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Prayuth Backing Off Campaign Plans, Party Leader Says

PM Prayuth Chan-ocha speaks at Government House on Tuesday.

BANGKOK — Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha may not hit the campaign trail for those who nominated him to be prime minister after all, a party leader said Wednesday.

Although the Phalang Pracharat Party announced Monday that Gen. Prayuth would step onto its rally stage for the first time, party executive Sontirat Sontijirawong said today that plan could change because the junta leader seems reluctant to go along.

“The prime minister’s intention is to meet the people, but now that there are protests, we have to listen,” Sontirat told reporters while canvassing in Lumphini Park. “We have been consulting with Gen. Prayuth. Since he has his worries, we will adjust our plans.”

Sontirat, who served as Commerce Minister under Prayuth’s cabinet until earlier this year, said the party is worried that his appearance at political rallies could cause conflict.

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Sontirat Sontijirawong plays badminton during his campaign at Lumphini Park.

“We don’t want opposition to Gen. Prayuth’s appearance with the party or interpretation of what we can do or cannot do,” he said. “If society is really concerned, the party will find other ways.”

The Election Commission recently ruled that Prayuth is free to campaign for Phalang Pracharat so long as he does not break any law.

But critics of the junta have widely condemned the ruling, arguing that Prayuth is blurring the line between governance and politics. Prayuth has long been accused of abusing his power for personal gain.

The general himself expressed reluctance to join party activities. Speaking to reporters Tuesday, he declined to confirm whether he would attend a Phalang Pracharat rally in Korat on Saturday as the party had announced.

“It will be difficult for me to go on stage,” he said.

Asked if that meant he wasn’t going to the rally, Prayuth replied, “The media doesn’t care for me at all? Don’t you care whether I might get sued?”

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US OKs Mind-Altering, Ketamine-Like Drug for Severe Depression

This photo provided by Janssen Global Services shows Spravato nasal spray. Photo: Associated Press
This photo provided by Janssen Global Services shows Spravato nasal spray. Photo: Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A mind-altering medication related to the club drug Special K won U.S. approval Tuesday for patients with hard-to-treat depression, the first in a series of long-overlooked substances being reconsidered for severe forms of mental illness.

The nasal spray from Johnson & Johnson is a chemical cousin of ketamine, which has been used for decades as a powerful anesthetic to prepare patients for surgery. In the 1990s, the medication was adopted as a party drug by the underground rave culture due to its ability to produce psychedelic, out-of-body experiences. More recently, some doctors have given ketamine to people with depression without formal FDA approval.

The Food and Drug Administration approved Spravato as a fast-acting treatment for patients who have failed to find relief with at least two antidepressants. Up to 7.4 million American adults suffer from so-called treatment-resistant depression, which heightens the risk of suicide, hospitalization and other serious harm, according to the FDA.

The drug will cost between USD$590 and $885 depending on the dosage and before various insurance discounts and rebates.

There have been no major pharmaceutical innovations for depression since the launch of Prozac and related antidepressants in the late 1980s. Those drugs target the feel-good brain chemical serotonin, and can take weeks or months to kick in.

Ketamine and J&J’s version work differently than those drugs, targeting a chemical called glutamate that is thought to restore brain connections that help relieve depression.

When the drug works, its effect is almost immediate. That speed “is a huge thing because depressed patients are very disabled and suffer enormously,” said Dr. John Mann, a psychiatrist and researcher at Columbia University. If the drug doesn’t work, physicians can quickly switch to other options, he noted.

The FDA approved Spravato, known chemically as esketamine, based on study results that showed patients taking the drug experienced a bigger improvement in their depression levels than patients taking a sham treatment, when measured with a psychiatric questionnaire.

The drug is designed to be lower-dose and easier to use than ketamine, which is normally given as an intravenous infusion.

Robin Prothro, 60, began taking antidepressants more than 20 years ago. But she says none of the five medications she tried relieved the depression that has stymied her personal and professional life.

Since enrolling in a Spravato trial two years ago, Prothro says her depression has lifted and she’s returned to hobbies she abandoned years ago, like gardening.

She takes the drug every two weeks at her psychiatrist’s office while reclining in a comfortable chair.

“You can feel it coming on, it’s a strong drug,” she said, describing colors and shapes that drift before her eyes. “I just let the drug work. I close my eyes and my mind is amazingly quiet.”

