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Catholic News 2

Washington D.C., Dec 1, 2016 / 03:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Angela Desa was 28 years-old when she got Essure, a form of permanent birth control made of flexible metal and polyester coils inserted into her fallopian tubes.  The only form of permanent, non-surgical birth control, implanted Essure coils are supposed to stay in the fallopian tubes, where they create a chronic infection causing scar tissue to form, effectively closing the tubes and rendering the woman sterile. At the time of Desa’s implants, the FDA warning on the device said that possible side effects could include “mild to moderate pain and/or cramping, vaginal bleeding, and pelvic or back discomfort for a few days.” But the side effects Desa experienced were to the extreme. She felt like she had the flu constantly. The pain wasn’t mild or moderate, but debilitating and chronic.  “They don’t tell you that it’s 'I can’t get out of bed and take care of...

Washington D.C., Dec 1, 2016 / 03:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Angela Desa was 28 years-old when she got Essure, a form of permanent birth control made of flexible metal and polyester coils inserted into her fallopian tubes.

  The only form of permanent, non-surgical birth control, implanted Essure coils are supposed to stay in the fallopian tubes, where they create a chronic infection causing scar tissue to form, effectively closing the tubes and rendering the woman sterile.

  At the time of Desa’s implants, the FDA warning on the device said that possible side effects could include “mild to moderate pain and/or cramping, vaginal bleeding, and pelvic or back discomfort for a few days.”

  But the side effects Desa experienced were to the extreme. She felt like she had the flu constantly. The pain wasn’t mild or moderate, but debilitating and chronic.

  “They don’t tell you that it’s 'I can’t get out of bed and take care of my kids' kind of pain,” she told CNA in 2015.

  Desa’s anger at her experience convicted her to join others in the fight against the device. Desa serves as one of several administrators for Essure Problems, a group of women who’ve had similar debilitating experiences with the medical device. They lobby against Essure in court, and provide support for women who have had issues with Essure, or who may be considering it.  

  Many of the women on the page have experienced even more serious side effects than Desa, including perforated organs due to coil migration, nickel allergies, fetal disfigurement due to nickel poisoning, chronic pain, exhaustion, increased risk of autoimmune disorders, and bouts of depression and suicidal thoughts.

  Since CNA first reported on the group in February 2015, it’s membership has more than doubled - from 14,000 to more than 31,000.

  At the end of November, the group was able to celebrate a victory - the FDA officially placed its strictest warning, a so-called “black box” label, on the device.

  Black box warning labels are reserved for drugs or devices that are reasonably associated with very serious or even life-threatening health risks.

  The decision to add the serious warning to Essure was announced in February. Since then, the FDA opened up a period for feedback during which they met with doctors and women who’ve had Essure implants to decide what should be included on the warning.

  Holly Ennis is an attorney who works with the women from Essure problems. She met with the FDA and her clients several times to discuss concerns about what should be included on the warning before it was released.

  One of her biggest concerns, she told CNA, was whether patients would actually see and know about the warning. Medical devices are typically shipped straight from their manufacturer to doctors or hospitals, leaving no way to ensure that patients would be made aware of the risks.

  To that end, the FDA also asked Bayer to create a patient-doctor checklist, that lays out the risks associated with the device and has space for patients to sign as they go through the checklist.

  The checklist is not mandatory, however, and many doctors view it as burdensome or intrusive, according to The New York Times. Planned Parenthood told the Times that it plans on informing women of the risks associated with the device, but does not plan on having them sign the checklist.

  “There’s no question there are complications, but there are risks and benefits to everything we do in medicine, and we don’t have good data to establish the magnitude of the problem,” Dr. Christopher M. Zahn, the vice president of practice for the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, told the New York Times.

  “Decisions like these should be made based on data that’s appropriately vetted, not a series of anecdotal reports,” Dr. Zahn added.

  But the women of the Essure Problems group would argue that they are the data - data that for a long time has been dismissed and ignored, Ennis said.  

  “We have 31,000 people on our page, probably 25,000 of them have had the device, have had this experience. Their frustration is no one is looking at their data. Instead the FDA is relying on a clinical trial that followed 200 people for two years for a device that is permanently implanted in the human body, as opposed to data from 25,000 women who are experiencing these symptoms every day,” Ennis said.

  “Almost 7,000 women on the page have undergone the removal procedure (which almost always requires surgery, often a total hysterectomy). That is a lot of women. I don’t think people are voluntarily going in and getting hysterectomies if they’re not having a significant amount of discomfort,” she said.

  The FDA has also ordered Bayer to conduct new clinical studies on Essure. The original clinical trials on the device were considered problematic by critics. No control group was used, and so some side effects experienced by the women in the clinical trials were dismissed as being caused by Essure.

