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Sunday, June 22, 2008
Jackie Gingrich Cushman :: Townhall.com Columnist
Asking and Answering Hard Questions
by Jackie Gingrich Cushman
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Do you feel the leaked information from a global warming alarmist organization is meaningful?



At 3:32 p.m., June 13, the Washington Post news alert hit my iPhone.  Tim Russert, moderator of NBC’s “Meet the Press,” and Washington bureau chief, had died.  My heart ached for his family.  The news was shocking and sad, particularly because Russert was so vital and young.  He was a good man, with more to offer the world, especially in this presidential race.  When reporting Russert’s death, former “Nightly News” Anchor Tom Brokaw noted, “This news division will not be the same without his strong, clear voice.” 

Russert was a force in America’s political landscape who could be counted on to ask the hard questions and raise the level of play and engagement of the guests on “Meet the Press.”  He was a champion of everyday people and asked questions in their stead.  In an age where authenticity is rare, he was the real thing.

Over the past two decades, I met Russert a few times.  Last year, when he moderated the debate at the Cooper Union of Science and Art in New York City between former Gov. Mario Cuomo and my dad, former Speaker Newt Gingrich, he used crutches, due to an injury, to enter the stage door.  But he walked out on stage and out the front door at the end of the event without assistance.  This kept the focus on issues and ideas rather than his injury. Through his action and questions, Russert revealed himself to be a professional, down-to-earth, hardworking man who loved his country.  He will be sorely missed.

Denise Grady’s June 17, 2008 New York Times article, “A Search for Answers in Russert’s Death,” tries to explain why a man of Russert’s youth (he was just 58) and apparent good health had died so suddenly.  The answer, according to Grady, at least in part, is that Russert’s doctors did not realize how severe his coronary heart disease was because he had neither chest pain nor other symptoms that would have led them to carry out “invasive tests needed to make a definitive diagnosis.”  That is also true for half of the men who die of coronary heart disease. 

While Russert was taking measures to control his risk -- medicine for blood pressure and cholesterol, daily exercise and trying to lose weight -- they were not enough.  “Mr. Russert’s cholesterol was not high, and medicine controlled his high blood pressure pretty well,” said Dr. Michael A. Newman, the journalist’s internist. But, he added, Russert was “significantly overweight.”

In the article, Newman noted, “if there’s one number that’s a predictor of mortality, it’s waist circumference.  Studies have found a waist of over 40 inches in men and 35 inches in women is a risk factor for heart disease.’”

This focus on waistline is being taken seriously in other parts of the world.  Norimitsu Onishi’s June 13, 2008 New York Times article “Japan, Seeking to Trim Waists, Measures Millions,” highlights that country’s campaign to improve their national health by measuring waists.

The Japanese focus began with a language shift from overweight to “metabo” (metabolic syndrome) reflecting a person’s health status rather than weight. “In no time,” writes Onishi, “the scary-sounding condition was popularly shortened to the funny-sounding metabo, and it has become the nation’s shorthand for overweight.” While slight, the linguistics change shifts an individual’s focus from appearance to health.

Japan set its waist limits at 33.5 inches for men and 35.4 inches for women, which are the thresholds, established in 2005 as health risk guidelines for Japan by the International Diabetes Federation.  These are lower than U.S. guidelines noted above due to differences in body composition.

According to Onishi, the Japanese government’s goal is to reduce “the overweight population by 10 percent over the next four years and 25 percent over the next seven years.”  Tactics include companies and local governments measuring the waistlines of those 40 to 74 years of age annually, with financial penalties for business and local governments failing to meet the target. 

So what is metabolic syndrome?  The U.S. National Institutes of Health’s Web site states, “Metabolic syndrome is the name for a group of risk factors linked to overweight and obesity that increase your chance for heart disease and other health problems such as diabetes and stroke.”

Five conditions are listed: A large waistline, a higher than normal triglyceride level (or on medicine to treat high triglycerides), a lower than normal level of HDL cholesterol (or on medicine to treat low HDL), a higher than normal blood pressure (or on medicine to treat high blood pressure), and a higher than normal fasting blood sugar (glucose), (or on medicine to treat high blood sugar).

In general, a person with metabolic syndrome is twice as likely to develop heart disease and five times as likely to develop diabetes as someone without metabolic syndrome, according to the NIH.

Almost 25 percent of Americans – 47 million adults -- have metabolic syndrome.  

While the Japanese approach may represent too much government intrusion into the lives of citizens, it is time for Americans too to make serious progress in our personal health.

