X-Message-Number: 26223
From: "" <>
Subject: Suspended Animation #1 Release
Date: Mon, 23 May 2005 01:39:37 -0400

Since someone posted the #2 release here, here is the #1
which I do not recall having seen here before.  Also, SA's
new website is:  http://www.suspendedinc.com/


News from Suspended Animation 
Number 1 
April 24th, 2005 

We will be distributing news updates from Suspended
Animation 
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Suspended Animation Finalizes its Agreement 
with The Cryonics Institute 

SA's previous management negotiated an agreement with CI
last 
year, but incoming general manager Rose Strain felt there 
were some aspects of that document which were insufficiently
clear. After Rose left SA, the accumulated pages of
proposals 
and her revisions were inherited by Charles Platt, who 
decided that the matter had become so affected by
conflicting 
suggestions and detail, the quickest way to address the
issue 
would be to start over. 

Platt sent his preliminary draft to CI president Ben Best 
just over two months ago. The negotiation process continued 
with revisions from David Ettinger, Saul Kent, and a 
consulting attorney with extensive experience in contract 
law. Relatively few compromises were required, and the 
negotiations were quick and amicable. 

In mid-April the board of directors at CI approved the 
document. On April 21st the difficult issue of standby fees 
was resolved at SA, and Ben Best and Charles Platt started 
discussing a format for presenting this information on the
CI 
web site. (SA does not maintain a web site at this time). 
Best and Platt exchanged a signed copy of the signature page
of the primary document via fax on April 24th, and the deal 
was done. 

Highlights of the agreement include:

--Two payment plans are offered, one flat-rate, the other 
using a pay-as-you-go format. Both plans require prepayment 
for procedures that precede pronouncement of legal death. 
Subsequent procedures will be paid through CI, using each 
member's excess life insurance. 

--Reduced fees are offered for people who require help
within 
200 miles of the SA facility. 

--All procedures are whole-body only. 

--Transport to Michigan will be in water ice (dry ice is not
an option). 

--SA offers CI members the extra-cost option of glycerol 
cryoprotection by SA in Michigan if they prefer this to the 
new proprietary vitrification solution offered by CI. 

--Air ambulance is an extra-cost option.

--No response outside of North America is available. 

--Canadian response is under review. 

--This is the first time that full standby service has been 
offered to CI members on a contractual basis. 

For CI's official announcement, go to 
http://www.cryonics.org/SA/SA_CI_Announcement.html

For a tabulation of fees prepared by SA, go to 
http://www.cryonics.org/SA/StandbyFees.pdf 

For some sample payment scenarios prepared by SA, go to 
http://www.cryonics.org/SA/Scenarios.pdf 

For complete copies of all contractual agreements, go to 
http://www.cryonics.org/SA/SA_documents.html 

SA has a pre-existing agreement with the American Cryonics 
Society, which remains unchanged. 

SA has offered a draft of a possible agreement to Alcor, 
which we have been told is under discussion. 

Our primary objective at SA is to refine procedures and 
equipment that are used to minimize ischemic injury after 
cardiac arrest. We devote most of our resources to research 
and development in this area. Still, our work cannot be 
evaluated or validated unless we are able to manage cases. 
For this reason, SA hopes to offer assistance to all
cryonics 
organizations in the years to come. 


Facility Buildout Reaches the Half-Way Mark

After a waiting period during which our architect made 
revisions to satisfy code requirements, buildout and 
renovation work at our new location began about three weeks 
ago. We are renting space totalling just over 8,500 square 
feet in a multi-tenant commercial building located in
Boynton 
Beach, very close to the Gateway exit on Interstate 95. 

Plumbing and framing work have now been completed, and our 
contractor is pushing ahead aggressively with the firm 
intention of finishing everything, including carpet 
installation, by mid-May. 

After we move to the new location we will begin hosting 
training sessions using the new equipment that we have been 
designing. We will also welcome visitors who are interested 
in our work. We must emphasize however that Suspended 
Animation is not a cryonics organization and does not
solicit 
customers from the general public. Our procedures are 
reserved for existing members of other organizations who 
request that initial intervention should be managed by SA. 

SA does not offer patient storage of any kind. 


Personnel

Mike Quinn, a research surgeon who is also qualified as a 
paramedic, decided to resign his position at Suspended 
Animation last month. Mike had been at SA since the 
beginning, and designed some of the early equipment here.

On April 19th we welcomed a new employee, Kelly Kingston, as
an office assistant who, we believe, will quickly acquire 
greater responsibilities than her job title suggests.
Already 
she has taken on many of the logistical challenges involved 
in our upcoming relocation, and she has expressed great 
interest in participating in field work as soon as she 
receives the necessary training. 

Here's a quick summary of personnel currently working at SA 
or affiliated with SA: 

Saul Kent, CEO and member of the board of directors.

William Faloon, member of the board of directors.

Charles Platt, general manager and member of the board of 
directors.

Aschwin de Wolf, chief financial officer, also involved in 
all policy decisions relating to standby protocol. 

Robert Pruss, electromechanical engineer, also fluent in 
LabView control systems, playing an active role in standby 
kit redesign and will be working on future perfusion circuit
design. 

Jay Wasserlauf, biologist and surgeon, supervising standby 
kit inventory and deployment, has participated in one 
cryonics case and will be available for surgical procedures 
in future cases. 

Kelly Kingston, office assistant, taking over some of the 
duties previously performed by de Wolf and Platt. 

Jim di Paulo, crafts person, specializing in all forms of 
welding. Jim is creating our own metal-working shop and is 
building prototypes, working for us on a part-time basis. 

Christopher Dougherty, Ph.D., molecular biologist, formerly 
an SA employee, currently an independent contractor testing 
our medications at an outside laboratory. 

In addition we can request assistance from various 
consultants who are qualified to perform standby work, and
we 
receive informal advice and guidance from scientists in two 
California laboratories that share our general source of 
funding. So far this year we have received visits from Bill 
Voice (paramedic at Alcor), Sandra Russell (from Critical 
Care Research), and Todd Huffman (neuroscientist and Alcor 
member). 

Our day-to-day operations have been further enhanced by the 
arrival from Arizona of Eddie, the office cat, a rodent 
supervisor whose duties also extend to small reptiles. 


End of news bulletin 

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