Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Healthy Trust Sponsoring First Aid at Long Grove Chocolate Fest

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care is proud to be the First Aid Sponsor for the Long Grove Chocolate Fest which is taking place on May 2nd, 3rd, and 4th. Healthy Trust will be providing First Aid to the visitors, sponsors, participants, and workers associated with the event.

Any festival in Long Grove is the perfect time to enjoy friends, shop the 80 specialty shops and restaurants, spend time with family, and feel the charming character of this historic village; but Chocolate Festival will leave your taste buds…. well…. happiest!

Wherever you go, surrender to temptation as you bite into a cold chocolate-dipped strawberry, crunch on fresh chocolate popcorn, bask in the flavor of a perfect chocolate cake, taste the sweetness of the ultimate chocolate donut... even sip up a chocolate martini!

Besides exceptional dining at the various village restaurants, other favorite foods will be available at more than 20 outdoor tents, ranging from delicious gyros to Smoothies.

Food booths are open 10 AM to 6 PM and the local Long Grove restaurants are open well beyond the Fest hours.

Grab a beer at the Beer/Brat Tent, or a cold bottle of Hinckley Springs at many vendor booths to quench that thirst!

The event have additional seating at the Fountain Square Beer and Brat Tent, so after you shop, take a seat, watch the stage performers, drink a Miller Draft, and enjoy the scenery!

Healthy Trust Medical and Pharmacy Discount Card

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care will also be giving out their new no cost Medical and Pharmacy Discount Cards at the Fest. The medical part of the program can save individuals and families up to 75% on their medical costs at the Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Clinic in Wheeling.

The prescription benefit part of your program provides you with discounts of up to 80% of the usual and customary costs of prescription drugs at participating pharmacies. The discount varies from drug to drug, and participating pharmacy. You can use your card at local pharmacies such as Walgreen's, CVS, Wal-Mart, Target, Costco, K-Mart, Dominick's, Sam's Club, Osco Drug, and thousands of other participating independent pharmacies.

Spin the Healthy Trust Wheel of Fortune!

Healthy Trust will also have a "Wheel of Fortune" where Fest goers can spin the wheel for no cost complimentary gift cards for health care services at the clinic. This our way of helping you get to know the quality health care that the Healthy Trust Clinic provides to the local community.

Healthy Trust Gift Cards Include:
  • Complimentary Comprehensive Preventive Physical Examination Valued up to $260
  • Complimentary Diabetes Testing Valued at $35
  • Complimentary Hearing Testing Valued at $35
  • Complimentary Immediate Care Doctors Visit
  • Complimentary Chiropractic Exam Valued at $115
  • School and Sports Physical Exams Valued at $45

Healthy Trust serves the Chicago North Shore Communities of Lake County, Wheeling, Prospect Heights, Lincolnshire, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Northbrook, Highland Park, Long Grove, Riverwoods, Des Plaines, Palatine, Glenview, Highwood, Northfield, Libertyville, Winnetka, Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Mundelein, and Bannockburn.

Come see us at the Long Grove Chocolate Fest. Our First Aid booth will be located conveniently on the corner of Old McHenry Road, and Robert Coffin!

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Healthy Trust Celebrates Chocoalate

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care is the official First Aid sponsor of the 2008 Long Grove Chocolate Fest which be held on May 2nd, 3rd, and 4th to kick off the Chicago Summer Festival season.

Chocolate of course is one of the worlds guilty pleasures, but did you know that chocolate taken in the right form, and with the right moderation may be very good for you?

Researchers have some news for chocolate lovers: it may be good for you. Scientists reported preliminary evidence recently that cocoa and other chocolates may keep high blood pressure down, your blood flowing and your heart healthy.

The research, the latest which correlates eating flavonoid-rich foods with a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease, was presented in February at the American Association for the Advancement of Science's (AAAS) annual meeting in Boston.

One study found that a substance in cocoa helps the body process nitric oxide (NO), a compound critical for healthy blood flow and blood pressure. Another study showed that flavonols in cocoa prevent fat-like substances in the bloodstream from oxidizing and clogging the arteries, and make blood platelets less likely to stick together and cause clots.

Flavonoids are plant compounds with potent antioxidant properties; so far, scientists have found more than 4,000 kinds. Cocoa beans contain large quantities of flavonoids, and so do red wine, tea, cranberries, peanuts, strawberries, apples and many other fruits and vegetables. The flavonoids in chocolate are called flavonols.

Generally, science has found that dark chocolate is higher in flavonoids than milk chocolate. The way that cocoa powder and chocolate syrups are manufactured removes most flavonoids.

Nitric Oxide

In the first study, researchers gave Boston volunteers cocoa with either a high or low amount of flavonols. Those who drank cocoa with more flavonols showed more nitric oxide activity.

"Nitric oxide plays such an important role in the maintenance of healthy blood pressure and, in turn, cardiovascular health," said lead researcher Dr. Norman K. Hollenberg, physician and professor of medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

The residents of an island called Kuna in Panama prompted Hollenberg's study. These indigenous people rarely develop high blood pressure, although they drink about 5 cups of cocoa each day and include it in many recipes. But if they leave the island, the risk of high blood pressure increases, and studies found it wasn't related to salt intake or obesity.

Next, Hollenberg's team will determine if regulating nitric oxide with flavonols has a positive impact.

"If our research results continue to support a link between consumption of flavonol-rich cocoa and nitric oxide synthesis, there could be significant implications for public health," said Hollenberg.

Promotes Blood Flow

The other study compared how blood platelets responded to a flavonol-rich cocoa drink with 25 grams of semi-sweet chocolate pieces and a blood-thinning, 81-milligram aspirin dose.

The research found similar reactions to the two from a group of 20- to 40-year-olds: both the drink and the aspirin prevented platelets from sticking together or clotting, which can impede blood flow.

In other words, flavonol-rich cocoa and chocolate act similarly to low-dose aspirin in promoting healthy blood flow. Reducing the blood's ability to clot also reduces the risk of stroke and heart attacks.