The U.S. Department of Heath and Human Services has set ambitious goals in its 2010 Healthy People Initiative: increase healthy weight adults from the current percentage of 34 percent to 60 percent; reduce the number of obese adults from 34 percent to 15 percent; reduce the number of overweight or obese children and adolescents from 18 percent to 5 percent. 

Perhaps the best tribute to the champion of the everyday man who did not flinch from tough questions would be for each of us to ask ourselves and our loved ones those questions about risk. Grab a tape measure and measure.  Honest, frank answers, and resulting action might save lives, and one of them could be yours.

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About The Author
Jackie Cushman is a freelance writer who lives in Atlanta, Georgia. Her column also runs later in the week in the Northside Neighbor.
 
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Vic - On spinoffs and possibilities...
--
Vic says:

"Just think if all the research money being thrown at Aids/HIV were instead thrown at Heart Disease that mythical machine might be available."


First, the ability to do a non-invasive and low-cost electrophysiographic study (EPS) as a screening procedure exceeds technical capacities now and in the immediate (20+ years) future.

We'd have to find some way to isolate the energy of myocardial (heart muscle) conductivity and automaticiity through the chest wall (or esophagus), "tuning out" the electrical energy of the muscles and nerves between the skin (or the gullet mucosa) and the specific zones of the heart where arrhythmias are kindled or conducted.

We might get that as a spinoff from radio astronomy (image processing), but not soon. The radio telescope guys contend with distance rather more than interference.

12-lead EKG studies are very simple, but only because we can persuade patients to relax and quit moving their arms and legs while we're getting a tracing. Try to run a cardiogram on a baby without sedating the little critter and you'll understand just what "electrical interference" really is.

Second, research into any infectious disease (ID) like AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) or viral pathogens like HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) is likely to have payoffs far beyond the treatment of the specific conditions under address.

No space to discuss here, but the spinoffs have been (and promise further to be) considerable in other areas of diagnosis and treatment. We're looking at fundamental mechanisms of pathogenic attack as well as selective chemotherapy to slow down and even kill these little bastiches.

Besides, what makes you think that the people pushing for AIDS research would put similar effort into research on heart disease?

--

enough, okay???

Well, well. Another "me too" column. It seems like everyone needs to write a column on russert.

So, how about I do one. I was on a plane last November from Washington DC to Chicago. And guess what? TIM RUSSERT WAS ON THE SAME PLANE!!!!

impressed?

Not funny at all.
What better way to leave this earthly life than the way Tim J. Russert did?

He'd just spent a wonderful vacation with his non-extended loved ones, in Italy, and to celebrate the achievements of his only child.

Fort Marcy Park?
There have been 3 different versions of his heart disease. He was on the hit, I mean hate list. Wonder if anyone did a criminal investigation or if they just wrote it off as a health issue? Conspiracy..conspiracy..conspiracy..haha..just kidding.
That long plane trip to Italy and back probably did him in. Being sedentary for that long of a period is very bad for people with circulation (heart) problems.

Russert lived life to its absolute
fullest under the guiding light of his maker. Could he have lived for more years to come? Maybe. But maybe he'd done just enough to make it right thru those pearly gates and he was needed on a higher plane, for a higher purpose.

His job here is done. That rainbow in the sky let us know he's fine. We can forget ourselves, as he did. And LIVE with our brother in mind. We should be so lucky as to engage in such fearless, selfless, purposeful acts, so as to leave our place better for doing so.

God Bless men like that.

Gestell, I disagree.
Period.

keep firmly to the right
Now, let's not go overboard on this cardiovascular health thing. Conservatives know that government has no responsibility for our health and well-being. We're Americans, and one of our God-given rights is the right to gorge ourselves and blow out our coronary arteries. Ms. Cushman sounded just the teeniest bit favorably impressed with the Japanese policy, so we've got to keep an eye on her. Nobody, no way, no how has any responsibity for our life or our death in this country but us. We're Americans and we can eat as much as we want.

sandrob
sandrob
Location: AZ

Reply # 14
Date: Jun 22, 2008 - 12:09 PM EST Subject: Hey Jackie Gingrich Cushman
This is a nice article but would you please have a talk with your dad, Newt. Tell him doing a Global Warming Advertisement with Nancy Pelosi was a major mistake.

************************
I did not see the ad... I assume it was on TV (I disconnected my TV years ago and have been happy every since).

