medicineman
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PMedMoe said:AFAIK, this medication is not available in the CF.
It's choloroquine, so yes it is
MM
PMedMoe said:AFAIK, this medication is not available in the CF.
medicineman said:It's choloroquine, so yes it is
MM
You're making some pretty broad brush statements, and I disagree with them. The vast majority of our CF pers are properly screened by multiple pers at multiple levels (e.g. PMed, MO, Pharm O) and prescribed the appropriate chemoprophylaxis prior to deployment. My biggest concern is for the augmentee that arrives at the last minute, usually as a replacement for someone on the TO&E. Furthermore, all medications have potential adverse effects. The hoopla over malarone use in the CF came out of the Somalia scandal with the CAR, when individuals claimed the neuropsychiatric side effects caused them to torture and murder a civilian. It doesn't.PMedMoe said:I agree. IMHO, some health care personnel are not screening people properly. Doxy isn't really the greatest either, as one of the side effects is sun sensitivity. Of course, one should be using sunscreen in A'stan anyway.....
PMedMoe said:Whoopsy! I stand corrected. No good for most places, though. Isn't Africa (mostly) chloroquine resistant? That would explain some things......... :nod:
CombatDoc said:You're making some pretty broad brush statements, and I disagree with them. The vast majority of our CF pers are properly screened by multiple pers at multiple levels (e.g. PMed, MO, Pharm O) and prescribed the appropriate chemoprophylaxis prior to deployment.
CombatDoc said:The hoopla over malarone use in the CF came out of the Somalia scandal with the CAR, when individuals claimed the neuropsychiatric side effects caused them to torture and murder a civilian
In the Somalia Affair, some Members of Parliament and doctors postulated that this drug may have been a cause of the brutal beating death of Shidane Arone by Canadian Forces personnel, some of whom had been given experimental treatment using the drug. Dr. Michele Brill-Edwards resigned in protest from Health Canada over her belief that the drug could produce "dangerous psychiatric reactions" in the soldiers before the Somalia Affair took place.
dangerboy said:In 2006 I took Mefloquine once a week for however long was required. I did not suffer any of the side effects and as far as I know no one in my section has either.
The option to use the other drug has been around at least since the end on 2005. If troops started to experience symptoms, they could be switched from one drug to the other.Pieman said:http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2012/04/10/malaria-drug-mefloquine.html
Someone please remind me, there was a weekly malaria pill and a daily pill for 2009 tours. What were they called?
Which is the drug they are talking about here?
I am worried this could have implications for veterans who are being treated.
E.R. Campbell said:Ditto, although I'm not sure what the drug was, three times, for periods ranging from a few weeks to about nine months, between 1975 and 1990ish. We heard all kinds of horror stories but I never saw nor heard, first hand, any real evidence about ill effects.