 

Psychedelics Reconsidered

The ketamine-like drug is the first of several psychoactive substances making their way through the U.S. regulatory process as physicians search further afield for new therapies. Researchers are conducting late-stage trials of psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, and MDMA, a euphoria-inducing club drug, as potential treatments for depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.

“Substantially different agents are only rarely appearing from pharmaceutical companies or other laboratories,” said Dr. Paul Summergrad, a psychiatrist at Tufts University. “That’s prompting people to investigate other compounds.”

Unlike ketamine, psilocybin and MDMA have no legal medical use. Classified in the same category as heroin and LSD, they are tightly restricted by the federal government. But the FDA’s approval of esketamine could smooth their path.

BURDEN OF DEPRESSION

Depression is among the leading causes of disability in the U.S. and is being closely monitored by health authorities amid rising suicides nationwide. In 2017, the U.S. suicide rate rose to 14 deaths per 100,000 people, the highest rate in at least 50 years, according to federal records.

Government officials haven’t suggested an explanation for the trend, though academic researchers point to the nation’s widening income gap, financial struggles and divisive politics.

J&J’s drug will be subject to a number of restrictions due to its abuse potential, side effects and lingering safety questions.

The drug will only be given by accredited specialists who must monitor patients for at least two hours after administration, due to its trippy, disorienting effects. Additionally, all patients will be tracked in a registry to monitor long-term safety and effectiveness.

The immediate impact of ketamine is thought to last just four to seven days and there’s no consensus yet on how long patients can benefit from ongoing treatment.

Still, there are few other options for patients who fail to respond to antidepressants. The most effective treatment in such cases, electroshock therapy, requires patients to be fully sedated and can cause persistent memory loss.

Wall Street has high expectations for J&J’s medication, with analysts predicting more than $600 million in annual sales by 2022. But J&J will face competition in the marketplace.

A decades-old drug, ketamine is already used off-label to treat depression by some doctors. At least 150 clinics around the U.S. provide treatment with various forms of the drug, which is available as a low-cost generic. Patients often pay hundreds or thousands of dollars for intravenous infusions of the drug over several weeks or months. Such therapies are generally not covered by insurance because they haven’t been approved as safe and effective by FDA regulators.

Some doctors plan to offer both ketamine and the new J&J drug.

Dr. Steve Levine says having FDA-approved standards for dosing and administering the new drug should raise standards in the field and drive out some of the bad actors who are not qualified to treat depression.

“This is going to bring in some standards, regulation and it’s going to make it safer and more accessible to patients,” said Levine, who serves as vice president of the American Society of Ketamine Physicians, a group representing doctors, nurses and others using ketamine for treating depression or other nonapproved uses.

Story: Matthew Perrone

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US Wraps Up SheBelieves Cup With 1-0 Win Over Brazil

United States' Tobin Heath, second from right, is congratulated on her goal by Mallory Pugh (11), Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan (13) during the first half of a SheBelieves Cup soccer match against Brazil Tuesday, March 5, 2019, in Tampa, Florida. Photo: Mike Carlson / Associated Press
United States' Tobin Heath, second from right, is congratulated on her goal by Mallory Pugh (11), Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan (13) during the first half of a SheBelieves Cup soccer match against Brazil Tuesday, March 5, 2019, in Tampa, Florida. Photo: Mike Carlson / Associated Press

TAMPA, Florida — Tobin Heath scored in the first half and the United States finished the SheBelieves Cup with a 1-0 victory over Brazil on Tuesday night.

It was the final game of the four-team, round-robin tournament played in three cities. England defeated Japan 3-0 in the early game at Raymond James Stadium on Tuesday to win the SheBelieves Cup title.

All four teams are in the top 10 of the FIFA rankings and will play in the World Cup in France later this year. The Americans, ranked No. 1, are the defending champions of football’s most prestigious tournament.

The United States played to a 2-2 draw with Japan in the tournament opener in Chester, Pennsylvania, and then tied England 2-2 in Nashville on Saturday. Brazil, ranked No. 10, lost all three of its matches.

Alyssa Naeher, the presumed U.S. starter in goal for the World Cup, injured her shoulder in the opener against Japan. Adrianna Franch got her first cap for the United States in the draw against England.

But on Tuesday, coach Jill Ellis opted to start goalkeeper Ashlyn Harris, who is a Florida native. Harris stopped a free kick from Orlando Pride teammate Marta late in the match.

