Couple Battling
ALS Starts Over in Katrina's Wake
by Christina Medvescek
It used to be that Walter Ferrier, 57, a lifelong resident of New
Orleans, would never evacuate during hurricanes. But since the onset
of ALS, a diagnosis of which he received in March 2004, he finds
it hard to breathe when the electricity goes out and he loses his
BiPAP and air conditioning. In August, he and his wife, Valetter,
decided to leave their neighborhood in extreme eastern New Orleans
in advance of Hurricane Katrina.
“We thought we would be gone just two or three days,”
said Valetter. “We left with just comfortable clothing, two
pair of shoes, four pair of underwear, Walter’s manual chair.
We didn’t take any precious photographs, my wedding book,
nothing. We left his Hoyer lift, lift chair, hospital bed, power
chair — all the things that made life convenient for him.
“I had no idea the water would be over my roof. Not in my
wildest dreams. We had no idea the levees would breach. The river
and the lake met each other over my house. I have no doubt there
are alligators swimming in our house right now.”
A Big Group
The couple made their way to Humble, Texas, outside of Houston,
because they have relatives in the area, and because Valetter has
breast cancer that has metastasized into bone cancer, and she has
been getting treatments at Houston’s M.D. Anderson Cancer
Center. The Ferriers traveled with their large extended family of
18 people, ranging in age from newborn to senior citizen.
Realizing early on that they wouldn’t be able to go home
for a long time, family members moved quickly to secure three apartments
in the same complex. Pooling their resources, they’re managing
to get by, but many family members now are unemployed, and those
who still have jobs aren’t getting paid regularly. Insurance
also is proving balky, unresponsive and slow, although ultimately
it should provide some help with living expenses.
Valetter registered with FEMA and applied for food stamps, but
was “crushed” to discover she and Walter didn’t
qualify for the stamps because they both get Social Security disability
checks. They’ve since made contact with a food bank that’s
helping out. Also, Dillard’s donated some “very, very
nice clothing,” she says, and a church group brought over
some household supplies.
MDA and M.D. Anderson have responded to the Ferriers’ immediate
medical needs. A tub transfer bench was shipped from the Austin
MDA office, but it’s taken a little longer to find a hospital
bed and Hoyer lift.
“Our vendor is just overwhelmed,” explained Houston
MDA Health Care Service Coordinator Anne Swisher, noting she’s
still looking. She arranged for Walter to be seen Sept. 20 without
medical records in the MDA/ALS clinic at the Vicki Appel MDA Neuromuscular
Clinic at the Methodist Hospital in Houston.
MDA Helping Out
The Houston MDA office went into high gear after Katrina, as the
area filled with New Orleans evacuees. After widely publicizing
the MDA phone number through social service agencies, hospital physical
therapy departments and disability referral sheets, Swisher helped
connect a number of ALS and muscular dystrophy patients with clinic
appointments and assistive equipment.
Swisher also was indirectly able to provide a communication device
for a young man with ALS who had left his behind in New Orleans.
“We take our communication devices to a speech pathologist,
Laurie Sterling, to have them recycled, and we had just taken her
one the day before,” said Swisher. “This young man somehow
managed to make his way to Laurie at Methodist Hospital without
calling MDA. She called us to see if she could loan him the device,
and of course we said yes.”
MDA also received calls from people with other disabling conditions,
such as multiple sclerosis and cerebral palsy, and staff were able
to provide help in those cases.
“I feel badly for the people who had to relocate, but I’m
proud of MDA for stepping forward and proud of our community,”
said Swisher, adding she feels “blessed to help.” Many
MDA families and volunteers, including MDA summer camp counselors,
have contacted the office offering housing, transportation and other
assistance.
Swisher hopes to connect evacuees with ALS to the local MDA ALS
support group meetings, and she may start a support group for displaced
families affected by muscular dystrophy.
A Long Road Ahead
In spite of the uncertainty and frustration of their current situation,
the Ferriers are settling into their new quarters.
