everything they promise to deliver Real Soon Now never seems to come to pass, and while their support is pretty good (the opposite of the brats over at 37signals) their product is just constantly disappointing.

From the commentary on a Questionable Content strip (my current obsession), a simple but important truth:

It takes strength to recognize that if you did not succeed at something it does not mean that it was not worth the effort. Sometimes taking big stupid risks is worth it, regardless of whether the outcome is what you were hoping for.

Ryan Carson challenges us to work a four-day week. I’m taking up the challenge, but slightly differently. Since I’ve come back from vacation I’ve been trying very hard to work only 40 hours in a week. I’m coming in early when the office is empty and quiet, staying until mid-afternoon to interface with coworkers and deal with the daily tasks and challenges, and then leaving promptly when I hit the 8 hour mark. Yesterday I stayed late accidentally, so today I came in late. Unfortunately I may find that I have to come in tomorrow for much of the day, in which case I’m going to try taking off the same amount of time on Monday. Well, if possible. Unfortunately Monday the new firewall rules are getting switched on… Ah well, it is a nice theory, anyway.

Geeking Out

Compy 3

Apple MacBookNow that I finally have Virtue Desktops working correctly, I can say that my new new new computer is finally perfect, at least for the time being. This is the third new computer I’ve had the pleasure (?) of owning in the past month, and after I got it I had to wait another week before the RAM and hard drive upgrades arrived. I received the new hard drive yesterday and, thanks to the number of times I’ve now done this, was able to go from virgin platter to reasonably usable system in about an hour and a half. This morning I copied over all of my music and documents and such and finished configuring a few additional programs, and now I finally have a rockin’ setup again. Yay!

But but but, this is a *MacBook*, and the last time we checked in, you had a *MacBook Pro*! What happened? Read on…

Continue reading “Compy 3”

Remember my two entries, “Meg, meet Jason” and “You’ve got blog follow through?” They discussed the online meeting and courting of two bloggers (Jason Kottke and Meg Hourihan) starting about six years ago, as first chronicled in the print world in a _New Yorker_ article titled “You’ve got blog.” I was very pleased this evening to open the latest edition of the very same magazine and discover a charming coda that gave a recap of the last six years under the heading, “Meg and Jason.”

Average number of vacation days around the world per year. They say that Americans are among the least productive workers in the world, which doesn’t really surprise me. Near the end of my vacation I was revitalized and ready to get back into work with a bunch of new ideas and plans, but now two days back (and a few setbacks later) I’m already feeling burned out and unproductive again.

_Slate_ offers a good layman’s rundown of problems facing colleges dealing with mentally ill students who may be at risk of committing suicide. There is a lot of complicated political and legal precedent for why things are as they are and how they are changing, and this article offers a very quick, readable overview of what’s what, using the recent controvery at GWU as a jumping-off point. The article especially warms my heart by actually explaining how FERPA(Family Education Rights and Privacy Act) limits the debate, something that most news accounts ignore completely in favor of a blanket “no comment” from the schools.

Malcolm Gladwell follows up on his blog with some feedback about his awesome recent _New Yorker_ profile on dog trainer Cesar Millan, who in addition to having a show on the National Geographic channel and a popular book was also recently featured on the TV show _South Park_.

★★☆☆☆
Review

The da Vinci Code

!>/files/2006/05/6311368.gif(The da Vinci Code)! Wikipedia notes that “fans have lauded [this] book as creative, action-packed, and thought-provoking. Critics have attacked it as poorly written, inaccurate, and creating confusion between speculation and fact.” A fitting critique, as both points of view are entirely accurate.

Not generally up on “popular fiction,” I picked up _The da Vinci Code_ in Paris yesterday for my flight home on the recommendation of my aunt and finished it today. The experience of having recently visited many of the most important settings of the novel heavily offset for me the awful prose and sloppy storytelling. In fact, as I read, I constantly noticed discrepancies between Brown’s travel guide descriptions and what I actually saw when I had visited the locations just a few days prior. One can forgive a novelist’s license in changing subtle details to help the story (metal detectors at Westminster Abbey, bar soap in the bathrooms at the Louvre, details of security systems and computers and display cases, etc.), but I was practically shouting at Brown’s description of the architecture of Westminster, including doors that and passageways that I knew (having just been there a week ago) did not exist. Luckily he redeemed himself later on, and all respect was not lost.

Continue reading “The da Vinci Code”