  Earlier this year, Bayer agreed to track 1,400 women with Essure over the next 5-6 years, though the study is already delayed. These women will be compared to 1,400 women who chose the sterilization method of laparoscopic surgery.

  The Essure Problems women, however, believe that the device should be pulled from the market while clinical trials are still ongoing, Ennis said.

  “If you were a woman, would you sign up for this clinical trial?” Ennis said, given the debilitating side effects that thousands of women have experienced post-Essure.

  “They know that these women are suffering from these problems, and yet they’re going to continue to sell the device until Bayer proves it’s not safe,” she said.  

  The Essure Problems women were also concerned that the new FDA label still failed to mention some of the more common side effects experienced by women with Essure, including autoimmune disorders, brain fog, bloating, chronic inflammation, and foreign body reaction, Ennis added.

  Nevertheless, the black box warning is an accomplishment for the grassroots organization of Essure Problems, Ennis said.

  And the women are not giving up. They will continue to fight, including lobbying Congress for laws that would get rid of pre-emption (which Essure received) and to improve medical device safety and medical device reporting from physicians.

  “They’re not quitting, but they should be proud of what they’ve accomplished to date,” Ennis said.

  “And they won’t give up. I know these women, they’re very tenacious. They’re definitely not stopping.”  

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Vatican City, Dec 1, 2016 / 05:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In his message for the 2017 World Day of Prayer for Vocations, Pope Francis focused on the need to be “missionary disciples” who first fall in love with God, and are then propelled into action, zealously spreading the Good News they have heard.“The People of God need to be guided by pastors whose lives are spent in service to the Gospel,” the Pope said in his message, published Nov. 30.He asked parish communities, associations and various prayer groups within the Church not to get discouraged by an apparent lack of vocations, but to continue praying fervently “that the Lord will send workers to his harvest.”“May he give us priests enamored of the Gospel, close to all their brothers and sisters, living signs of God’s merciful love,” he said.Set to be celebrated May 7, 2017, the 54th World Day of Prayer for Vocations will take place on the fourth Sunday of Easter and will hold ...

Vatican City, Dec 1, 2016 / 05:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In his message for the 2017 World Day of Prayer for Vocations, Pope Francis focused on the need to be “missionary disciples” who first fall in love with God, and are then propelled into action, zealously spreading the Good News they have heard.

“The People of God need to be guided by pastors whose lives are spent in service to the Gospel,” the Pope said in his message, published Nov. 30.

He asked parish communities, associations and various prayer groups within the Church not to get discouraged by an apparent lack of vocations, but to continue praying fervently “that the Lord will send workers to his harvest.”

“May he give us priests enamored of the Gospel, close to all their brothers and sisters, living signs of God’s merciful love,” he said.

Set to be celebrated May 7, 2017, the 54th World Day of Prayer for Vocations will take place on the fourth Sunday of Easter and will hold the theme: “Led by the Spirit for Mission.”

While Francis’ previous messages for the event have focused on the frequent summons he makes for the Church to “go out” of ourselves in order to hear the Lord and the importance of the ecclesial community as the place where God’s vocational call is born, this year will focus on another topic often promoted by the Pope: mission.

In his message, the Pope noted how those who drawn by God’s voice and choose to follow Jesus “soon discover within themselves an irrepressible desire to bring the Good News to their brothers and sisters” through proclamation and charitable service.

As disciples, “we do not receive the gift of God’s love for our personal consolation, nor are we called to promote ourselves, or a business concern,” he said. “We are simply men and women touched and transformed by the joy of God’s love, who cannot keep this experience just to ourselves.”

Commitment to the mission isn’t some sort of “decoration” added to the Christian life, but is rather “an essential element of faith itself,” he said, stressing that we must overcome our own feelings of inadequacy “and not yield to pessimism, which merely turns us into passive spectators of a dreary and monotonous life.”

“There is no room for fear! God himself comes to cleanse our unclean lips and equip us for the mission,” Francis continued, explaining that all Christians, but priests and consecrated in particular, are “bearers of Christ.”

Priests, he said, are asked to “go forth from the sacred precincts of the temple” with renewed enthusiasm in order to “let God’s tender love overflow for the sake of humanity.”

“The Church needs such priests: serenely confident because they have discovered the true treasure, anxious to go out and joyfully to make it known to all,” he said.

When it comes to a Christian understanding of mission, Pope Francis said we can understand it by looking at three scenes from the Gospel: the launch of Jesus’ mission at the synagogue in Nazareth, the journey he makes with the disciples from Emmaus after his Resurrection, and the parable of the sower and the seed.

Turning to the first scene, the Pope noted to be a missionary disciple “means to share actively in the mission of Christ.”