If Newt is chasing the global warming fraud, he may have succomed to the same thing a lot of academics have, as is claimed in the BBC documentary "The Global Warming Swindle".

Maybe Newt knows where the spotlight is shining, and the money is falling out of the sky. Maybe he compromised his priciples and took an easy road (which is sad because I tend to like Newt and many of his ideas).

Or... maybe he is smarter than we think and he is trying to disarm the enemy by sitting at thier campfire.

Hey Jackie Gingrich Cushman
This is a nice article but would you please have a talk with your dad, Newt. Tell him doing a Global Warming Advertisement with Nancy Pelosi was a major mistake. I appreciate what he is doing with Drill Here, Drill Now, but backing a fraud like Global Warming? He is too intelligent to not know that Global Warming is a Fraud. I know he's got a lot on his plate but he is one of the few people in this country that could organize and get people to act. Tell him I know that this would probably destroy a number of his friends and associates in Congress. We really need to start over anyway and get some statesmen in there to get this country back on it's feet. Tell him that he is either part of the problem or part of the solution. The Pelosi ad would indicate he was part of the problem. You might also mention that there are 31.000 + Scientist, out of which there are 9,000 + PhDs that have signed a petition stating there is no convincing evidence that greenhouse gasses are causing or will cause catastrophic heating of the earth.
The people in this country are not stupid. The truth will come out and when it does please tell your dad to be on the right side.

http://www.petitionproject.org/

SJ Doc
Just think if all the research money being thrown at Aids/HIV were instead thrown at Heart Disease that mythical machine might be available. The PC advocates are able to tilt the system to research a disease that really is limited to a small portion of the population while the biggest killer in the country goes wanting.

TeeHall
Your comments partly miss an inportant point.

In the MSM business, few people seem to be really good at their job, and few try to be fair.

The reason Russert deserves some additional attention is because he seemed to really try to be fair... and he was good at his job of informing the American people and digging for the truth.

He got ratings though quality.

He was a rare person in the dirty business of news and politics.

Focus on doing a great job
Like many men, Russert may have not taken his health condition as seriously as he should. He certainly could afford the best medical care available on the planet.

I would not be surprised if Russert was told by his doctors that his condition looked manageable, but they needed to do additional tests to get the full picture… but he would need to take a day or so off from work while the various tests were performed. Russert may have compared the apparent level of risk to lost time at work… and decided to skip the additional tests.

He instead may have focused on doing the best job he could. He focused on not letting the American people down, or his company, or let his competitors and adversaries get a step ahead.

This is probably another example of how men neglect themselves in order to achieve and fulfill what they think is their duty.

He will also probably be another statistic for feminists to use. Feminists will take his statistic and say “see, here is another example of the disproportionate success men enjoy in the world… it must be because of discrimination!”

Russert Was A Fat Person
Pushing a pencil, fingering a typewriter or computer, and talking all the waking hours may have contributed to his demise -- ya think? Was he a good person, a good talker, a good questioner, etc. Yes, so lets get on with it now. He was not a statesman, leader, not known to be a philanthropist, not a server in a soup kitchen, or not known for any other good person thing.

Significant correction
--
The paragraph above reading:

"Indeed, resting electrocardiograms (EKGs) and even cardiac stress tests augmented by roentgenographic and ultrasonographic techniques will screen for these kinds of problems with 100% reliability."


...needs to read:

"...WON'T screen for these kinds of problems with 100% reliability."


Electrophysiologic studies (EPS) might pick up such things, but dropping a wire into the left ventricle and electrically mapping the myocardium is both technically difficult in the extreme and an overall cruddy risk/benefit proposition as a screening measure.

They're recommended after you *salvage* a patient who presents with cardiac sudden death and is defibrillated or otherwise resuscitated, and with increasing effective deployment an use of AED gadgets (check out the average shopping mall, which will tend to have a couple of AED stations hither and thither), the esoteric cardiologic subspecialty of electrophysiology has definitely become something of a "growth industry,"

But it's not yet gotten to the point at which your family doctor can hook you up a bunch of leads and yank an EPS report out of a gadget like the highly automated 12-lead EKG machines that are smaller and less sophisticated than your kids' PlayStation 3.

--

I Like Russert
I generally do not care for media or entertainment types... but I did like and respect Russert!

He seemed to be a decent, hardworking, unpretentious, fair type of person.

Farwell Mr. Russert, I hope you get to see your father in heaven!