Although it’s more difficult without assistive equipment,
Walter said he’s managing “OK,” thanks to being
“totally surrounded by my family.” The extra help with
his bathing, dressing and feeding has provided a small break for
Valetter, who said she’s feeling “tired, overwhelmed
and blessed.”
The couple aren’t eager to go back to New Orleans anytime
soon. Even when the water is pumped out of their neighborhood (estimated
to be in mid-October), the area is going to be beset with toxic
waste, mosquitoes and disease.
“There’s no way we could go back now. And I’m
not interested in going back at all,” said Walter slowly,
his words slurred but clear. “I’ve already got one disease
I’m battling right now. That’s enough.”
Epilogue: After “looking at weather
maps, considering our options and calling hotels,” the Ferrier
family decided not to leave Humble in the face of Hurricane Rita
later in September. Neighbors who tried to evacuate came back due
to highway traffic jams. The storm produced only high winds and
rain in Humble.
For more on Hurricane Katrina survivors who have an MDA connection,
go to www.mda.org/whatsnew and www.mda.org/publications/Quest/extra.
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Augie's Quest
by Alyssa Quintero
Since 1977, Augustine (Augie) L. Nieto II has guided the fitness
industry to new heights, notably as the co-founder and former president
of Life Fitness Inc. Now, he has one more mountain to climb and
conquer — in March, at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz.,
the fitness industry innovator received a diagnosis of ALS.
Nieto, 47, immediately resolved to find a way to raise money for
ALS research, hoping to help open the door to new treatments and
ultimately a cure.
A 1980 graduate in economics from Claremont McKenna College, Nieto
has built his career in the fitness industry on the principle of
making a positive daily impact on people’s lives.
“What businesses can you ever be associated with where you
can really change not only someone’s outlook on life but also
how long they live?”
Now, Nieto has the chance to do the same in a different arena.
“My goal is to help increase the survival rate,” Nieto
said. “I look forward to helping any way I can as long as
I can.”
Augie's Quest
In January Nieto bought the Octane Fitness Company of Andover,
Minn., which designs and distributes premium elliptical cross-trainers,
and became company chairman.
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From left: Lindsay, Nicole, Lynne (wife),
Nieto, Austin and Danielle
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Two months after the purchase, however, he received his ALS diagnosis.
Since then, he has focused much of his attention on raising funds
for ALS research. Six months later, Nieto’s campaign, called
Augie’s Quest, has taken center stage.
Following his diagnosis, Nieto embarked on a nationwide journey
in search of answers. He visited the top research facilities “to
learn more about what I’m facing.”
“I wanted to know how I could learn more, and I became an
information hound, trying to find out where the top facilities were,
and what I found is that they were all MDA facilities,” Nieto
said.
After completing a thorough investigation, he realized that MDA
“is the largest contributor to ALS research,” and Nieto
decided he wanted to build a partnership with MDA.
“I couldn’t have picked a better partner,” Nieto
said. “It was very easy once I had all of the information.”
At this time, Nieto is working with members of the MDA staff to
coordinate future fund-raising events that will benefit ALS research.
“I’m thrilled to be able to work with Sharon [Hesterlee,
MDA director of research development] and her staff in Tucson, Ariz.,
and to learn about where we should be putting the money.”
The Benefit
When Nieto learned that he was to receive the fitness industry’s
top honor, the Lifetime Achievement Award presented by the International
Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Association and the National Fitness
Trade Show, in September, he had a brainstorm.
Nieto convinced the trade show’s organizers that its annual
reception and dinner should be transformed into a benefit that would
raise money for Augie’s Quest and MDA’s ALS research.
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Ron Hemelgarn, IndyCar team owner and benefit emcee, presents Augie Nieto the fitness industry Lifetime Achievement Award.
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“This was never a fund-raiser in the past,” Nieto said.
“I got together with Shannon [Shryne] of the MDA office in
San Diego, and said, ‘Let’s go make it happen.’
And, in less than three months, we set a record for MDA.”
The benefit raised the largest amount ever by an inaugural event
of its kind — over $1 million. The funds have been earmarked
for MDA’s ALS research program.