Lead study author Dr. Carl Keen cautioned that his team isn't suggesting that people eat a couple of candy bars instead of taking their daily dose of aspirin.

"We're not advocating that people consume flavonol-rich foods in place of aspirin," stressed Keen, who is also the University of California-Davis nutrition department chairman.

For people who cannot take aspirin, however, he said eating flavonol-rich foods "may be a useful approach." He noted one important difference between aspirin and flavonol-rich foods: "The effects you see in aspirin are longer-lasting than the effects you see in flavonols," he said.

Although the trial involved just 40 people, Keen called the results "remarkably robust" and said the platelet effect may be related to the nitric oxide benefits found by Hollenberg's study.
Keen's team currently has an article under review in which they show a direct comparison to low-dose aspirin using the same study group.

"The next thing on our agenda is to look at chronic effects," said Keen. "What happens when a person has a high flavonol intake for two weeks? Do you still see the same effects? Many times...the body adapts or adjusts and you don't necessarily see the same thing after two or three weeks."

Many CFS specialists consider chocolate one of a few substances their patients should stay away from completely. CFS specialist Chuck Lapp, M.D., is one of them.

"I've always recommended that PWCs avoid sugar, caffeine, alcohol, Nutrasweet and tobacco," said Lapp, director of the Hunter Hopkins Center in Charlotte, NC. (He tells patients to remember the things they shouldn't eat by remembering the mnemonic SCANT, the first letter of each of those words.)

"These items are not tolerated well," he said. "PWCs tend to have hypoglycemia, and eating refined sugar - like chocolate candy - triggers reactive hypoglycemia, or a 'let down' in energy a couple hours later. And the cocoa used in cake, for example, doesn't contain refined sugar, but has a caffeine-like effect."

Dick Bruno, M.D., agrees. He's Director of the Fatigue Management Programs and Post-Polio Institute at Englewood Hospital and Medical Center in Englewood, NJ.

"PWCs shouldn't use anything containing caffeine- including chocolate, coffee, tea or soda-to pump themselves up," said Dr. Bruno. "What's more, we discourage the 'sugar high' carbs provide and recommend a hypoglycemia diet: using protein as a long-lasting source of fuel to supply and turn on damaged, brain-activating system neurons."

Chocolate's Benefits?

A PWC who was a true chocoholic could do a little research and argue that there are several bioactive compounds in chocolate that promote alertness, lessen pain and promote well-being.

For example, the stimulants theobromine, caffeine, tyramine and phenylethylamine (PEA) provide a brain-fogged PWC with a much-needed lift. Tryptophan, an essential amino acid, lessens anxiety by producing the neurotransmitter serotonin; endorphins, the body's natural opiates, reduce sensitivity to pain.

Anandamide acts like a cannabinoid to promote relaxation. And last but certainly not least, chocolate is a natural analgesic, and high-fat, chocolate foods trigger the brain's production of natural opiates.

So let's sum up. Chocolate gives you an energy lift, less anxiety, a reduction in pain-who wouldn't recommend something that did all that? Well, a nutritionist or biochemist could argue that chocolate doesn't contain much of these ingredients.

For example, while caffeine does encourage alertness, there is less caffeine in chocolate than there is in a cup of coffee. (There are about 30 milligrams of caffeine in your average chocolate bar, while a cup of coffee contains 100 -150 mgs.)

Another example: PEA causes blood pressure and blood sugar to rise, and you'll feel alert and content for awhile. But those good feelings are likely to be followed by a sugar-induced drop in energy that leaves you more tired than before you ate the candy.

Cannabinoids are substances that mimic marijuana. The chemical in marijuana that makes people "high" - tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) - binds to certain receptors in the brain. The anandamide in chocolate can bind to the same receptors, producing a "high."

However, Christian Felder at the National Institute of Mental Health would point out that a 130-pound person would have to eat 25 pounds of chocolate all at once to get a marijuana-like effect.

And what about chocolate's ability to trigger the brain's natural opiates? At a CFS conference held September 1999 in Brussels, Belgium, Professor Jonathan Brostoff of London discussed "Allergy in CFS." He said about 25 percent of the population suffers from intolerances or allergies and the percentage is the same for PWCs.

Brostoff said food and inhalant sensitivities could lead to health problems, including migraine, irritable bowel syndrome, arthralgia and chronic fatigue. He suggested an elimination diet to find out whether someone is intolerant. Furthermore, he blamed the "exorphins" (external morphine-like substances) in chocolate for "gut problems" and even "psychological sequelae.

Don't laugh: A study published in 1999 in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association found that chocolate contains "several biologically active constituents (methylxanthines, biogenic amines, and cannabinoid-like fatty acids), all of which potentially cause abnormal behaviors and psychological sensations that parallel those of other addictive substances."

So, about those chocolate cravings: At "The Challenge of Chronic Illness" CFS conference in Sydney, Australia, in 1999, Abhijit Chaudhuri, a neurologist on the Glasgow, Scotland-based team researching CFS, said about 40 percent of his patients routinely craved chocolate. He suggested SSRIs or and low-dose tricyclics to help prevent those cravings.

Some people find that Bupropion (Wellbutrin) reduces chocolate cravings.,That may be because Bupropion's chemical structure is similar to PEA.

Antioxidant Power

Here's an argument you could win with the nutritionist: Studies show that cocoa powder, dark chocolate and milk chocolate have higher Oxygen Radical Absorption Capacity (ORAC) values than many common foods, such as prunes and blueberries. (ORAC values measure how powerful an antioxidant a substance is.

An antioxidant is a substance that inhibits oxidation or reactions promoted by oxygen and peroxides, and that include many held to protect the living body from the deleterious effects of free radicals. Examples include beta-carotene, vitamin C, and alpha-tocopherol.

Dark chocolate has more than 13,000 ORAC units and milk chocolate has about 6,700, according to the Chocolate Manufacturers Association in McLean, Va. Unsweetened powdered cocoa starts out with almost twice as much antioxidants as dark chocolate, but when it's diluted with water or milk and sugar to make hot chocolate, the flavonoid total per serving plummets to about half that in milk chocolate.

