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Saturday, February 25, 2023

Erin Brockovich: No "Quick Fix" For Ohio Train Derailment

 by Jeff Lopuderbeck via The Epoch Times,

On taking the stage in the East Palestine High School auditorium on Feb. 24, environmental activist Erin Brockovich told a crowd mostly composed of local residents dealing with the aftermath of a toxic train derailment she was “here with a message you don’t want to hear but maybe you know.”

“Superman is not coming. Nobody is coming to change what has happened to you, magically fix everything, or give you all of the answers,” Brockovich said. “You will become the strongest advocate you have.

“You have the ability to become—and you will become—your own critical thinker,” Brockovich added.

“You will vet information. You will ask questions. You will demand answers.”

Brockovich cautioned audience members that there will not be a swift resolution to the issues that now impact East Palestine and surrounding communities.

“You want to be heard, but you’re going to be told it’s safe, you’re going to be told not to worry,” Brockovich said.

“That’s just rubbish, because you’re going to worry. Communities want to be seen and heard.

“This is not going to be a quick fix. This is going to be a long game,” she added.

Environmental activist Erin Brockovich speaks at a town hall in East Palestine, Ohio, on Feb. 24. (Jeff Louderback/The Epoch Times)

An overflow crowd of more than 2,000 gathered in this village of 4,761 near the Pennsylvania border to hear Brockovich speak, with more than 100 media members covering the event.

Brockovich was joined by water expert Robert W. Bowcock and trial attorney Mikal Watts. They are the principles of East Palestine Justice, an organization of lawyers, environmental activists, and scientific and medical professionals providing assistance to eastern Ohio and western Pennsylvania residents affected by the derailment.

On Feb. 3, a 151-car Norfolk Southern Railway freight train derailed in East Palestine.

When the train crashed, 38 rail cars derailed, and a fire ensued which damaged an additional 12 cars, according to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).

“There were 20 total hazardous material cars in the train—11 of which derailed,” according to an NTSB statement.

Environmental activist Erin Brockovich (C-R) speaks to concerned residents as she hosts a town hall at East Palestine High School in East Palestine, Ohio, on Feb. 24, 2023. (Michael Swensen/Getty Images)

Fears escalated in the immediate aftermath of the wreck. Seeking to avoid an explosion that officials claimed would send shrapnel into the air, vinyl chloride was intentionally released and burned on Feb. 6, sending a massive cloud of black smoke into the sky that could be seen for miles around and was likened to a mushroom cloud caused by a nuclear weapon.

The burn triggered questions about the health effects that could potentially impact the residents of East Palestine.

Vinyl chloride, a chemical used to make PVC pipes and other products, has received extensive attention as part of the emergency. The National Cancer Institute notes that vinyl chloride has been linked to cancers of the brain, lungs, blood, lymphatic system, and liver.

Other rail cars contained ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, ethylhexyl acrylate, isobutylene, and butyl acrylate, which are all used in the making of plastic products.

Officials from federal and state agencies have repeatedly said that tests show the air and water are safe in East Palestine and surrounding communities. However, residents continue to report headaches, vomiting, burning eyes, skin rashes, and other ailments.

“I’ve never seen anything in 30 years like this and the situation happening in East Palestine,” Brockovich said.

“You all know the story about digging the hole and draining the chemicals in there and lighting it on fire,” she added. “I don’t think that turned out well for anybody.”

Brockovich said she traveled to East Palestine after receiving numerous emails from residents who requested her presence.

“I feel your angst and I feel your frustration. And I want to share something with you: You are not alone,” she said. “It feels like every community I’ve been going to for 30 years gets the same run-around, and you don’t get clear information.

“You own this narrative, not an agency that wasn’t here, and certainly not Norfolk Southern,” Brockovich added. “You know how you feel. You know if you’re sick. You know if you smell something. You know if the water’s a funny color.”

Communities confronted with an environmental disaster can handle the truth, Brockovich added, “but what they can’t handle is being misled and lied to.”

At that moment, the auditorium’s lights turned off, promoting Brockovich to say, “That is how we feel—in the dark—and in the dark, we will continue to talk.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/erin-brockovich-says-theres-no-quick-fix-ohio-train-derailment

Medicare for all … of East Palestine?