Nieto declared that MDA’s Scientific Advisory Committee is
best qualified to determine how the funds should be spent.
“The benefit on Sept. 8 was an amazing highlight in my career,”
Nieto said. “I was grateful to the industry but more grateful
for how they responded financially.”
Still Running
Nieto started out in the fitness industry almost 30 years ago,
largely because he was an overweight young man.
“I struggled with weight as a young adult, and once I found
it [fitness] to be my answer, my panacea, I wanted to share that
belief and that vision with everybody else,” he explained.
Even though his arms are much weaker six months after his diagnosis,
Nieto isn’t willing to let ALS keep him down.
“I ran six miles this morning, and I’m not giving up,”
he said. “Exercise is a part of my life, and I intend to be
active as long as I can, forever.”
Despite the changes that come with ALS, Nieto has developed Augie’s
Quest because he wants to continue to make a difference in people’s
lives.
“There’s incredible therapy in being part of helping
to find the cure,” Nieto explained. “It gives me purpose
in my life to try to provide some leadership in an area where there
aren’t enough people that know what’s out there.”
Learning About Living
Nieto and his wife, Lynne, have been married for 10 years, and
they reside in Corona Del Mar, Calif. Nieto has four children, Nicole,
22, Danielle, 20, Austin, 19, and Lindsay, 16.
“My first priority is to spend time with my family,”
he said. “You have to be careful that you don’t get
out of balance. And, I want them [my kids] to look at me as a role
model in that this is what Dad does when he’s given a stack
of cards. He plays his hand and does the best he knows how to do.”
Nieto’s learned a few life lessons that he carries with him
as he continues to live in the face of ALS.
“It doesn’t matter how many medals you win, how many
trophies you have, how much money you have made. There is only one
thing at the end of the day, and that is love,” Nieto said.
And, although he’s facing the challenge of his life, Nieto
still hasn’t lost his sense of humor.
“I’m going deep into my wine cellar right now,”
he said. “There aren’t too many bottles that I’m
waiting to drink. I figure, don’t put away for tomorrow what
you can drink tonight.”
Back to top
ALS Research Roundup
by Margaret Wahl
Beijing Report:
Fetal Cells Fail to Stop ALS
John Winchester, of Medina, Ohio, is among a small number of Americans
with ALS who have gone to China’s capital city to receive
transplants of cells that cover nerves involved in the sense of
smell (olfactory ensheathing cells) taken from fetuses. These OECs
have some stem cell-like properties.
Winchester and his wife, Megan, traveled to Beijing in December,
some three years after John’s diagnosis at age 33. At the
time, he was using a power wheelchair and nighttime assisted ventilation.
After checking into a sparsely furnished room at West Hill Hospital
in Beijing, Winchester underwent blood and breathing tests, an electromyogram
(EMG) and an MRI scan.
Then, with the aid of local anesthesia, doctors drilled two holes
in his skull, into which they inserted the fetal cells. (Winchester
felt only vibration.)
After a few days of rest, he began speech and physical therapy,
acupuncture, massage and electrical stimulation. The total cost
for the Winchesters, excluding only airfare, was $19,000.
At the end of the first week, Winchester says, he noted improvements
in hand and arm function and in his speech. The second week brought
even more gains, and there were short periods when his speech was
very clear.
But back home, Winchester experienced a steady decline over the
next eight weeks, with an unexplained improvement in week eight.
By August, he had gotten worse again.
Via e-mail in September, Winchester said his speech had further
deteriorated, that he could no longer feed himself and needed help
to transfer.
“Two that I know of from my [transplant] group have since
passed away, and others I e-mail with are declining,” he wrote.
But he added, “Nobody regrets trying it.”
Although these experiences demonstrate that cell transplantation
for central nervous system disease has a long way to go, much research
in this area continues.
Low SMN Levels Increase ALS Risk and
Severity
The more SMN (survival of motor neuron) protein one has, apparently,
the better it is for motor neurons, the nerve cells in the brain
and spinal cord that control movement and degenerate in ALS.