The United States went ahead 1-0 in the 20th minute when Heath buried a rebound while Brazil’s goalkeeper was out of position. It was Heath’s 27th international goal.

Alex Morgan remained one goal away from reaching 100 for her career, which will tie her with Tiffeny Milbrett for sixth on the team’s career list. She had a header in the 73rd minute that she lofted just wide.

Morgan led the team with 18 goals last year and she has 26 goals over her last 30 national team matches.

Earlier Tuesday, England scored all three goals in the first 30 minutes and got the shutout over Japan to win the tournament title on points.

The United States will continue its 10-match tour in preparation for the World Cup next month, when the team faces Australia in Commerce City, Colorado, on April 4 and Belgium in Los Angeles on April 7. The Americans open World Cup group play on June 11 against Thailand.

England and Japan play in the same group in France and meet again on June 19.

Story: Anne M. Peterson

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Jerry Merryman, Calculating Genius Inventor, Dies at 86

DALLAS — Jerry Merryman, one of the inventors of the hand-held electronic calculator who is described by those who knew him as not only brilliant but also kind with a good sense of humor, has died. He was 86.

Merryman died Feb. 27 at a Dallas hospital from complications of heart and kidney failure, said his stepdaughter, Kim Ikovic. She said he’d been hospitalized since late December after experiencing complications during surgery to install a pacemaker.

He’s one of the three men credited with inventing the hand-held calculator while working at Dallas-based Texas Instruments. The team was led by Jack Kilby, who made way for today’s computers with the invention of the integrated circuit and won the Nobel Prize. The prototype built by the team, which also included James Van Tassel, is at the Smithsonian Institution.

“I have a Ph.D. in material science and I’ve known hundreds of scientists, professors, Nobel prize-winners and so on. Jerry Merryman was the most brilliant man that I’ve ever met. Period. Absolutely, outstandingly brilliant,” said Vernon Porter, a former TI colleague and friend. “He had an incredible memory and he had an ability to pull up formulas, information, on almost any subject.”

Another former TI colleague and friend, Ed Millis, said, “Jerry did the circuit design on this thing in three days, and if he was ever around, he’d lean over and say, ‘and nights.'”

Merryman told NPR’s “All Things Considered” in 2013, “It was late 1965 and Jack Kilby, my boss, presented the idea of a calculator. He called some people in his office. He says, we’d like to have some sort of computing device, perhaps to replace the slide rule. It would be nice if it were as small as this little book that I have in my hand.”

Merryman added, “Silly me, I thought we were just making a calculator, but we were creating an electronic revolution.”

The Smithsonian says that the three had made enough progress by September 1967 to apply for a patent, which was subsequently revised before the final application in June 1974.

This 1997 photo taken by Phyllis Merryman shows Jack Kilby and Jerry Merryman, at right, at the American Computer Museum in Bozeman, Montana. Photo: Phyllis Merryman via AP
This 1997 photo taken by Phyllis Merryman shows Jack Kilby and Jerry Merryman, at right, at the American Computer Museum in Bozeman, Montana. Photo: Phyllis Merryman via AP

Merryman, who was born on June 17, 1932, grew up in Hearne in Central Texas. By the age of 11 or so he’d become the radio repairman for the town.

“He’d scrape together a few cents to go to the movies in the afternoons and evenings and the police would come get him out … because their radios would break and he had to fix them,” said Merryman’s wife, Phyllis Merryman.

He went to Texas A&M University in College Station but didn’t finish. His jobs after that included working at the university’s department of oceanography and meteorology and before long he was on an oil platform in the Gulf of Mexico measuring the force of hurricane winds. He started at Texas Instruments in 1963, at the age of 30.

His friends and family say he was always creating something. His daughter Melissa Merryman recalls him making his own tuning fork for their piano. She said she asked him how he made it out of that “hunk of metal” and he told her: “It was easy, I just took away all the parts that were not an F sharp.”

Friend and former TI colleague Gaynel Lockhart remembers a telescope in concrete at Jerry Merryman’s home with a motor attached that would allow it to follow a planet throughout the night.

Despite his accomplishments, he was humble. “He wouldn’t ever boast or brag about himself, not ever,” said Melissa Merryman, who became stepsisters with her friend Kim Ikovic when they set up their parents, who got married in 1993.