In different terms, a 40-gram serving of milk chocolate contains about 400 milligrams of antioxidants, the same as a glass of red wine, according to research published by Joe A. Vinson of the University of Scranton, Pa. Vinson's team's results were also supported by ACRI.

Vinson and his colleagues found that the flavonoids in chocolate are more powerful than vitamins such as ascorbic acid in protecting circulating lipids from oxidation.

Atherosclerosis studies suggest that oxidation of lipoproteins is part of the process that creates the plaque that clogs artery walls.

"Chocolate just stands out," Vinson said. "It's much higher than anything else."

If that doesn't convince your doctor, try this: researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health found that those who eat chocolate and sweets up to three times each month live almost a year longer than those who eat too much or those who steer clear of junk altogether.

Industry-funded Research

Both studies presented at the February AAAS meeting used an experimental cocoa supplied by Mars Incorporated, and the candy company commissioned the research as well. Mars Incorporated makes M&Ms and Mars, Snickers and Dove bars, among other candies.

For the last few years, Mars Incorporated and the American Cocoa Research Institute (ACRI) in McLean, Va., have jointly funded research to try to find health benefits in the delectable dessert. Mars Incorporated external affairs director Marlene Machut said the studies began as "flavor research" but shifted to health benefits as evidence grew.

One problem with that was alluded to in an AAAS symposium on chocolate held in 2000: Why should consumers trust data on chocolate when it comes from industry-funded research?

"That's a valid question," acknowledged John W. Erdman, professor of food science and human nutrition at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and cochair of that symposium. But he also said in a recent interview that if the candy industry hadn't funded the research, "it would have been very difficult to get off the ground otherwise."

Erdman said the situation is similar to Quaker Oats' preliminary funding of research that showed oats' lowered serum cholesterol, or to Midwestern soy farmers funding most of the initial studies which showed that proteins and antioxidants in soy fight heart disease. Later clinical research done by independent labs around the world confirmed those smaller studies' conclusions and expanded upon them, he said.

"It's often necessary for a lot of promising, peer-reviewed, industry-financed studies to be done before government steps in with financial support for larger-scale research," Erdman said. "Nowadays the FDA wants preliminary information before they fund a major project."

Rather than questioning the data, Professor Keen believes people should applaud the industry for investigating the nutritional value of their products.

"Responsible food companies have a responsibility to fund research into the potential value of nutrients in those foods," he said. "If [these] companies help fund research at independent campuses and universities, and generate exciting data, that tells the NIH, 'This is a worthwhile area in which to invest precious taxpayer dollars."

Conclusive Evidence?

So does chocolate contribute to disease prevention? Should we eat chocolate for its health benefits as well as for its terrific taste?

When asked to choose how far along the preliminary-conclusive continuum this research is, Erdman said, "It's moving along. People are starting to say, 'There's something here.' Scientists are finding similar results with compounds in fruits and vegetables, tea, red wine and tomatoes."
Keen agreed, pointing out that the tea, grape and chocolate industries are just a few of the groups exploring antioxidants' potential benefits.

"I think one should view it from a collective perspective," he suggested. "There are a number of industries with very different types of food products who are saying, 'It looks like these compounds may have some potential health benefits,'" he said.

Of course, people should always be "skeptical" until results are repeated and published in peer-reviewed journals, Keen said.

The USDA Food Composition Laboratory is already sold: They're developing a database reporting the levels of flavonoids in plant foods, and cocoa will be included along with fruits, berries and other foods that provide health benefits, said Machut. In addition, the lab adopted Mars Incorporated's methods for looking at the flavonol levels in food products.

Methods Matter

"The cacao bean and its bran have the highest polyphenol levels," nutritionist Angela Miraglio noted in a May 2001 article in Nutrition Notes. "Processing the beans destroys some polyphenols; temperature, chemical changes and duration of exposure contribute to the loss. So the level of polyphenols in the final product vary. Cocoa processors and chocolate manufacturers are beginning to take precautions to minimize the losses."

Mars recently developed a proprietary method for processing cocoa beans called Cocoapro?, which preserves polyphenols by changing the way the beans are selected, fermented, dried, as well as how they're processed and formulated, said external affairs director Machut. Some Mars candy bars feature the CocoaPro label.

"That's how consumers can identify chocolates that retain much of a cocoa bean's initial flavonoid riches," said Machut.

Future?

Both Keen's and Hollenberg's teams plan future research into the benefits of cocoa. As you might expect, Mars Incorporated plans more, too.

But the surest sign of the candy company's faith in its main product is the fact that they're "working with several pharmaceutical companies to isolate and develop cocoa components as cardiovascular pharmaceuticals." In other words, they're trying to develop a drug based on chocolate's cardiovascular health benefits.

"Take a candy bar and call me in the morning." I knew it all along: Those of us who've been self-medicating ourselves with a few chosen chocolate candies were simply ahead of our time.

Monday, April 28, 2008

Healthy Trust Answers Questions about PAP and HPV testing

New research suggests a test for the HPV virus that causes cervical cancer may replace the old-fashioned Pap smear one day as that cancer's primary screening tool. But even enthusiasts say it will take years of additional research to make such a big switch.

For now, a new trend is the Pap-plus — both a Pap and an HPV test — to improve screening accuracy. But government researchers issued a caution this month: Nearly one in 10 women over age 30 who get the combo test learns they have HPV even though their Paps show no cancer or even precancerous cells. They'll need repeat checkups, and maybe more in-depth testing, to tease out who's really at risk.

What makes the issue confusing: Women's bodies very often clear an HPV infection on their own, without lasting harm, but it can take a year. The younger the woman, the more likely that HPV is going to be transient.

"One HPV test does not tell you very much. Two consecutive HPV tests are what you need," says Debbie Saslow of the American Cancer Society, who fields phone calls from women frightened by the test mismatch.

"Right now we're, I think, in quite a state of flux," adds Dr. George Sawaya of the University of California, San Francisco, who worries that women aren't being educated enough about the pros and cons of their test options. "We are very thoughtful in telling them how we believe it can add to their care versus how it may be complicating."

