Project Destiny

The Voice of Idaho – by Vicky Davis

This morning on KTVB Channel 7 Local News, there was a story about a new transmittable virus that effects babies but the babies show no symptoms.  The name of the virus is Cytomegalovirus (CMV).   The reason for the use of the word new is because it is something that few people have heard of before now.  There is a couple in Idaho who have a daughter who allegedly has this virus.  Her parents started a Foundation to educate people and the health care community about it.  The Idaho legislature passed a bill recognizing the virus and they appropriated money for educational materials to distribute around the state.   Apply some logic and common sense to that and it doesn’t compute.

This is my worst nightmare come true since 2007 when I began writing about the Human Genome Project in conjunction with the redesign of our health care system – the emergence of a new unheard of disease that shows no symptoms but is preventable and treatable and supposedly a significant percentage of the population has it.  It’s the perfect diagnosis for applied genetics research on an unsuspecting population and the redesign of our health care system with nationalized medical records was designed to accommodate it.   In 2009 when I heard the name Project Destiny and I researched it and found that it had to do with the pharmaceutical profession, it was simply further confirmation that my instincts in 2007 and my subsequent research to find the elements of the system design that would enable it were correct.

Project Destiny was a strategic plan to add a new role in health care for your local pharmacist.  On August 15, 2007, Medical News Today reported that the Pharmaceutical Industry Supports Visionary Project Destiny Initiative, USA.  Project Destiny required a new specialty be approved by the Board of Pharmaceutical Specialties.   It was announced in March of 2008 in an article titled Pharmacy Groups Unveil Findings, Future of “Project Destiny”.

The stated objective of Project Destiny is to develop a replicable, scalable, measurable, and economically viable future model for community pharmacy. The project seeks to identify ways that patients and the healthcare system can benefit from community pharmacy’s medication expertise, in a way that is economically viable for all parties.

One key concept that emerged from the first phase of the project is that of a “primary care pharmacist,” who would work collaboratively with the healthcare delivery and financing systems and focus on managing medications, positively impacting health outcomes, reducing overall healthcare system costs and empowering consumers to actively manage their health. Putting this concept into practice would require the development of pharmacy-based Patient Care Management Services that are consistent nationwide while maintaining the autonomy of individual pharmacies.

A petition for the new specialty was submitted to the Board in November of 2008 along with a supporting report – Project Destiny Executive Summary.

A pharmacist as medication manager and front line health care provider fits into the agenda of applied genetics research because in order to personalize medications for a person’s DNA requires customized drugs which means a compounding pharmacist (maker of drugs) and access to the medical record and a say in the patient’s care.  Project Destiny fulfills that requirement.

Reciprocal Licensing

This morning when I was looking on the Idaho Legislature website for the legislation to support the education initiative for this unknown, symptomless viral disease called Cytomegalovirus, I found a couple of other related health care bills:

H0002

BY HEALTH AND WELFARE COMMITTEE
AN ACT
RELATING TO PHARMACISTS; AMENDING SECTION 54-1723, IDAHO CODE, TO REVISE
PROVISIONS REGARDING RECIPROCAL LICENSING AND TO MAKE A TECHNICAL CORRECTION.

54-1723. QUALIFICATIONS FOR LICENSURE BY RECIPROCITY.
(1) To obtain a license as a pharmacist by reciprocity….

The other related piece of legislation has to do with visas for foreign doctors:

H0081

BY HEALTH AND WELFARE COMMITTEE

ACT

RELATING TO THE IDAHO CONRAD J-1 VISA WAIVER PROGRAM…

SECTION 1. That Section 39-6102, Idaho Code, be, and the same is hereby amended to read as follows:

39-6102. PURPOSE. Under this chapter, rural and underserved communities in Idaho would be able to apply for the placement of a foreign trained physician after demonstrating that they are unable to recruit an American physician, and all other recruitment/placement possibilities have proven to be inaccessible.

(1) The “Idaho Conrad J-1 Visa Waiver Program” authorizes the Idaho department of health and welfare to recommend up to thirty (30) foreign trained physicians per federal fiscal year to locate in communities that are federally designated as having a health workforce shortage…

(3) The “National Interest Waiver Program” allows the Idaho department of health and welfare to testify that it is in the public’s interest that a waiver be granted to a foreign trained physician who commits to locating in a community that is federally determined as having a health workforce shortage. Final approval of the national interest waiver request is made by the United States bureau of citizenship and immigration services.

(10) “J-1 visa” means an entrance permit into the United States for a foreign trained physician who is a nonimmigrant admitted under section 101(a)(15)(J) of the United States information and education exchange act or who acquired such status or who acquired exchange visitor status under the act.

(11) “J-1 visa waiver” means a federal action that waives the requirement for a foreign physician, in the United States on a J-1 visa, to return to his home country for a two (2) year period following medical residency training.

(12) “National interest waiver” means an exemption from the labor certification process administered by the United States department of labor for foreign physicians whose will to stay in the United States and work in an area of underservice in Idaho is determined to be in the public interest by the Idaho department of health and welfare.

SECTION 18. An emergency existing therefor, which emergency is hereby declared to exist, this act shall be in full force and effect on and after its passage and approval.

Emergency?

The nature of this so-called emergency is found in the resolution the Idaho Legislature passed that recognized this unknown disease Cytomegalovirus (CMV) that nobody ever heard of before now.  Lines 16 and 17 of House Concurrent Resolution 9 links together the agenda:

HCR009

BY HEALTH AND WELFARE COMMITTEE
AN ACT

A CONCURRENT RESOLUTION STATING FINDINGS OF THE LEGISLATURE

AND SUPPORTING EFFORTS TO ALLEVIATE THE

EFFECTS OF RARE DISEASES ON IDAHOANS.

WHEREAS, there are only eight pediatric neurologists in Idaho, six of 15 whom practice in Boise;

WHEREAS, pediatric physicians and neurologists have an average waiting list of eight to nine weeks; and

WHEREAS, once a diagnosis of “rare disease” is made, many Idaho patients are referred to neurological clinics in surrounding states for evaluation and treatment…

The monsters who are behind the redesign of our health system for the purpose of genetic research that I’ve been writing about for ten years are now coming for the babies.  Don’t let this happen.

2 thoughts on “Project Destiny

  1. READ ALL THE LINKS INSERTED IN THE ARTICLE …….BAM! VICKY DAVIS IS ONE OF THE BEST INVESTIGATORS……..IMHO

  2. “This is my worst nightmare… the emergence of a new unheard of disease that shows no symptoms but is preventable and treatable and supposedly a significant percentage of the population has it.”

    Tailor-made for MANDATORY VACCINATIONS.

    Just try…

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