The Politics Of Lyme Disease Spreading Into Canada
Credit: faim.org
September 10, 2014

Big Pharma/Big Research has deep claws into the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease, and as someone who's had Lyme and remained untreated for almost 20 years, I pay attention to these things. Good for Gwen Barlee for crowdsourcing the funds to get these records.

Imagine this: There was enough public demand that forced the British Columbia government to establish this program, but also pressures from unknown other parties that prevented them from actually doing anything that would help Lyme patients. I wish I was surprised:

Saying she was frustrated because patients weren’t being adequately diagnosed or treated for Lyme disease, Liz Zubek quit British Columbia’s new Complex Chronic Disease Program (CCDP) in June.

Now, Dr. Zubek has teamed up with Lyme disease patients in a crowdfunding project to pay a freedom of information (FOI) fee for the release of medical documents related to the program’s management.

Gwen Barlee, a Lyme disease patient and policy director of Wilderness Committee, launched the project Monday morning and by noon had hit the target, raising half the total $2,160 fee. Dr. Zubek had promised to match dollar-for-dollar any donations made, so she will contribute the balance.

“I worked at the Complex Chronic Disease Program. It was a $1.2-million program, and yet we were not able to do anything that was in our mandate to do,” Dr. Zubek said about why she was supporting Ms. Barlee’s project.

“We were supposed to be looking at better testing for Lyme disease patients, yet there was no facility to improve the testing or to order the testing that we needed from elsewhere. … we were not able to treat the Lyme disease patients. There was no IV setup there. And we were completely at a stalemate to actually be able to meet the mandate of the program,” said Dr. Zubek, who helped start the CCDP in 2013.

With a waiting list of 1,500 patients, Dr. Zubek said she and other doctors faced a great demand for services, “but met with resistance” from above when it came to actually treating patients.

She hopes the documents sought by Ms. Barlee will answer these questions: “Who were the people behind the scenes that blocked us from ordering tests or treatments? Why were we not able to do this? Why did we meet with such resistance?”

In June, Health Minister Terry Lake acknowledged that the new program wasn’t meeting expectations. “They need to fix it,” he said.

Ms. Barlee, who has suffered from Lyme disease for years, said she filed the FOI request after three doctors quit the CCDP earlier this year, raising questions about the program’s effectiveness. She was shocked when the Provincial Health Services Authority told her it would not waive a fee for releasing records concerning the treatment and management of Lyme disease and demanded more than $2,000.

“I have concluded that some of the records you have requested do relate to a matter of public interest … however, we do not conclude the disclosure of these further records will contribute positively to a matter of public interest,” Sandra MacKay, chief counsel for the Provincial Health Services Authority (PHSA), told Ms. Barlee in an Aug. 5 letter.

If you want to know more about the truly shocking medical and corporate politics behind Lyme, I recommend Pamela Weintraub's "Cure Unknown: Inside the Lyme Epidemic." (Be sure to get the updated version.)

Can you help us out?

For nearly 20 years we have been exposing Washington lies and untangling media deceit, but now Facebook is drowning us in an ocean of right wing lies. Please give a one-time or recurring donation, or buy a year's subscription for an ad-free experience. Thank you.

Discussion

We welcome relevant, respectful comments. Any comments that are sexist or in any other way deemed hateful by our staff will be deleted and constitute grounds for a ban from posting on the site. Please refer to our Terms of Service for information on our posting policy.
Mastodon