Add the still-to-come impact of the new HPV vaccine, and one thing is clear: The days of simple one-size-fits-all advice on cervical cancer screening are ending — and women will need to be savvy to realize the newer technology's biggest benefits.

Cervical cancer will strike just over 11,000 U.S. women this year and kill 3,870, the cancer society predicts. Paps are credited for cutting death rates in half since the 1970s, because they can spot precancerous cells in time to remove them and prevent invasive cancer.

HPV, or human papillomavirus, is a common sexually transmitted disease. Some of HPV's dozens of strains can cause cervical cancer if a woman remains infected for a long time -- more than a year, according to research in this month's Journal of the National Cancer Institute. The HPV test is designed to detect most of the worst strains, using the same cells scraped from the cervix as a Pap does, to signal who's at high or low risk.

Neither test is perfect. Paps can miss cancer signs, which is why women are urged to get them every one to three years. Cervical cancer grows so slowly that an abnormality missed at one checkup can still be caught next time.

Also, roughly 4 million of the nation's 60 million annual Paps appear abnormal but not clearly dangerous. An HPV test that finds no virus gives peace of mind that nothing's wrong, a crucial use of that test.

A positive HPV test detects that virus is present, but can't measure duration of infection or actual abnormalities on the cervix, which require more in-depth follow-up testing.

"There's absolutely a tradeoff," says Dr. Diane Solomon of the National Cancer Institute.

"There's that balance between wanting to identify ... young women at risk, but not overtreat.

"Yet the HPV test's extra sensitivity, casting a wider net for who's at risk, is precisely what has researchers around the world furiously studying it as a potential replacement for the Pap. A list of studies in the last six months have made headlines by finding a stand-alone HPV test more accurate than a Pap at identifying women with cancer or pre-cancer — almost twice as accurate, in one study.

While that research so far has compared HPV to an older type of Pap, Canada last month began enrolling 33,000 women into a study to compare HPV testing to the liquid-based Paps most common today to see if that makes a difference.

Also, more precise HPV tests, that can pinpoint if women have the one or two most dire strains, are being developed to offer more accuracy.

An extra twist: The HPV test may prove especially useful in poor countries, where cervical cancer still strikes hundreds of thousands of women who have no access to repeat Paps and might benefit more from a less frequent viral check.

However all this research turns out, cancer groups for now stand by their guidelines:

—Women under 30 should get a Pap alone. If it's is inconclusive, HPV testing can rule out who needs further examination. A first test should be three years after starting sexual intercourse or at age 21.

—Women over 30 have the option of a Pap followed by an HPV test, or a simultaneous Pap-HPV combo. If both are negative, women can wait three years to be tested again.

—Women who don't get the HPV test still can wait three years between Paps, if they've had three consecutive clear Paps.

—Anyone who's received the new HPV vaccine still must follow guidelines for their age group. That's because the vaccine prevents some but not all HPV strains, and some teens or young women may have been infected already before they were vaccinated.

Stay tuned: The advice is almost certain to change in the next few years.

Paps are "going to be around for the next decade, I will say at least for the next decade," says NCI's Solomon. "But we may not be doing as many Paps in 10 years as we're doing now."

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Clinic has physician specialists in Women's Health on staff who can answer all your questions regarding PAP, and HPV Testing which is provided at the medical clinic in Wheeling.

Healthy Trust serves the Chicago North Shore Communities of Lake County, Wheeling, Prospect Heights, Lincolnshire, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Northbrook, Highland Park, Long Grove, Riverwoods, Des Plaines, Palatine, Glenview, Highwood, Northfield, Libertyville, Winnetka, Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Mundelein, and Bannockburn.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Want a Boy? Eat Your Wheaties!

New research suggests that what a woman eats before pregnancy influences the gender of her baby.

Having a hearty appetite, eating potassium-rich foods, including bananas, and not skipping breakfast seemed to raise the odds of having a boy.

The British research is billed as the first in humans to show a link between a woman's diet and whether she has a boy or girl.

It is not proof, but it fits with evidence from test-tube fertilization that male embryos thrive best with longer exposure to nutrient-rich lab cultures, said Dr. Tarun Jain. He is a fertility specialist at University of Illinois, Chicago, who wasn't involved in the study.

It might be that it takes more nutrients to build boys than girls, he said.

University of Exeter researcher Fiona Mathews, the study's lead author, said the findings also fit with fertility research showing that male embryos aren't likely to survive in lab cultures with low sugar levels. Skipping meals can result in low blood-sugar levels.

Jain said he was skeptical when he first heard about the research. But he said the study was well-done and merits follow-up to see if the theory proves true.

While sperm determine a baby's gender, it could be that certain nutrients or eating patterns make women's bodies more hospitable to sperm carrying the male chromosome, Jain said.
The study was published Wednesday in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, a British medical journal.

The research involved about 700 first-time pregnant women in the United Kingdom who didn't know the sex of their fetuses. They were asked about their eating habits in the year before getting pregnant.

Among women with the highest calorie intake before pregnancy (but still within a normal range), 56 percent had boys versus 45 percent of the women with the lowest calorie intake.

Women who ate at least one bowl of breakfast cereal daily were 87 percent more likely to have boys than those who ate no more than one bowlful a week.

In the study, eating very little cereal was considered a possible sign of skipping breakfast, Mathews said.

Compared with the women who had girls, those who had boys ate an additional 300 milligrams of potassium daily on average, "which links quite nicely with the old wives' tale that if you eat bananas, you'll have a boy," Mathews said.

Women who had boys also ate about 400 calories more daily than those who had girls, on average, she said.

Dr. Michael Lu, an associate professor of obstetrics, gynecology and public health at the University of California, Los Angeles, said the results "are certainly plausible from an evolutionary biology perspective." In other words, since boys tend to be bigger, it would make sense that it would take more calories to create them, Lu said.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Lasik Has It's Risks

In fury and despair, patients harmed by Lasik eye surgery told federal health advisers Friday of severe eye pain, blurred vision and even a son's suicide. The advisers recommended that the government warn more clearly about the risks of the hugely popular operations.