Jerry Merryman retired from TI in January 1994, the company said.

“He always said that he didn’t care anything about being famous, if his friends thought he did a good job, he was happy,” Phyllis Merryman said.

 

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Police Intercept Pickup Packed With Pangolins On Way to China (Video)

A Ground Pangolin in 2012 at the Madikwe Game Reserve in South Africa. Photo: David Brossard / Flickr
A Ground Pangolin in 2012 at the Madikwe Game Reserve in South Africa. Photo: David Brossard / Flickr

PRACHUAP KHIRI KHAN — Police charged a man with animal trafficking after finding 76 pangolins in the back of his truck Saturday.

Sompol Mekchai, 45, was arrested at a police checkpoint near the Sam Roi Yot Police Station in Prachuap Khiri Khan province after police found 18 sacks stuffed with scaly mammals in the back of his truck.

He reportedly confessed that it was his third run trafficking the animals, which came from Indonesia, for which he was paid 8,000 per job. He said the pangolins were on their way to be used in traditional medicine in China; now they have been taken to a wildlife center in Phetchaburi province.

Police said they were checking Sompol’s truck when they noticed a strong smell among the construction materials on it.

The 76 pangolins are worth approximately 10 million baht.

Pangolins are protected under Thai and international law. Traffickers can be punished by up to four years in prison and a fine of 40,000 baht.

Related stories:

Wildlife Group: Malaysia Seizes Record 30-Ton Pangolin Haul

Hong Kong Makes Record Seizure of Pangolin Scales, Ivory

Rare Pangolins Languish in China Wildlife Rescue System

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2nd Man in Dozen Years Seems Cured of AIDS

Timothy Ray Brown, the first person to be cured of HIV infection, poses for a photograph Monday in Seattle. Photo: Manuel Valdes / Associated Press
Timothy Ray Brown, the first person to be cured of HIV infection, poses for a photograph Monday in Seattle. Photo: Manuel Valdes / Associated Press

SEATTLE — A London man appears to be free of the AIDS virus after a stem cell transplant, the second success including the “Berlin patient,” doctors reported.

The therapy had an early success with Timothy Ray Brown, a U.S. man treated in Germany who is 12 years post-transplant and still free of HIV. Until now, Brown is the only person thought to have been cured of infection with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

Such transplants are dangerous and have failed in other patients. They’re also impractical to try to cure the millions already infected.

The latest case “shows the cure of Timothy Brown was not a fluke and can be recreated,” said Dr. Keith Jerome of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle who had no role. He added that it could lead to a simpler approach that could be used more widely.

The case was published online Monday by the journal Nature and will be presented at an HIV conference in Seattle.

The patient has not been identified. He was diagnosed with HIV in 2003 and started taking drugs to control the infection in 2012. It’s unclear why he waited that long. He developed Hodgkin lymphoma that year and agreed to a stem cell transplant to treat the cancer in 2016.

With the right kind of donor, his doctors figured, the London patient might get a bonus beyond treating his cancer: a possible HIV cure.

Doctors found a donor with a gene mutation that confers natural resistance to HIV. About 1 percent of people descended from northern Europeans have inherited the mutation from both parents and are immune to most HIV. The donor had this double copy of the mutation.

That was “an improbable event,” said lead researcher Ravindra Gupta of University College London. “That’s why this has not been observed more frequently.”

The transplant changed the London patient’s immune system, giving him the donor’s mutation and HIV resistance.

The patient voluntarily stopped taking HIV drugs to see if the virus would come back.

Usually, HIV patients expect to stay on daily pills for life to suppress the virus. When drugs are stopped, the virus roars back, usually in two to three weeks.

That didn’t happen with the London patient. There is still no trace of the virus after 18 months off the drugs.

Brown said he would like to meet the London patient and would encourage him to go public because “it’s been very useful for science and for giving hope to HIV-positive people, to people living with HIV,” he told The Associated Press Monday.

Stem cell transplants typically are harsh procedures which start with radiation or chemotherapy to damage the body’s existing immune system and make room for a new one. There are complications too. Brown had to have a second stem cell transplant when his leukemia returned.

Compared to Brown, the London patient had a less punishing form of chemotherapy to get ready for the transplant, didn’t have radiation and had only a mild reaction to the transplant.

Dr. Gero Hutter, the German doctor who treated Brown, called the new case “great news” and “one piece in the HIV cure puzzle.”