 Nearly three weeks after a train derailed in East Palestine, Ohio, spewing toxic chemicals into the air, water and soil, Biden officials are racing to find answers on how the disaster happened. But it’s also unclear what happens next for thousands of Ohioans who could now be sick — and who covers their care.

Ohio lawmakers from both parties have already demanded that Biden health officials step up their response and ensure health care through an obscure provision of the Affordable Care Act that promises Medicare to Americans exposed to certain environmental health hazards. But legal experts tell STAT that it seems unlikely that the provision would apply here and totally unclear how Ohioans would go about getting it.

“It would not be easy to deem everyone in a particular geographic area such as East Palestine eligible for Medicare,” said Lawrence Gostin, a public health law professor at Georgetown University, who described a “cumbersome process” that would amount to each person applying for access and proving their exposure, unless the federal government set up an unprecedented pilot program to ensure broader coverage.

“It would take political will for [the Health and Human Services Department] to cover some, or even all, residents of East Palestine,” Gostin said.

The Biden administration isn’t providing answers, yet, despite repeated calls from HHS officials to take stronger action on environmental justice. A health department spokesperson declined to comment on the Obamacare provision, but pointed to several other ways the agency is offering support in East Palestine, including Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials on the ground assessing toxic exposure levels.

Questions about federal health agencies’ response come amid mounting criticism of the Biden administration’s response to the train derailment — backlash that Biden officials argue is turning an environmental disaster into a partisan debate.

The Environmental Protection Agency took over recovery operations earlier this week and ordered the train company, Norfolk Southern, to foot the bill for cleaning up toxins, including cancer-causing vinyl chloride. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg landed in the town Thursday. And the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began sending staff last Friday to assess contamination and communicate risk to residents.

CDC began sending staff after an official request from state officials, a spokesperson said.

The obscure ACA language promising Medicare to environmental hazard victims was slipped into the sweeping bill by then-Montana Sen. Max Baucus, a Democrat, who had a specific case in mind — longtime asbestos poisoning in Libby, Montana, that resulted in hundreds of deaths and an EPA emergency declaration after years of activist lobbying.

That focus could make it difficult or impossible to apply the ACA provision to other environment hazard situations, said Boston College of Law professor Mary Ann Chirba. The actual language specifies that people who can participate in the Medicare pilot program are those who resided “in or around the geographic area subject to an emergency declaration made as of June 17, 2009.”

That hasn’t stopped public health and environmental justice advocates from pressing the federal government to ensure health care to East Palestine residents.

There is some precedent for action. No federal health coverage provisions existed when pediatrician and epidemiologist Philip Landrigan was working at Manhattan’s Mt. Sinai in 2001, when two planes hit the World Trade Center, killing thousands and eventually causing lingering health problems in thousands more who inhaled harmful chemicals, cement powder, and other toxins.

What Landrigan, now director of Boston College’s Global Public Health Program, and other health workers first dubbed the “World Trade Center cough” turned into cancer for hundreds of first responders and nearby victims.

“We had to basically work with our congressional delegation in New York and New Jersey to get federal funds,” said Landrigan. “Hopefully something analogous will happen here. I don’t know.” That federal support for health care coverage was eventually formalized in the World Trade Center Health Program.

https://www.statnews.com/2023/02/24/medicare-for-all-east-palestine/

FDA Tobacco Chief Doesn't Say Much You Haven't Already Heard

 Following today’s release of the FDA response to a December report critical of the agency’s tobacco regulators, FDA Center for Tobacco Products Director Brian King sat down with representatives of the independent vaping industry to answer questions about the agency’s treatment of vaping products and the people who use them.

The Zoom event, billed as “The Future of Vaping in the US: A Conversation with FDA’s Dr. Brian King,” was organized by the American Vapor Manufacturers Association (AVM), and moderated by AVM Vice President Allison Boughner and Director of Legislative & External Affairs Gregory Conley. Vaping advocate Nick “Grimm” Green simulcast the event on his YouTube channel.



King: no more youth epidemic, but gateway real

It was the first time King has publicly spoken with vaping advocates, but he wasn’t rattled in the slightest. In fact, King is so comfortable speaking FDA bureaucratese, it’s almost impossible to imagine him carrying on a normal conversation without inserting legal disclaimers and repeated promises to “follow the science.”