A Dutch study published online Aug. 10 in Neurology shows that
relatively low levels of SMN, such as those found in carriers of
spinal muscular atrophy, a disease affecting the motor neurons in
the spinal cord, increase the risk of developing ALS and shorten
survival time in those who already have the disease.
Study investigator Jan Veldink at University Medical Center Utrecht
says that, even with low SMN levels, the risk of developing ALS
remains small. With low SMN, it increases from about 1.5 per 100,000
to about six per 100,000.
He said the main implication of the findings is not that people
with low SMN should worry about developing ALS, but that understanding
SMN’s functions may shed new light on the mechanisms underlying
ALS development and progression.
Life Satisfaction
Probed
Graduate student Roy Chen at Michigan State University in East
Lansing is investigating the relationship between self-acceptance
of a disability and life satisfaction. Chen, who has muscular dystrophy,
is seeking people who are at least 18 years old and have a progressive
neuromuscular disorder.
His online questionnaire can be found at www.surveymonkey.com/s.asp?u=344351246794.
For information or a hard copy of the survey, contact Chen at (517)
355-8091 or chenroy@msu.edu.
MDA Seeks to Move
Gene Therapy to Clinical Trials
In September, MDA issued a request for proposals related to gene
therapy for ALS. The transfer of genes for vascular endothelial
growth factor (VEGF) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1), as
well as strategies to block genetic information through a technique
known as RNA interference, have shown promise in laboratory
models of ALS, and MDA now wishes to move these strategies into
clinical trials as quickly as possible.
More Influence Than You
Know...
by Christopher Rice
Living with ALS, of course, has many downsides. At the same time,
dealing with people, in day-to-day activities, has taught me a lot
about the upsides. One thing I’ve learned is that the way
I carry myself and the way I deal with life really have an effect
on others.
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Chris and Reda Rice of Houston are co-chairs of MDA's ALS Division
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This became apparent in my correspondence with Tara, a friend and
co-worker at Lincoln Property. Tara was an administrative assistant
to a vice president in Austin, Texas, part of the information technology
service area for which I was responsible. She e-mailed me to inform
me she was moving on to another job. She made some comments that
were quite surprising to me, and very nice. With her permission,
here is the edited e-mail:
Chris —
I have met some wonderful people over the years that I am really
going to miss — and you are certainly at the top of that list!
I’ve learned a lot of things because of you — about
myself, about ALS, human nature in general... You really are an
amazing human bean (as my little one says).
Because I know you, I will try my best to always be thankful
for my health, and if you can get up and live life to the fullest
every day, then I can surely get off my butt and play with my kids
when I really want to sleep in! I’ve also had the opportunity
to share these lessons with my girls at a very young age —
my oldest daughter researched ALS and gave a presentation to her
class! And since we were on TV at the Telethon here — now
my kids think I am a star!
Also because I know you, I will be more patient with people
who have challenges — because now I know that behind the slurred
speech lies a brilliant mind and a warm heart — a valuable
co-worker and a loving husband and father!!
… I wanted you to know that you have educated and inspired
me. Someday medical science will prevail — and then there
will be Chris Rice’s Cure for Lou Gehrig’s Disease!
And maybe they will name a stadium after you!
… always know that you and your beautiful family are in
my thoughts and prayers!
Tara’s words surprised me. All I thought I was doing was
living my life, the way I see so many others with ALS do. I had
no idea what kind of effect someone with a disability, namely, ALS,
can have. I recently retired from my job, and heard similar things
from others I worked with over the past seven years.
All of us who have ALS can and do use this attitude in order to
make this disease more visible. One person may be a whisper, but
all together we speak in a loud voice.
Reminder
Every fall, MDA offers those it
serves free flu shots, because influenza can be extremely
dangerous for people affected by neuromuscular diseases.
For more information, call your local MDA office.
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Snapshots of Life
by Alyssa Quintero
From celebrities to prominent political figures to professional
athletes to the average man or woman on the street, John Joseph
Davis has seen it all.