Not even coronary catheterization...
--
...will tend reliably to pick up what probably killed Russert, which was (to a relatively high level of reliability) a cardiac arrhythmia.

The latest statistics from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) put sudden cardiac death rates at over 600,000 per year. Up to one-half of patients have sudden death as the first manifestation of cardiac disease.

Meaning they either somebody gets an automated external defibrillator (AED) to them right to hellangone away or they're gone.

I've had plenty of patients with recent unremarkable coronary arterial cath results who have gone on to sudden cardiac death because the catheterization procedures show only macroscopic structural and functional anomalies, and not microscopic myocardial abnormalities that might predispose to potentially fatal ventricular arrhythmias.

Indeed, resting electrocardiograms (EKGs) and even cardiac stress tests augmented by roentgenographic and ultrasonographic techniques will screen for these kinds of problems with 100% reliability.

The only truly definitive diagnostic procedure, people, is the autopsy.

So assigning blame (or even talking about metabolic syndrome) is kind of a waste of time.

Why is metabolic syndrome so prevalent in the general population?

That's the most interesting question, isn't it?

Could it be because the "normal" state of human existence is starvation, poverty, disease and death at an early age?

And what we call "metabolic syndrome" is actually the result of a constellation of survival traits that help human beings get through times of protein-calorie malnutrition to reach reproductive age and crank out babies?

Moralizing and blame-blasting is idiocy.

Get over it.

--

No government intrusion

The higher cost of food and energy will have people reordering their priorities. I think this is a more effective motivator then all of the "in your face" type of intervention with my tax dollar.

In commerce as a function of the market, these ideas are already out there. I hand out a pedomotor and DVD/booklet to help guide people into a healthier life style. This is something good I can offer my clients as well as the general public as a promotional item.

It is still up to the individual to actually do something with that knowledge. No more government expense, no matter how well intentioned.



Common Sense

Common sense dictates that Tim Russert knew over eating was bad for him, just as your and my Dad knows.

Just as I know smoking is bad for me.

Ergo, Tim Russert had his weakness and he understood that one of the consequences could be an early death.

None of us are perfect, it just is too bad for us because the man did his homework and it enriched the debate. I appreciate and am grateful he frequently asked the right question and when he did, I couldn't stop the involuntary "Yes" that popped from my lips.

If he was liberal I assume he was pro-abortion though that doesn't square with his faith. So I am immediately confronted with a conundrum.

I only saw him for your father's and the Presidential debate as I don't watch TV and I appreciated his participation. He understood how to work with your Dad and I bet it contributed to Tim Russert's performance during the Presidential debate.










More
The Mayo didn't include
risk factors that are beyond control. This site has all.

http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=235

Risks
The latest research from what I have read and what I have actually experienced is that family history is the highest indicator. If your family has a history of heart problems then you are likely to have heart problems. The next highest contributor is smoking. See the list below for the Mayo Clinic and the contributors, including the risk calculator.

In addition, I would like to add that a normal physical would never have picked up on his problem. The best non-intrusive test is the radiological stress-test and it is not definitive. The only test that is definitive is the heart catheterization and that is a hospital entry required operation. Most people are reluctant to have that done.

http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/cath/cath_what .html

http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/heart-disease/HB00057


assigning blame
It's NBC's fault, huh? It is the responsibility of employers to tell employees how to take care of their health? It is common knowledge that people should have annual exams -- one would assume that Russert knew that and did that. His doctors knew the need for coronary artery studies and the benefits of surgical interventions. They knew the pressure he lived with and the schedule he kept. Both Russert and his doctors also knew that he'd have to make lifestyle changes that would affect his career........

Russert's Health
Ms. Gingrich notes important factors about heart health contributing to heart disease. In Russert's case, while apparently he exercised, took medication for HBP and elevated cholesterol, it seems to me that for a man with his standing and importance at NBC, that his bosses should have insisted that he have coronary artery studies that easily could have diagnosed his severe coronary artery disease which was found after his death. There are obvious surgical interventions that could and should have been accomplished, but instead this man, who daily worked from dawn to late at night fulfilling his work duties for NBC, unknowlingly laboring while harboring severe coronary artery disease. Most businesses provide employees of Russert's standing with the annual physical exams, that would and should have led to life-saving surgery for him, yet NBC allowed him to continue his lifestyle without insisting on further studies. Now, NBC is faced with having to replace perhaps their most important resource, when readily available studies and surgery could no doubt have saved Russert's life. Thus, NBC gambled away the life of this good man.
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