You can watch the full event (above), but no new ground was broken unless you count King’s claim to have never (in his almost eight months at the FDA) used the term “epidemic” to describe youth vaping patterns.

He maintained there is “strong evidence” that some adolescents switch from vaping experimentation to smoking cigarettes, and that even infrequent teenage vapers show “signs of dependence.”

He defended the Drug War-style youth messaging in the agency’s youth-oriented anti-vaping ads, which he said were “rigorously evaluated” before and after they aired and were effective reaching teenagers.

All unauthorized vape products are “illegal”

King said that, in general, adults switching completely from smoking to vaping improve their health—and acknowledged that millions have switched—but maintained that some vaping products are much more risky than others. Pressed by Conley to identify which vapes pose risks equivalent to cigarettes, King refused to name names.

He also neatly avoided answering Boughner’s question about how the FDA’s new commitment to health equity jibed with a small vape shop in East Harlem, NY being forced to close and its customers returning to cigarettes.

Regarding the FDA’s messaging on vaping, King claimed the agency studied ways to communicate the “continuum of risk” accurately to adults who smoke, but that the effort had been postponed due to the increase in youth vaping beginning in 2018. He said the CTP is planning messaging for adults in the future that explains differences between nicotine products.

King said the standard for FDA vaping product authorization could get looser if youth vaping continues to decline, but offered no specifics or timeline. He continued to insist that expensive scientific trials aren’t necessarily required for authorization—even though no product has been authorized without them.

Asked whether he would prefer adult vapers buy products from legal or illicit sources, King said that it “depends what you define as an illicit source.” As far as CTP regulators are concerned, King said, “any product that is on the market without an [FDA] authorization is illegal.”

The FDA has authorized seven unpopular vaping devices and tobacco-flavored refills for them—but none since King took the CTP helm in July 2022.

Brian King’s anti-vaping history

King, a former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) employee, was named by FDA Commissioner Robert Califf to succeed longtime CTP director Mitch Zeller last July.

Since receiving a doctorate in epidemiology from the State University of New York at Buffalo in 2010, until he was named CTP director by Califf, King had worked only for the CDC. He advanced within the CDC Office on Smoking and Health (OSH) from Epidemic Intelligence Service Officer to Senior Scientific Advisor, and then in 2015 to his final CDC job as Deputy Director for Research Translation at OSH.

Although King had no regulatory or management experience to qualify him for the FDA job, he did have a history of antagonism toward vaping, including frequent collaboration with anti-tobacco organizations like the Truth Initiative and Bloomberg Philanthropies.

King is believed responsible for creating the name given by the CDC to the lung injuries caused by the 2019 spread of tainted THC cartridges. The name—“e-cigarette, or vaping, product use-associated lung injury (EVALI)”—suggested that commercial nicotine vaping products (e-cigarettes) were at least partly responsible for the injuries that killed almost 70 American cannabis vapers. No nicotine vaping device was ever tied to a case of “EVALI,” and the outbreak slowed and then stopped after illicit cannabis processors stopped mixing cannabis oil with toxic vitamin E acetate to increase profits.

During that crisis, CDC leadership allowed King to address reporters, and he made several bizarre and speculative comments. For example, he suggested during one press event that lung injuries like “EVALI” may have been occurring since the advent of nicotine vaping more than a decade earlier, but that epidemiologists may have missed the evidence.

King has co-authored numerous slanted articles and scientific papers about vaping and other low-risk nicotine product use. He wrote or approved a CDC article that asserted the style of vaping known as dripping involved pouring e-liquid directly onto already-hot coils. In a press release, he once deliberately misinterpreted his own study of Juul Labs’ product sales to suggest that many more JUUL devices were in circulation than actually were.

https://vaping360.com/vape-news/120346/avm-public-meeting-with-brian-king-fda/

Newsom's Wife Accused Of Profiting From 'Gender Justice' Films For Schoolchildren

 by Lear Zhou via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Jennifer Siebel Newsom, the wife of California Governor Gavin Newsom, has been criticized for allegedly making a profit by screening her “gender justice” films to public school children.