About 700,000 Americans a year undergo the elective laser surgery. Like golf star and famed Lasik recipient Tiger Woods, they're hoping to throw away their glasses, just as the ads say.

And while the vast majority benefit - most see 20-20 or even better - about one in four people who seeks Lasik is not a good candidate. A small fraction, perhaps 1 percent or fewer, suffer serious, life-changing side effects: worse vision, severe dry eye, glare, inability to drive at night.
"Too many Americans have been harmed by this procedure and it's about time this message was heard," David Shell of Washington told the Food and Drug Administration's scientific advisers before their recommendation that the FDA provide clearer warnings.

Shell held up large photographs that he said depict his blurred world, showing halos around objects and double vision, since his 1998 Lasik.

"I see multiple moons," he said angrily. "Anybody want to have Lasik now?"

Colin Dorrian was in law school when dry eye made his contact lenses so intolerable that he sought Lasik, even though a doctor noted his pupils were pretty large. Both the dry eye and pupil size should have disqualified Dorrian, but he received Lasik anyway - and his father described six years of eye pain and fuzzy vision before the suburban Philadelphia man killed himself last year.

"As soon as my eyes went bad, I fell into a deeper depression than I'd ever experienced, and I couldn't get out," Gerard Dorrian read from his son's suicide note.

Matt Kotsovolos, who worked for the Duke Eye Center when he had a more sophisticated Lasik procedure in 2006, said doctors classify him as a success because he now has 20-20 vision. But he said, "For the last two years I have suffered debilitating and unremitting eye pain. ... Patients do not want to continue to exist as helpless victims with no voice."

The sober testimonies illustrated that a decade after Lasik hit the market, there still are questions about just how often patients suffer bad outcomes from the $2,000-per-eye procedure.

But one thing is clear, said Dr Jayne Weiss of Detroit's Kresge Eye Institute, who chairs the FDA advisory panel: "This is a referendum on the performance of Lasik by some surgeons who should be doing a better job."

The FDA advisers - a group of mostly glasses-wearing eye doctors - recommended that the agency make more clear the warnings it already provides for would-be Lasik patients:

- Add photographs that illustrate what people suffering certain side effects actually see, such as the glare that can make oncoming headlights a huge "starburst" of light.

- Clarify how often patients suffer different side effects, such as dry eye. Some eye surgeons say 31 percent of Lasik patients have some degree of dry eye before surgery, and it worsens for about 5 percent afterward. Other studies say 48 percent of Lasik recipients suffer some degree of dry eye months later.

- Make more understandable the conditions that should disqualify someone from Lasik, such as large pupils or severe nearsightedness.

- And spell out that anyone whose nearsightedness is fixed by Lasik is guaranteed to need reading glasses in middle age, something that might not be needed if they skip Lasik.
That's a big reason why Weiss, the glasses-wearing ophthalmologist, won't get Lasik even though she offers it to her patients.

"I can read without my glasses and ... operate without my glasses, and I love that," she said. "The second aspect is I would not tolerate any risk for myself. ... Does that mean Lasik is good or not good? It means Lasik is good but not for everyone."

Lasik is marketed as quick and painless: Doctors cut a flap in the cornea - the eye's clear covering - aim a laser underneath it and zap to reshape the cornea for sharper sight.

The FDA agrees with eye surgeons' studies that only about 5 percent of patients are dissatisfied with Lasik. What's not clear is exactly how many of those suffer lasting severe problems and how many just didn't get quite as clear vision as they had expected.

The most meticulous studies come from the military, where far less than 1 percent of Lasik recipients suffer serious side effects, said Dr. David Tanzer, the Navy's Medical Corps commander. That research prompted Lasik to be cleared last year both for Navy aviators and NASA astronauts.

"The word from the guys that are out there standing in harm's way, whose lives depend on their ability to see, are asking you to please not take this away," said Lt. Col. Scott Barnes, a cornea specialist at Fort Bragg who described Army troops seeking Lasik after losing their glasses in combat.

No one's actually considering restrictions on Lasik - but the FDA is pairing with eye surgeons to begin a major study next year to better understand who has bad outcomes.

"Millions of patients have benefited" from Lasik, said Dr. Peter McDonnell of Johns Hopkins University, a spokesman for the American Academy of Ophthalmologists. "No matter how uncommon, when complications occur, they can be distressing. ... We're dedicated to doing everything in our power to make the Lasik procedure even better for all our patients."

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Lifespan in America Declining

For the first time in generations, life expectancy for large numbers of Americans is stagnating or falling as more people pay for obesity, high blood pressure and other chronic conditions with shortened lives.

The findings, published Monday by researchers at Harvard University and the University of Washington, show that while Americans are living longer than ever on average, life expectancy is changing at increasingly unequal rates among the population.

Shrinking life expectancy is almost unheard of in an advanced nation, said Dr. Majid Ezzati, the studies first author and an associate professor at Harvard School of Public Health. And it is likely to worsen as the fates of the healthiest and least-healthy Americans continue to diverge.
More alarming is the real possibility that a reversal in life expectancy will touch more and more Americans, said Dr. Christopher Murray, director of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at UW and the paper's co-author.

"This is a harbinger of the future," Murray said.

Policy wake-up call

Researchers analyzed death figures by county between 1961 and 1999 and calculated that the average life expectancy climbed to a record 79.6 years for women and 74.1 years for men. But the gap is widening between the best- and worst-off counties; many of the latter lie in swaths through the Deep South, southern Midwest, Texas and parts of the Rocky Mountains.
About 26 million women, or 19 percent of that population, had stagnant or shortened life spans, compared with 4 percent of the men.

Women's historical gender edge in longevity is slowly shrinking: Women outlived men by an average of 5.5 years in 1999, down from 6.6 years in 1961.

Investigators said this is the first time that average life spans have fallen for significant numbers of American women since the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, and the first time for men since the cigarettes-and-steaks era of the early 1950s.

"The decline for women is so stunning," Murray said. "This is a real wake-up call for health policy."

The paper appears in today's edition of the online journal PLoS Medicine.