For over 40 years, Davis has photographed countless American and
international icons, including Sammy Davis Jr., Gregory Peck, Dionne
Warwick, Ray Charles, Ted Kennedy, Nelson Mandela, Venus and Serena
Williams, and Michael Jordan, just to name a few.
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Serena and Venus Williams with their
mother Oracene. Photo by John Davis
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Davis’ résumé — and his memory —
is long. After taking thousands of photographs over the years, the
self-proclaimed natural-born photographer really thought he had
seen it all. Well, almost.
In August 2004, Davis received a diagnosis of ALS.
“I knew right away it was devastating and terminal,”
Davis said. “It tore me apart for a while, but then I knew
that I had to pick up the pieces. It was very difficult to tell
my wife.”
Davis, 65, who attends the MDA Clinic at UCLA, has lost the use
of his arms and legs, uses a power wheelchair for mobility, and
is experiencing swallowing difficulties.
With his diagnosis, however, Davis realized that it’s not
the end but rather a new beginning, of sorts.
“It’s a new beginning spiritually,” Davis explained.
“For all those years, I was living from the outside in, and
now I have to reverse that and live from the inside out.”
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Gregory Peck. Photo by John Davis
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During this time of transition and change, Davis and his wife,
Cheryl, as well as other family members, have relied on prayer to
sustain one another and move ahead.
“Change is not easy,” Davis explained. “I would
hug everybody I came in contact with, or shake his or her hand.
I miss hugging my wife, but you haven’t heard me say that
I miss too much more.”
Body of Work
Davis, a revered international photographer based in Los Angeles
since the early 1960s, has several long-standing celebrity clients,
including recording artist Dionne Warwick and actress Marla Gibbs.
For several years, he has shot photography for the Essence, Soul
Train and NAACP Image Awards. Several of his photographs also have
been published in Ebony magazine and in official publications for
the state of California.
“I’ve photographed a lot of legends, but I never advertised,”
Davis said.
Davis’ photographs have been displayed at various museums,
universities and galleries, including, most recently, the National
African American Museum and Cultural Center in Wilberforce, Ohio;
the Black Art Gallery in Los Angeles; the Pasadena Conference Center;
Charles Drew University in Watts, Calif.; and the Los Angeles County
Office of Education. Davis’ photographs of various jazz legends
can be viewed at the Los Angeles Jazz Society.
Davis, who worked as the official photographer for the city of
Inglewood, Calif., also has received many accolades, including a
proclamation honoring him from the city of Inglewood in 2001 and
a proclamation of John Joseph Davis Day, on Aug. 12, 2001, in Dayton,
Ohio, where he was born, and where he worked with at-risk youth
before moving to Los Angeles in the early 1960s.
Sammy Davis Jr. was one of Davis’ most prominent celebrity
clients. He photographed the late entertainer during the last two
years of his life. The star’s wife, Altovise Davis, is working
on a book about her husband’s life. At this time, Davis is
in talks to contribute his photos for the book.
“I’m really looking forward to working on that project,”
he said.
A Night Under the Stars
Davis received the 2005 Golden Wings Award at MDA’s 19th
annual A Night Under the Stars spring gala in Los Angeles on April
16. Established in 2003, the Golden Wings Award acknowledges an
individual whose remarkable talents and vision make a difference
in the lives of all they touch.
“I was very excited,” Davis said. “I decided
that there was no way that I could receive an award as great as
this without giving it away. I said this goes to the people who
picked me up the day when I fell, and it goes to the wife that has
to make sure I’m OK.”
Davis has always reveled in his ability to capture life through
his photography.
“Most photographers photograph with their eyes, but I photograph
from the heart,” Davis explained.
Life With ALS
While Davis admits that his emotions, especially his self-esteem,
have been on a roller-coaster ride since his diagnosis, he also
said that he has learned much about himself and humankind in a rather
short time.
“It’s been an amazing journey, and it’s given
me a lot of time to look deep inside myself,” he added.
For Davis, ALS has helped put life in perspective. While he understands
that ALS brings certain physical losses, Davis prefers to enjoy
the life he has left to live.