The scrutiny comes from a nonpartisan government watchdog group called Open the Books, which claimed that “Siebel Newsom spent years laying the ideological groundwork and political infrastructure to support her policy ambitions,” in a research report published on Feb. 13.

CEO and founder of Open the Books Adam Andrzejewski told NTD, a sister media of The Epoch Times, that his organization found out about Siebel Newsom’s alleged scheme by “following the money.”

Andrzejewski said they followed it “right into the governor’s wife’s … public charity, which is a film and curriculum nonprofit organization that licenses her films and curriculum to public schools across the country and in the state of California.”

The First Lady of California’s nonprofit organization “The Representation Project” was founded in 2011. It has produced four films, all advocating for gender or racial justice.

Siebel Newsom is the producer and director of the films. Andrzejewski said the secret is that “she hires her for-profit film production company to contract with her nonprofit film distribution company.”

Siebel Newsom’s for-profit company, Girls Club Entertainment, has received $1.6 million from The Representation Project since 2012, the report stated.

She also earned $1.5 million in salary from the nonprofit company from 2013 to 2021, which means she has personally received $3 million in profit, according to Andrzejewski.

In the health education framework for California public schools issued in 2021 by the State Board of Education, Siebel Newsom’s nonprofit films and curriculum are recommended.

In the summer of 2022, Gavin Newsom convinced the state legislature to pass a budget providing $4.7 billion for K–12 mental health services, which, among other things, funded 10,000 new school counselors.

“The Mask You Live In,” one of the films produced and directed by Siebel Newsom, would warn “teachers in the classroom that when they show the film and walk students through the curriculum, they should have therapists on hand,” Andrzejewski said, and this became one of the main argument points for Gavin Newsom to convince the state legislature.

The film features porn website addresses, and the pornographic images displayed are tagged with descriptions such as “domination,” “kinky couples,” etc.

The movie claims it will show “how we, as a society, can raise a healthier generation of boys and young men” and will help “shape the national conversation around healthy masculinity.”

However, Andrzejewski said, “This incredibly gives students a roadmap to see this stuff for future exploration outside of the classroom.”

“This is exactly what parents across the entire country should be scared of that their children are seeing in their public school classrooms,” he said.

Besides the sexually explicit imagery shown in two of the four films, lessons that include Marxist ideology and critical race theory are being taught in classrooms, Andrzejewski said.

This is a classroom very physically divided between those that are, quote unquote, oppressed and those that are, quote unquote, privileged,” said Andrzejewski.

He said Gavin Newsom stars in two of the four films Siebel Newsom made.

“In the curriculum, students are asked to vote for politicians that espouse the same views as her husband, Gavin Newsom,” Andrzejewski said. “We think it’s an on-its-face conflict of interest.”

NTD has reached out to The Representation Project for comment but has not received a response as of this writing.

NTD reporter Jackie Rios contributed to this report.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/gavin-newsoms-wife-accused-profiting-gender-justice-films-schoolchildren

Zelensky urges top GOP lawmakers to consider new weapons wish list

 As some outspoken Republican lawmakers threaten to block future aid to Ukraine, a small group of House GOP members that traveled to the country this week vowed to consider a list of key weapons and other crucial necessities during a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, sources familiar with the meeting told CNN.

The meeting, set against the backdrop of the one-year anniversary of Russia’s invasion, is a stark example of how far apart members within the Republican Party are on how to handle US involvement in the war moving forward. The divide has only deepened since the GOP took over the House majority in January, even as House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has carefully attempted to remain neutral on the issue.

It also comes at a time when President Joe Biden is facing increasing pressure to supply the Ukrainians with more advanced weaponry that some of his own military commanders have privately acknowledged could help Ukraine win the war.

Zelensky, who met with House Foreign Affairs committee chairman Michael McCaul and four other House GOP members, told the group he planned to send them a list of weapons, which includes F-16 fighter jets, that he believes are necessary to speed up the end of the war with Russia.

A top US military commander reiterated to a group of Republican lawmakers how imperative F-16 fighter jets and longer-range missiles would be to serve the Ukrainian cause, one of the sources said.