Beginning in the early 1980s, life expectancy for segments of the population began to fall as smoking, obesity and high blood pressure began exacting greater tolls. Specifically, women's deaths from lung cancer, diabetes and lung disease outpaced the drop in deaths from heart diseases, which had propped up overall female life expectancy during the 1960s and 70s.
For men, on the other hand, higher death rates from HIV/AIDS and homicides among young and middle-age males, as well as rising mortality from diabetes, cancers and lung disease, were largely offset by continuing gains against cardiovascular diseases.

Geography, income

Life expectancy for Russians fell during the 1990s, and it continues to fall in countries such as South Africa and Botswana that are grappling with the HIV epidemic and high infant mortality. But the rule of thumb for industrialized countries for a half-century has been ever-lengthening life spans, Ezzati said.

King County had Washington's third-largest gain in overall life expectancy during the past four decades with 8.2 years, to an average of 79.2 years. Jefferson County was No. 1, followed by Island and San Juan counties together. Snohomish County ranked ninth with a gain of 7 years, to an average of 78.4 years.

Douglas County had the smallest gain, with 3.8 years. But Grays Harbor County was last in life expectancy in 1999, with the lowest average of 74.9 years.

Murray and Ezzati said they hope their research will help better guide strategies for tackling health disparities. Geography and income — but not race or migration patterns — appear to bind Americans with stagnant or declining life expectancies.

The researchers couldn't fully explain that, except to say that it suggests the problem goes beyond individual health choices. Murray noted, for instance, that the majority of people with high blood pressure do not get medical care for it.

"This is as much a challenge for better primary health care as it is trying to get people to adopt healthier lifestyles," Murray said.

James Wiley, a public-health expert at San Francisco State University, said the paper should sound an alarm — for individuals and for public officials. Wiley said Americans should heed the message to quit smoking, eat right and exercise, a message he said should be aimed not only at adults but at children as well.

But the government also needs to ensure that all Americans have adequate health care, Wiley said. The only path to longevity, he said, is through "prevention, prevention, prevention."

Preventive Health Screenings at Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care

Regular physical exams and health screening tests are an important part of preventative health care. They can help insure that common, serious diseases are detected and treated. You may not have symptoms, but you could be at risk. Get the answers you deserve and take control of your health today.

Healthy Trust Preventive Health Screening offers extremely affordable health screening, periodic physical exams, and recommended lab work in age/gender specific packages.

Call Healthy Trust at 847-243-0333 to schedule a preventive health screen. We have specially priced packages that anyone can afford. Be informed about your own personal health!

Monday, April 21, 2008

Emergency Room or Immediate Care?

When a medical problem arises that requires immediate attention, it is often difficult to know if it is truly an emergency, or whether it is simply an urgent medical issue.

What is the difference?

Generally, an emergency is a condition that may threaten an individual's life or cause impairment. On the other hand, urgent care can treat medical problems such as broken bones and minor burns that, while not emergencies, require care within 24 hours. If a medical problem is life-threatening, call 911 immediately, and care will be provided at the nearest emergency room (ER).

However, ER visits should be reserved for true emergencies, such as life-threatening accidents or chest pain. A visit to the ER without an actual emergency can be costly and inefficient, and detract medical care from individuals who truly need emergency care. For urgent medical concerns, patients should call PAMF first. Even if a patient's own physician is not available, physicians are always on call, and advice nurses can handle many problems over the phone during regular business hours.

If the medical problem is not life-threatening, but warrants immediate care, Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care in Wheeling, Illinois, is the place to visit.

"However, the Immediate Medical Care Clinic is not an Emergency Room", said Dr. Boris Gurevich, M.D. medical director of Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care.

"There is a big difference between urgent and emergency care," he said. "The ER is equipped to handle emergency situations, but Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care does not handle ambulance traffic and is not adequately equipped to manage patients with life-threatening medical conditions."

If a medical condition arises suddenly and you believe as a reasonable person that without immediate care and treatment your life or health is in jeopardy, you should go to the emergency room or call 911.

Some examples of symptoms that should be treated at an Emergency Room include:

  • Signs of a heart attack that last two minutes or longer, including chest pain
  • Signs of stroke, like sudden onset of numbness in any extremity
  • Severe shortness of breath
  • Bleeding that won't stop after ten minutes of direct pressure
  • Poisoning
  • Complicated fractures
  • Coughing or vomiting blood
  • Suicidal or homicidal feelings

Some examples of symptoms that are best treated at a Urgent, or Immediate Care Center:

  • Earaches
  • Minor cuts where bleeding is controlled
  • Sprains
  • Simple fractures
  • Skin Rashes
  • Flu, colds, coughs, sore throat
  • Allergies
  • Sinus infections
  • Bronchitis
  • Urinary infections
  • Scrapes and Abrasions
  • Insect bites
  • Eye infections
  • Migraine
  • Chemical exposure
  • Minor burns
  • Most fevers

If you have any questions about whether it is an emergency or not, you should call your primary care physician, or contact Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care serve the Chicago North Shore Communites of Wheeling, Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Prospect Heights, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Lake County, Lincolnshire, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Mundelein, Northbrook, Highland Park, Long Grove, Riverwoods, Des Plaines, Palatine, Libertyville, Glenview, Highwood, Northfield, Winnetka, and Bannockburn.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Immediate Care in the Chicago North Shore Suburbs

Louise Larson tried to get her son in to see the pediatrician last week, after the 7-year-old spent several days coughing, sneezing and feverish. But since hundreds of other little kids are also coughing, sneezing and feverish this time of year, Larson couldn't get an appointment at the pediatricians office.

So, that's how they wound up at Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care, one of more than a dozen urgent-care centers in the greater Chicago area.

"His doctor was full, we couldn't get in," says Larson who was drawing Crayon pictures with her son Jerome while waiting to be seen at Healthy Trust.

Urgent care centers -Immediate care centers- Walk-in clinics where you can be treated for a minor injury, sore throat, urinary infections, or other non-emergency illnesses -- have been around since the 1970s. But they have become increasingly more popular in the last several years.