Just as Jesus in the synagogue of Nazareth said he had been “anointed” by the Spirit to bring good news to the poor, and that he had been “sent” to proclaim the release of captives and to heal of the oppressed, “this is also our mission,” Francis said. “To be anointed by the Spirit, and to go out to our brothers and sisters in order to proclaim the word and to be for them a means of salvation.”

Pointing to the disciples on the road to Emmaus, the Pope stressed that we are never alone on our journey, but that Christ is at our side every step of the way.

Life’s questions and challenges can “make us feel bewildered, inadequate and hopeless,” and the Christian mission at times appears to be “mere utopian illusion” beyond our reach, he said. However, if we contemplate Jesus on the road to Emmaus, we see a true “liturgy of the street.”

“We see that, at every step of the way, Jesus is at our side! The two disciples, overwhelmed by the scandal of the cross, return home on the path of defeat. Their hearts are broken,” the Pope said, but noted that instead of judging them, Jesus walks beside them.

“Instead of raising a wall, he opens a breach” and gradually transforms their discouragement into hope, he said, explaining that the same goes for a Christian, who never carries their burdens alone, but who even amid difficulty know that Jesus is by their side.

On the parable of the sower and the seed, Pope Francis said it’s important to look at the passage to understand from the Gospel itself what Christian proclamation should look like.

Even with the best intentions in mind, Christians can at times “indulge in a certain hunger for power, proselytism or intolerant fanaticism.” However, the Gospel, he said, tells us to reject “the idolatry of power and success, undue concern for structures,” and an anxiety “that has more to do with the spirit of conquest than that of service.”

The seed of the God’s Kingdom, “however tiny, unseen and at times insignificant, silently continues to grow, thanks to God’s tireless activity,” he said, explaining that our first reason for confidence in God is that he surpasses our every expectation and “constantly surprises us by his generosity.”

Francis then pointed to the importance of maintaining a life of prayer, stressing that “there can be no promotion of vocations or Christian mission apart from constant contemplative prayer,” above all in scripture by forming a personal relationship with Jesus Christ in the Eucharist.

“I wish heartily to encourage this kind of profound friendship with the Lord, above all for the sake of imploring from on high new vocations to the priesthood and the consecrated life,” he said, and urged parishes and Church institutions to continue praying for vocations.

Despite a general sense throughout the world that faith “is listless or reduced to mere ‘duties to discharge,’” young people want to discover “the perennial attraction of Jesus, to be challenged by his words and actions, and to cherish the ideal that he holds out of a life that is fully human, happy to spend itself in love,” he said.

Pope Francis closed his message by entrusted youth to the intercession of Mary, who “had the courage to embrace this ideal.”

He asked through her prayers, “we be granted that same openness of heart, that same readiness to respond, ‘Here I am’ to the Lord’s call, and that same joy in setting out, like her, to proclaim him to the whole world.”

Vocations is a theme Pope Francis is likely to delve into in a deeper way over the next two years, since it will form the heart of the discussion for the next Synod of Bishops. Announced Oct. 6, the theme for the next Ordinary Synod, scheduled to take place in October 2018, will discuss “Young People, the Faith and the Discernment of Vocation.”

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VILNIUS, Lithuania (AP) -- Rasa Miskinyte spent last Saturday in a freezing forest near Lithuania's capital learning to gather water from a pond with a condom, to filter it through sand, charcoal and cloth, and to make her own stove from a beer can. She thought some basic survival skills would be helpful if Russian troops ever entered Vilnius and her family escaped into the woods....

VILNIUS, Lithuania (AP) -- Rasa Miskinyte spent last Saturday in a freezing forest near Lithuania's capital learning to gather water from a pond with a condom, to filter it through sand, charcoal and cloth, and to make her own stove from a beer can. She thought some basic survival skills would be helpful if Russian troops ever entered Vilnius and her family escaped into the woods....

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SEATTLE (AP) -- The suspect in the fatal shooting of a Tacoma officer has been shot and killed by police after a lengthy barricade situation, authorities said early Thursday....

SEATTLE (AP) -- The suspect in the fatal shooting of a Tacoma officer has been shot and killed by police after a lengthy barricade situation, authorities said early Thursday....

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SEATTLE (AP) -- The Latest on the fatal shooting of a Tacoma, Washington, police officer who was answering a domestic violence call (all times local):...

SEATTLE (AP) -- The Latest on the fatal shooting of a Tacoma, Washington, police officer who was answering a domestic violence call (all times local):...