“There is a broad, bipartisan support between the United States and our NATO and European allies to support Ukraine against Russian aggression,” McCaul said during his congressional delegation to Ukraine. “[W]e had a very productive meeting with President Zelensky. We talked primarily about what his needs are when it comes to winning this war. And he is providing this delegation with the list of the weapons the Ukraine needs to win.”

“He said we’ll stay here as long as it takes. And while that’s true, I hope it doesn’t take so long to win this conflict. And to do so, we have strong bipartisan support to give Ukraine everything that it needs to win,” McCaul added.

That position, however, may become increasingly untenable as upcoming spending fights, congressional hearings and the 2024 presidential race firmly place the question of whether to add to the $113 billion the US has already sent Ukraine front and center – and as some Republicans push back on the prospect of additional aid.

Several GOP lawmakers are already gearing up for such a battle, and privately gaming out how to fend off opposition within their own party.

Inside the internal jockeying

Behind the scenes, a plan is starting to take shape among the Republicans who view Ukraine’s ultimate victory as the only path forward: ramp up pressure on Biden to shake off his reluctance and send weapons like F-16 fighter jets and longer range missiles while tamping down their party’s opposition by using the majority in the House to spotlight Russia’s war atrocities.

Some GOP lawmakers are already pushing back on claims from fellow Republicans that US funding and weapons aren’t going where they are intended to go – even as Republicans on the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday made clear in a letter to Biden administration officials they plan to investigate federal funding to Ukraine to examine potential “waste, fraud, and abuse” in spending.

McCarthy, meanwhile, hasn’t made a decision on what position he will ultimately take. But McCaul, in assuring Zelensky he will consider sending additional weapons and aid to Ukraine, did so with the private backing of McCarthy, a person familiar with the discussions told CNN.

McCarthy has also supported House Oversight Chairman James Comer’s probe into the potential misuse of previous US aid, a second person familiar with the talks said. McCarthy also approved Comer sending the letter to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and US Agency for International Development Administrator Samantha Power seeking documents and information to understand how the departments and the agency are conducting oversight of these funds.

Divide over supplying F-16 fighter jets

Zelenky’s specific goal of obtaining US F-16 fighter jets has become an increasingly controversial ask. Both Biden and General Mark Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have previously opposed such a move due to concerns about how it could escalate the conflict.

But the argument against providing F-16s is becoming more difficult to make as senior military leaders have privately acknowledged to GOP lawmakers in recent days that those weapons would help Ukraine win the war, according to a source familiar.

Last week, Gen. Christopher Cavoli, supreme allied commander for Europe and head of US European command, told 10 GOP lawmakers in a closed-door briefing that F-16s would help Ukraine win. Asked if that was the case, Cavoli said “yes,” the source said, confirming details first reported by Politico.

While Cavoli’s comments go further than what senior US officials have said publicly, they also reflect diverging views within the Pentagon – notably splitting with the more cautious approach of Milley who has long been wary of any move that could provoke Russian escalation, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter.

As the push for providing those weapons intensifies, McCaul plans to hold a hearing this spring on alleged Russian war crimes, a McCaul spokesperson told CNN.

In addition to McCaul, GOP Reps. Darrell Issa of California, Keith Self of Texas, Max Miller of Ohio, Jake Ellzey of Texas, as well as Margaret Kibben, the House chaplain, were part of the delegation.

https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/25/politics/zelensky-republicans-weapons/index.html

‘It’s OK to be white,’ agree 72%, including 53% of black people

 Voters are not buying into “woke” racial politics and anti-white attacks from liberals, according to a new survey on the simmering “it’s OK to be white” pushback.

In the latest Rasmussen Reports survey shared with Secrets, 72% agreed with the statement, “It’s OK to be white.” Even a majority of black people, 53%, agreed.

What’s more, when asked if voters agreed or disagreed with the statement, “Black people can be racist, too,” 79% agreed, including 66% of black people.

The survey appears to be a blow to the narrative in the liberal media and Hollywood that white people are the only racists and that being white is something people should be ashamed of.

The statement, “It’s OK to be white,” was first pushed on right-wing websites and then picked up in speeches by influencers. It has since been decried as a hate chant by the Anti-Defamation League.

In the last week, for example, Portland, Maine, has seen protests against a former city council candidate's OK sign.

The Rasmussen survey showed that most think nobody has the market on racism and that there is a lot more open-mindedness on the topic than the media would make you believe.

