NH FAMILY COURT

REMEMBER YOUR NOT ALONE. Please contact your state house representative or THE CENTER FOR REDRESS OF GRIEVANCES in NH. And watch SPEAK UP NH, who shows one NH Family Court case after another like Jamie Doherty's http://youtu.be/CIOXB21sBMY. You too can tell the public your experience with NH's Family Judicial Branch. NH's very own Family Court Records are proving that NH's Judicial Branch fully participates and supports Kidnapping and Domestic Violence; Real Estate Fraud, Mortgage Fraud, and Property Deed Fraud; Perjury, Falsifying Documents and Non Existing Issues, and above all, Obstruction of all Justice. Case file after case file showing all the evidence in multiple Family Court Records, that are filling the NH County Court Clerk Records Offices daily throughout the whole state! People are being visited by the FBI and THREATENED simply over a NH divorce case. You truly know the truth struck a nerve then. So become a part of the solution and bring them your court case file with your evidence of your experience with NH Family Court. Fear and Silence only continues to fuel what is already a corrupted government branch harming all those who pay their salaries. You are not alone. Numbers can truly speak louder than words!

Dec 12, 2018

HOW LONG DOES A STATE HAVE TO REMAIN IN A SILENT STATE OF EMERGENCY?

What is New Hampshire going to do now?  Today, CNN reported that "the CDC has now confirmed that Fentanyl is now the most commonly used drug involved in drug overdoses, according to a new government report. The latest numbers from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics say that the rate of drug overdoses involving the synthetic opioid skyrocketed by about 113% each year from 2013 through 2016.

The number of total drug overdoses jumped 54% each year between 2011 and 2016. In 2016, there were 63,632 drug overdose deaths."

For the past forty years, NH's rates of institutionalization only rose while government continually closed more community services each year while the  state's health just decline.  Now New Hampshire only has a very long history of only continually reneging on every poor commitment attempt ever made by government, to develop any system of community-based services, that has  caught up with the state and become too high a price to pay.

In 2018, for the past five years, the No.1 leading cause of death already has been cancer in New Hampshire, and apparently no one even seems knowledgeable enough to conclude why that is.  The CDC found that pediatric cancer rates again are now only the highest in New Hampshire.  The study shows that there were 816 pediatric cancer cases recorded just alone in New Hampshire between 2003 and 2014. That's a rate of more than 205 per one million, which is the highest rate in the United States.

Overall, there were about 174 pediatric cancer cases per one million children and teens alone throughout New Hampshire, and the rate was higher in males compared to females. When broken down by age group, the rates were higher in children between the ages of 0-4 and teens between the ages of 15-19, as compared to kids between the ages of 5-9 and 10-14. The state's second leading cause of death still continues to remain to be drug overdose. 

New Hampshire has now become the second highest rate of opioid-related overdose deaths in the country mixed with the fact that the state already has the second highest rate of people already collecting disability just for mental illness alone.   Only once again, at almost double the rate of the entire country.

The state now requires so much more healthcare than what the state is even possibly capable to serve in 2019, that already 2 years ago, New Hampshire began receiving $150 million over 5 years in 2016, by federal Medicaid officials, to expand access to mental health and substance abuse treatment services alone, but now is no where even close to covering what is now currently necessary and required by the state.




Healthcare in NH is already extremely very poor due to the state's continuous reckless and poor financing abilities.  It is not due to physician's care and knowledge by any means. Physicians and nurses can only do so much with what their given to work with by the state's government.  Now, it has simply reached the point where the state could not even simply handle an out-brake from a 250 percent increase of just gonorrhea alone in 2016.  New Hampshire had to report the following year (2017) that 15 percent of the gonorrhea cases already treated in 2016, were now not even correctly properly treated in the first place.


According To The National Institute of Drug Overdose:

"In 2016, there were 437 opioid-related overdose deaths­­­ in New Hampshire—a rate of 35.8 deaths per 100,000 persons—nearly 3 times higher than the national rate of 13.3 deaths per 100,000. From 2013 through 2016, opioid-related deaths in New Hampshire tripled. This increase was mainly driven by the number of deaths related to synthetic opioids (predominately fentanyl), which increased more than tenfold, ­from 30 to 363 deaths, during this time. NH hospitals have (repeatedly) been in need of expansions and are not even equipped to handle what they have now (For decades).