"It's an extremely rapidly growing niche of health care," says John Berkowitz, director of Marketing for Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care, "It is largely driven by the fact that there's large numbers of healthy people out there who want care for acute problems without going to the emergency room, and can't get an immediate appointment with their primary physician.

"But the clinics -- despite the word "urgent" in their name -- are not to be used for emergencies."If somebody has warning signs of chest pain, abdominal pain, especially if they're sweating or pale, we usually try to make sure they're stable and get them to the hospital emergency room," says Dr. Boris Gurevich, medical director for Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care. "In fact in Illinois they are referred to as Immediate Care Centers to avoid the confusion."

On a recent day at Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care, a 69 year old Deerfield woman who had a painful urinary infection was directed to a walk in clinic at a name brand pharmacy in Libertyville for treatment at the suggestion of her family because she could not see her gynecologist for another three days. She waited for three hours until being told that they could not treat her because the Nurse Practitioner was only able to treat respiratory infections. She then went to Healthy Trust which was able to see her immediately, and perform the necessary lab tests which were able to giver a correct diagnosis of the problem.

"Some people misunderstand the concept of urgent care and think it's an emergency department that just happens to be in your community," Dr. Gurevich says. "If you think you have an emergency, go to the emergency department. What people don't realize is that 80% of the patients that go to an emergency room are going for non-urgent problems that can be treated for a fraction of the cost at an Immediate Medical Care Center like Healthy Trust."

Most urgent care centers see lots of otherwise healthy people who have an acute problem. Once people start developing serious or chronic conditions, they turn to their family physician."People who are young and healthy are utilizing it," Dr. Gurevich says. "A lot of people are trying to fit things into the edges of their lives. We're a sort of a drive-through mentality ... Now it's almost to the point where we drive through for health care as well."

Louise and her son spent about 5 minutes waiting to be seen by Dr. Elena Edwards.

Dr. Edwards was able to tell Louise that everything looked fine after the exam. She said to expect it to take 10 or 11 days for the boy to feel back to his old self.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care proudly serves the Chicago North Shore Communities of Lake County, Wheeling, Prospect Heights, Lincolnshire, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Northbrook, Highland Park, Long Grove, Riverwoods, Des Plaines, Palatine, Glenview, Highwood, Northfield, Libertyville, Winnetka, Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Mundelein, and Bannockburn.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Walk-in clinic administers immediate medical care during convenient hours. See our doctors for minor injuries or health problems, such as sprains, cuts, urinary infections, colds, flu's, and for other convenient health care services.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

Flu Vaccine Blamed for Bad Flu Season

The flu season has shaped up to be the worst in four years, partly because the vaccine didn't work well against the viruses that made most people sick, health officials said Thursday.

This season's vaccine was the worst match since 1997-98, when the vaccine didn't work at all against the circulating virus, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The 2007-08 season started slowly, peaked in mid-February and seems to be declining, CDC officials said.

Based on adult deaths from flu and pneumonia, this season is the worst since 2003-04, another time the vaccine did not include the exact flu strain responsible for most illnesses.
Each year, health officials — making an educated guess — formulate a vaccine against three viruses they think will be circulating. They guess well most of the time, and the vaccine is often between 70 percent and 90 percent effective.

But this year, two of the three strains were not good matches and the vaccine was only 44 percent effective, according to a study done in Marshfield, Wis. That seemed to match the experience in other parts of the country.

The CDC compares flu season by looking at adult deaths from the flu or pneumonia in 122 cities. This year, those deaths peaked at 9 percent of all reported deaths in early March and remained above an epidemic threshold for 13 consecutive weeks.

Pediatric deaths are another way flu seasons are compared. So far this season, 66 children have died, including 46 who were not vaccinated. In 2003-04, 153 children died.

This year, most of the illness has been due to Type A H3N2 Brisbane strain, which was not in the vaccine. That strain tends to cause more hospitalizations and deaths, CDC officials said.

Type B Florida strain, also absent from this year's vaccine, also has caused illness. Marshfield data showed that the vaccine was completely ineffective against the Type B virus and was 58 percent effective against the Brisbane virus.

In the Chicago area, physicians at Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Walk-in clinic administers immediate medical care during convenient hours. The doctors at Healthy Trust can see you without an appointment, and they can immediately test you for flu by using their on site lab. The correct diagnosis in a timely manner is the best way to start feeling better.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care serves the Chicago North Shore Communities of Lake County, Wheeling, Prospect Heights, Lincolnshire, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Northbrook, Highland Park, Long Grove, Riverwoods, Des Plaines, Palatine, Glenview, Highwood, Northfield, Libertyville, Winnetka, Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Mundelein, and Bannockburn.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

HTIMC Introduces Medical and Pharmacy Discount Card

Health Trust Immediate Medical Care (HTIMC) has introduced an innovative medical and pharmacy discount card. The card is available to print out at the Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care website, and there is no cost for the card. Patients who bring the self printed card into the clinic will be given a permanent laminated discount card.

The card gives deep discounts for all medical services at the Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care clinic in Wheeling. The new, large, modern facility provides immediate medical care without an appointment necessary. HTIMC also has a has a primary care facility at the same site staffed with family practice physicians, internists, endocrinologists, urologists, chiropractors, physical therapy, pain managment, radiology, and laboratory. The combination of all these services under one roof makes Healthy Trust one of the Chicago North Shore's most complete full service medical clinics.

What makes Healthy Trust different though is their dedicated outreach into the local community to make health care affordable to all. The clinic recently introduced a no cost discount card which gives members deep discounts on all services at the clinic, plus significant discounts of up to 80% at over 59,000 pharmacies across the country including Walgreen's, Osco Drug, CVS, Costco, Sam's Club, Wal-Mart, K-Mart, Dominicks, and many other major local pharmacies participating in the program.

The whole idea of the program is to make sure the cost of health care is affordable, and nobody is left behind because they simply cannot afford quality health care. Most people don't realize how affordable quality health care can be if managed correctly, and Healthy Trust Immediate Care is the first clinic in the country to offer such a program.