In the survey, for example, those who disagreed with both statements were a very small percentage. An equal 12% somewhat to strongly disagreed with both statements.

But the largest majorities agreed strongly. Asked about agreeing with the statement, “It’s OK to be white,” 58% strongly agreed.

When asked if “black people can be racist, too,” 53% strongly agreed.

In its analysis, Rasmussen said:


"Support for 'OK to be white' crosses political lines. Majorities of Democrats (51%), Republicans (73%), and those not affiliated with either major party (52%) strongly agree that 'It’s OK to be white.'"

"Fewer Democrats (39%) than Republicans (67%) or the unaffiliated (53%) strongly agree that 'Black people can be racist, too.' Still, even among Democrats, only 19% disagree with that statement."

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/washington-secrets/its-ok-to-be-white-agree-72-including-53-of-blacks

Hopkins studying intravenous mistletoe extract to treat advanced cancer

 Mistletoe extract has been widely used to support cancer therapy and improve quality of life, but there has been a lack of clinical trials and data to support its use. Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center completed what is believed to be the first phase I trial of intravenous Helixor M in the U.S. aimed at determining dosing for subsequent clinical trials and to evaluate safety.

The findings from the small study were reported online Feb. 9 in Cancer Research Communications.

The trial's purpose was to evaluate the drug's safety, but the researchers, led by Channing Paller, M.D., associate professor of oncology, also documented improved quality of life and some disease control.

Mistletoe extract (ME), known as Helixor M, was studied in 21 patients with advanced and treatment-resistant cancers of various types. The phase I trial used dose escalation to determine the maximum dose that could be safely tolerated by patients. ME was delivered intravenously three times per week until disease progression or until toxicity. The study concluded that dose to be 600 milligrams of ME.

The median follow-up duration on mistletoe was 15.3 weeks. Stable disease was observed in five patients and lasted, on average, for 15 weeks. Tumors in three participants decreased in size, and remained stable for two to five months, however, this did not meet official criteria for partial response. Patients also reported overall improved quality of life via a questionnaire. The most common side effects reported were fatigue, nausea, and chills and they were noted as manageable.

"Intravenous mistletoe demonstrated manageable toxicities with disease control and improved quality of life in this group of patients, who had already received multiple cancer therapies," says Paller, adding that additional phase II studies in combination with chemotherapy are the next step, pending additional funding.

In addition, Paller says, laboratory research to better decipher ME's mechanisms are needed, as the cytokines (cell-signaling proteins) measured in this study are preliminary and hypothesis generating.

Mistletoe extract is a semi-parasitic plant with several active ingredients that, in preclinical studies, appear to directly cause the death of tumor cells and stimulate an immune response. It has been used in Europe for several decades as a complementary medicine approach to cancer treatment alone or in combination with chemotherapy and radiation therapy, but it has not been evaluated in clinical trials. ME is not currently FDA approved for cancer treatment in the U.S. but is listed in the Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia and is offered in integrative care clinics.

In addition to Paller, other researchers included Lin Wang, Wei Fu, Rajedra Kumar, Jennifer N. Durham, Nilofer S. Azad, Daniel A. Laheru, Ilene Browner, Sushant K. Kachhap, Kavya Boyapati, Thomas Odeny, Deborah K. Armstrong, Christian F. Meyer, Stephanie Gaillard, Julie R. Brahmer, Ivelisse Page, Hao Wang, and Luis A. Diaz.

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health P30CA006973, and Believe Big, Inc. Study drug was provided by Helixor Heilmittel GmbH.

Journal Reference:

  1. Channing J. Paller, Lin Wang, Wei Fu, Rajendra Kumar, Jennifer N Durham, Nilofer S. Azad, Daniel A. Laheru, Ilene Browner, Sushant K Kachhap, Kavya Boyapati, Thomas Odeny, Deborah K. Armstrong, Christian F. Meyer, Stephanie Gaillard, Julie R. Brahmer, Ivelisse Page, Hao Wang, Luis A. Diaz. Phase I Trial of Intravenous Mistletoe Extract in Advanced CancerCancer Research Communications, 2023; DOI: 10.1158/2767-9764.CRC-23-0002