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Vienna, Austria, Dec 1, 2016 / 12:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- European leaders gathered this week at a conference in Vienna to discuss Christian persecution and its resounding effect on Europe, particularly emphasizing the need to seriously address religious discrimination and genocide around the world.“The persecution faced by Christians around the world must be recognized and treated by the international community with the seriousness it deserves,” Ellen Fantini, executive director of the Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination Against Christians, stated Nov. 29.“The pressure faced by Christians in Europe is much more subtle – what Pope Francis has called ‘polite persecution.’”The conference, entitled “Embattled: Christians Under Pressure in Europe and Beyond,” drew more than 100 attendees. It was held at the archbishop’s palace in Vienna, with the hope of informing the public, lawmakers and officials of the ongoing thr...

Vienna, Austria, Dec 1, 2016 / 12:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- European leaders gathered this week at a conference in Vienna to discuss Christian persecution and its resounding effect on Europe, particularly emphasizing the need to seriously address religious discrimination and genocide around the world.

“The persecution faced by Christians around the world must be recognized and treated by the international community with the seriousness it deserves,” Ellen Fantini, executive director of the Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination Against Christians, stated Nov. 29.

“The pressure faced by Christians in Europe is much more subtle – what Pope Francis has called ‘polite persecution.’”

The conference, entitled “Embattled: Christians Under Pressure in Europe and Beyond,” drew more than 100 attendees. It was held at the archbishop’s palace in Vienna, with the hope of informing the public, lawmakers and officials of the ongoing threats of religious persecution.

The event was organized by the Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination Against Christians in partnership with ADF International, Open Doors, Aid to the Church in Need, and Christian Solidarity International, which additional support from the Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies.

In the spotlight at the conference was a North Korean native, Timothy C., who was forced to leave his country or face imminent death because of his religion. Other similar stories surfaced throughout the event, including those of Nigerian Christians killed by Boko Haram.

According to Jan Figel, the EU Special Envoy for Religious Freedom, over 100,000 Christians are killed every year due to religious persecution. Figel underscored the importance of not remaining silent during times of persecution, and pointed to the example of German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer.

“Those who do not understand religion and misuse religion cannot understand what is happening in the world,” Figel stated during his opening keynote address.

Figel’s statements were echoed by Swedish MEP Lars Adaktusson, who called the current persecution and killings of religious groups in the Middle East “genocide.”

“We must never hesitate in the defense of religious freedom. In the end, it is about standing up for a value-based foreign policy based on human dignity and human rights,” Adaktusson stated.

The Swedish MEP also spoke of his time in Northern Iraq, saying the evidence of persecution was significant. In the Middle East, Adaktusson noted that he saw “the signs of deliberate destruction and contempt for the beliefs of others,” pointing to destroyed churches, books, and crosses at the hands of the Islamic State.

In addition, Auxiliary Bishop Stephan Turnovszky of Vienna highlighted the marginalization of refugees in Europe, who are “often subjected here to violence, threats, and discrimination on the basis of their Christian faith.”

The conference additionally called into question European governments' role with regard to conscience, freedom of speech, and parental rights, which have been increasingly restrictive and invasive. While the government has enhanced its control, Bishop Turnovszky believes that Europe is failing to protect people because of their religious convictions.

Moving forward, Gudrun Kugler, member of the Vienna Regional Parliament, encouraged individuals to contact public officials in order to raise awareness of religious discrimination, and to start making strides to prevent persecution.

Kugler believes both individuals and organizations should work to “create space for Christians in Europe and to address the atrocities committed against Christians around the world.”

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NEW YORK (AP) -- The psychedelic drug in "magic mushrooms" can quickly and effectively help treat anxiety and depression in cancer patients, an effect that may last for months, two small studies show....

NEW YORK (AP) -- The psychedelic drug in "magic mushrooms" can quickly and effectively help treat anxiety and depression in cancer patients, an effect that may last for months, two small studies show....

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XALAPA, Mexico (AP) -- The death of reporter Regina Martinez was almost too much for her colleagues to bear....

XALAPA, Mexico (AP) -- The death of reporter Regina Martinez was almost too much for her colleagues to bear....

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NEW YORK (AP) -- President-elect Donald Trump is poised to take a victory lap on Thursday, appearing first in Indiana to salute workers at a factory that he made a campaign promise to save and then in Ohio on the first stop of a "Thank You Tour" to honor the supporters in states that gave him his stunning victory....

NEW YORK (AP) -- President-elect Donald Trump is poised to take a victory lap on Thursday, appearing first in Indiana to salute workers at a factory that he made a campaign promise to save and then in Ohio on the first stop of a "Thank You Tour" to honor the supporters in states that gave him his stunning victory....

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SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) -- Almost a year after her father was killed in the San Bernardino terror attack last December, Kate Bowman etched the word "love" in yellow chalk on the sidewalk outside a mosque....

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) -- Almost a year after her father was killed in the San Bernardino terror attack last December, Kate Bowman etched the word "love" in yellow chalk on the sidewalk outside a mosque....

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