Story:  Carla K. Johnson

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Smart Visa Holders May Have Side Hustles: Cabinet

BANGKOK — High-earning expats holding four-year professional visas could soon do other jobs outside their fields without needing a work permit.

The interim cabinet on Tuesday approved a proposal to allow any foreigner holding a valid Smart Visa – exclusive to those earning more than 200,000 baht monthly in specialized industries – to do other work without a permit issued by the Labor Ministry, government spokesman Lt. Gen. Werachon Sukondhapatipak said.

The four-year professional visa, which launched in February 2018, has been offered to those working in fields such as medical tourism, biotech and robotics. Children over 18 and spouses in Thailand for at least a year can also work without a permit.

In the first eight months it was available, 28 of 37 applicants managed to obtain the visa, according to the Board of Investment.

Related stories:

4-Year ‘Smart Visas’ Available Starting Feb. 1

More Info on 4-Year Professional Visas Coming Next Month

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Loei’s Remaining Leaf Monkeys Live Out Days at Temple

LOEI — One particular species of monkeys has found their last haven in a temple.

Years of deforestation have left only 100 to 120 endangered Phayre’s leaf monkeys in Loei province, almost all of which now live in one place – Wat Tham Pha Pu.

They fled the shrinking forests to forage for food offerings at the temple and settled in the branches on the grounds as dry season depletes their food sources in the wild.

“I see them every day when I come to work, especially the mothers with the black fur cuddling their babies with the golden fur,” said Som Prasan, a construction worker at the temple. “They’re never still. They always eat the bananas I bring them. The small ones are so cute.”

The Phayre’s leaf monkey, rated endangered on the IUCN Red List, is found in Burma and Thailand’s north. It is not to be confused with the dusky leaf monkey, a similar species found in Thailand’s south.

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BTS Coming to Lat Phrao in 5 Months: City Hall

Construction of the northern BTS Green Line extension in November near Lat Phrao, Bangkok. Photo: Green Line North / Facebook
Construction of the northern BTS Green Line extension in November near Lat Phrao, Bangkok. Photo: Green Line North / Facebook

BANGKOK — Mo Chit will no longer be the end of the BTS world later this year, with about a third of a new northern extension open for service by August 2020, City Hall said Tuesday.

Deputy Gov. Sakoltee Phattiyakul said BTS Ha Yaek Lat Phrao, the first of the new line extending from BTS Mo Chit to Khu Khot in Pathum Thani province, could open as early as August. About five more stations will open the following year.

The northern extension, which has been under construction since 2015, will ultimately run about 19 kilometers and stop at 16 stations.

Fares will be adjusted on existing BTS extensions, city officials said yesterday. Those on the eastern Sukhumvit Line which had been fixed at 15 baht from On Nut to Bearing, will become distance-based starting April 16, which means paying up to an additional 6 baht.

Gov. Aswin Kwanmuang has ordered the fares for all of the Green Line, which includes the new extension and Sukhumvit Line, capped at 65 baht.

The extension to Samut Prakan province that opened in December will remain free until April 15. It will also see four more stations come online that will stretch it to Bang Pu.

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Old Parliament to be Used Until Ides of March

Lawmakers and volunteers clean up the House of Parliament on Dec. 26 before turning the facility over to the palace.

BANGKOK — Junta-appointed lawmakers will continue to meet in the old parliament building until March 15 before turning the facility over to the palace, the house speaker said Tuesday.

Parliament chairman Pornpetch Wichitchol told reporters before entering today’s session that the legislature would have to meet in an auditorium inside a parliament secretariat office on Prachachuen Road after March 15.

About 44 bill drafts and proposals will be deliberated in the coming weeks, according to reports.

Read: Even if Thailand Votes, No Parliament Awaits New Lawmakers

Although the parliament was supposed to close for good New Year’s Eve, the royal palace extended the deadline while lawmakers look for a place to rent.

The new parliament, located riverside in the Dusit district, has yet to be completed despite years of construction. Its website says 59 percent of the work had been completed as of Feb. 22.

Lawmaker Somchai Sawangkan said last month that an auditorium at state telecom TOT in northern Bangkok would be rented for formal sessions of the full house, such as the selection of prime minister next month following the election.

The rent stands at about 100,000 baht per day, Somchai said, adding that construction of the new parliament may be complete by July – about four months after the general election.

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