The State has knowingly owed 10 hospitals hundreds millions of dollars and is so broke now, to the point where they never bothered to even include it in the state's budget. Now for the past five years, the No.1 cause of death is only increasing in numbers from cancer throughout the entire state and all the government can tell us for five years is they simply don't know why.

Opioid Pain Reliever Prescriptions

In 2015, New Hampshire providers wrote 66.6 opioid prescriptions per 100 persons (886,000 prescriptions). In the same year, the average U.S. rate was 70 opioid prescriptions per 100 persons (IMS Health, 2016External link, please review our disclaimer.).
This graph shows the number of opioid-related overdose deaths in New Hampshire from 1999-2016. In 2016, there were 437 opioid-related overdose deaths: 363 involved synthetic opioids, 34 involved heroin, and 89 involved prescription opioids. Categories are not mutually exclusive because deaths may involve more than one drug.

Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS)

A CDC study analyzing 2013 NAS data available across 28 states estimated the national average NAS rate at 0.6 percent of live births (CDC, MMWR, 2014). NAS in New Hampshire increased dramatically from 2003 through 2011—from 20 cases in 2003 to nearly 150 in 2011 (NH DHHS). By 2015 this number rose to 269 infants (a rate of 24.4 of 1,000 live births) diagnosed with NAS (K. Smith, Carsey Research Regional Brief #51, University of NH External link, please review our disclaimer.).

HIV Prevalence and HIV Diagnoses Attributed to Injection Drug Use (IDU)

  • U.S. Incidence: In 2015, 9.1 percent (3,5941) of the 39,513 new diagnoses of HIV in the United States were attributed to IDU. Among new cases, 8.2 percent (2,6141) of cases among men and 13.2 percent (980) of cases among women were transmitted via IDU (CDC).
  • U.S. Prevalence: In 2014, 955,081 Americans were living with a diagnosed HIV infection—a rate of 299.5 per 100,000 persons. Of these, 18.1 percent (131,0561) of males and 22.6 percent (52,013) of females were living with HIV attributed to IDU (CDC).
  • State Incidence: Of the new HIV cases in 2015, 22 occurred in New Hampshire (no transmission data available for New Hampshire) (AIDSVuExternal link, please review our disclaimer.).
  • State Prevalence: In 2014, an estimated 1,240 persons were living with a diagnosed HIV infection in New Hampshire—a rate of 108 infections per 100,000 persons (AIDSVuExternal link, please review our disclaimer.). As of 2013, 12.4 percent of these persons were living with HIV per AIDS attributed to IDU (NH.gov). 

Hepatitis C (HCV) Prevalence and HCV Diagnoses Attributed to Injection Drug Use

  • U.S. Incidence: In 2015, there were 181,871 reported cases of chronic HCV and 33,900 estimated cases of acute HCV2 (CDC). Where data were available, 64.2 percent of acute cases reported IDU (CDC).
  • U.S. Prevalence: An estimated 3.5 million Americans are living with HCV, including approximately 2.7 million living with chronic infections (CDC).
  • State Incidence: State incidence data are not available for 2016 and all previous years. As of June 2017, New Hampshire collected 113 reports of chronic HCV and 10 reports of acute HCV for 2017 (NH.gov).
  • State Prevalence: Current state prevalence data are not available. As of 2010, an estimated 11,000 persons (1,070 cases per 100,000 persons) were living with HCV in New Hampshire (HepVuExternal link, please review our disclaimer.).
Additional Resources
So how long does a state have to actually remain in a silent state of emergency before it actually is a transparent state of emergency?  Children have been dying in NH now for 5 years from both cancer and NAS and even that is no great urgent matter to the government of NH!

ONE CHILD's BLOOD ON THE HANDS OF GOVERNMENT, IS ALREADY ONLY ONE TOO MANY.  AND IT DOESN'T EVEN TAKE A BRAIN INJURY ALREADY INFLICTED BY THE NH GOVERNMENT ITSELF, TO JUST SIMPLY SEE THAT!