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John Joseph Davis and his wife, Cheryl
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“I can outweigh the losses by looking at what I have left,”
he said. “I have a beautiful family that loves me dearly and
friends galore. As I look at what I have left, it’s truly
amazing. I’m not the old John Davis, but there is something
new inside of me.”
Davis, who with his wife shares six children, is hopeful that some
of his best days are on the horizon.
“Most people have already written me off, but I will be back,
and there’s still a real hope that I’ll get to hear
that shutter go off again,” he said.
Back to top
An Endless Fight
for Essential Benefits
by Erin Brady Worsham
When I made the choice to live on a ventilator in 1997, I had no
idea how many times I would have to fight for the private duty nursing
(PDN) that makes it feasible for me to safely stay at home with
my husband and young son.
Once I became vent-dependent, my doctor prescribed 12 hours a day
of nursing care. But TennCare, Tennessee’s Medicaid program,
repeatedly refused to provide my PDN, on the grounds that it was
not a covered benefit.
We sought help from the Tennessee Justice Center. Our lawyer argued
that Tennessee had not followed the Grier Consent Decree, which
lays out guidelines the state must follow for denials and appeals.
We hadn’t been properly notified of the initial denial nor
told how to appeal. In addition, by categorically stating that PDN
was not a covered benefit, TennCare showed it had neither considered
my individual case nor based its decision on anything in my medical
record. In May 1998, the state reversed the denials and determined
that PDN was medically necessary for me.
Victory! Yet PDN continued to be a volatile issue. Later in 1998,
the state proposed limiting home health visits to a total of 125
a year. The question of just what constituted a “visit”
was troubling for someone receiving PDN in 12-hour shifts. If this
proposal carried, many people would be forced into nursing homes.
I wrote down my thoughts on my Liberator communication device and
testified, with others, before a legislative committee in 2000.
Thankfully, the proposed changes did not go into effect. I could
breathe easy for a while.
But not for long. Near the end of 2002, our PDN was threatened
again. The state seemed determined to warehouse its most vulnerable
citizens in nursing homes.
Desperate times called for desperate measures. My husband, son
and I attended the Christmas Open House at the Governor’s
Mansion, hoping to speak with Gov. Don Sundquist. He wasn’t
there, but we gave the First Lady’s secretary a picture I’d
made, along with a letter I wrote about the issue. But Sundquist’s
term was ending. He hadn’t been a friend to the disability
community while in office and did nothing to help us as he left.
Enter Gov. Phil Bredesen — a man who made his fortune in
health care and who ran on the promise that he alone could reform
TennCare. We didn’t know his idea of reform meant cutting
323,000 people from the rolls and reducing the benefits for another
396,000. One of those benefits was PDN.
This was the most serious threat yet, because Bredesen had obtained
federal approval to proceed with the cuts. We received a letter
saying we would lose our PDN on Aug. 1, 2005.
Once again, we didn’t sit back and wait for the axe to fall.
We joined with hundreds of other protesters to put pressure on the
governor. I spoke (via Liberator) at a prayer vigil, wrote letters
to the editor and state and federal legislators, and attended vigils
on the steps of the Capitol.
We’ve now been told that PDN will not be cut for ventilator-dependent
enrollees, and the whole issue of PDN for others will be shelved
until early 2006.
Another victory! For now. If — when — the issue arises
again, we will be back on the front lines fighting, because the
livelihood of our family depends on it.
ALS may have weakened my body, but it hasn’t weakened my
resolve to survive. I will fight for as long as it takes!
Editor’s Note: Tennessee is one
of several states that have curtailed or restructured Medicaid benefits
due to rising costs. Many others are considering cutbacks. A proposed
$10 billion reduction in federal Medicaid funds, scheduled for a
vote in Congress this fall, has been put on hold due to the unknown
effects of Hurricane Katrina on the Medicaid program.
Worsham, a freelance computer artist who
lives in Nashville, Tenn., received her ALS diagnosis in 1994.
“Caring
Every Day”
Believe. Protect. Reach Out.
National Family Caregivers Month November 2005
For more information and resources, see www.thefamilycaregiver.org
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