Healthy Trust plans to be a first aid sponsor at many Chicago North Shore Suburban fairs, and events this Summer. They will be providing free first aid, and blood pressure checks at these events. HTIMC will also be distributing their free discount card at these events to members of the community, explaining how the program works, and answering any questions the community has about the program.

The first event Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care will sponsor will be the annual Long Grove Chocolate Fest on May 2nd, 3rd, and 4th. Stop by the First Aid booth at the event to meet the dedicated team from Healthy Trust, and pick up your free medical discount card.

*The Healthy Trust Medical and Prescription Drug Discount Card is not insurance, and not intended to replace insurance.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care proudly serves the Chicago North Shore Communities of Lake County, Wheeling, Prospect Heights, Lincolnshire, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Northbrook, Highland Park, Long Grove, Riverwoods, Des Plaines, Palatine, Glenview, Highwood, Northfield, Libertyville, Winnetka, Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Mundelein, and Bannockburn.

How are Schools Doing on Nutrition?

New York students will have to settle for pizza without tasty turkey pepperoni topping. In Maryland schools, tomato slices were pulled for a few weeks from cafeteria salads in favor of less-expensive carrots or celery.

And in North Carolina, Yoo-hoo drinks, which had been taken off the shelf in favor of healthier options, are back. Sure, officials would rather the kids chugged milk. But each Yoo-hoo sale brings in 36 cents of profit.

Sharp rises in the cost of milk, grain and fresh fruits and vegetables are hitting cafeterias across the country, forcing cash-strapped schools to raise prices or pinch pennies by serving more economical dishes. Some school officials on a mission to help fight childhood obesity say it's becoming harder to fill students' plates with healthful, low-fat foods.

School meal programs across the country are run somewhat like restaurants, relying on federal and state subsidies, and profits from meal and snack sales and catering services, to buy food and pay workers. Rising labor costs, coupled with the recent push for healthier meals — which has meant serving higher-priced foods such as whole-grain breads and fresh vegetables — has squeezed budgets. Soaring food prices make it even harder to break even.

Puget Sound school districts are no different. Officials with the 27,000-student Kent School District, for example, expect to raise meal prices as they assemble the budget for the next school year.

"As we look at increased costs in food and production ... in order to make ends meet, there will be an increase," school-district spokeswoman Becky Hanks said.

In Seattle, the School Board is considering raising meal prices by as much as 50 cents to help balance next year's budget. Lunch currently costs $1.75 for elementary-school students and $2 for middle- and high-school students.

Miami-Dade County schools are on track to pay $4.5 million more for milk this year than last year, about a 47 percent increase. Penny Parham, administrative director of the schools' department of food and nutrition, went to Washington, D.C., last month to urge federal lawmakers to raise subsidies.

"We do not want to serve our students highly refined sugar and flour products, which are more affordable," Parham told the House Education and Labor Committee, "but we are continually being pushed down this path."

Each year, Uncle Sam, in an effort to ensure the neediest children get healthful meals, gives schools a little more cash to help feed students. But school officials nationwide say the federal share hasn't kept pace with rising costs. This year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture is giving schools $2.47 per lunch to serve free meals to children from the poorest families, up from $2.40 last year, a 3 percent increase. In the same time, milk prices rose about 17 percent and bread nearly 12 percent.

The federal government provides $2.07 per meal for students eligible for a reduced-price lunch and 23 cents a meal for students who pay full price. Schools also receive some foods, including meat, cheese and canned goods, purchased by the federal government.

The average cost of preparing and serving a school lunch runs from about $2.70 to $3.10, according to the School Nutrition Association.

In some places, food-service budgets are dipping into the red, requiring schools to use general funds that pay for such expenses as teacher salaries, computers and busing. The operating budgets that provide those general funds are also under heavy pressure because of lower state and local tax revenues.

School food chefs across the country said they are cutting costs in much the same way that at-home chefs clip coupons and scan supermarket aisles for sales. They are seeking to keep healthy items on the menu but are increasingly picky about choosing the most economical options. Several said vendors have warned that prices will be even higher within months.
Small, rural districts, which don't serve enough meals to court competitive bids from suppliers, might be squeezed the most.

But big districts also are feeling the pinch. In the New York school system, the nation's largest, which serves 850,000 meals a day, the milk bill is up $3 million over last year, said Eric Goldstein, chief executive for school support services.

"We're seeing our food cost growing at a rate that is putting pressure on our budget. Increases in corn, wheat, milk — it's really hitting us," Goldstein said. "We're having to be creative, but we're worried it's not sustainable."

Looking to get a school, or sports physical? Healthy Trust Immediate Medical is the place to go to get it done without an appointment at your convenience.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Walk-in clinic administers immediate medical care during convenient hours. See our doctors for minor injuries or health problems, such as sprains, cuts, urinary infections, colds, flu's, and for other convenient health care services.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Discount Card Now Available On Line

Healthy Trust Immediate Care in Wheeling, Illinois has begun offering a discount card for medical services provided at the clinic in Wheeling, and pharmacies across the greater Chicago area. The card debuted online on April 15th and the first distribution point of printed cards will be at Chocolate Fest in neighboring Long Grove, Illinois during the first week of May.

The whole idea of the card is to substantially lower health costs, and increase access to health care and discounted prescription medications to residents of the Chicago North Shore communities of Lake County, Wheeling, Prospect Heights, Lincolnshire, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Northbrook, Highland Park, Long Grove, Riverwoods, Des Plaines, Palatine, Glenview, Highwood, Northfield, Libertyville, Winnetka, Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Mundelein, and Bannockburn.

The Healthy Trust Medical Discount Card is not Health Insurance, nor is it intended to replace Health Insurance.

Too many families are going without adequate health care because of rising costs, high deductibles, no, or limited co pays, and in a lot of cases, no health insurance. The Healthy Trust Discount Medical card is not health insurance, and it is not intended to be a replacement for health insurance. However it provides significant discounts to those that use it at the medical clinic in Wheeling, and at over 59,000 participating pharmacies in the Chicago area, and around the country.

No Charge, No Applications, No Hassles

  • There is no charge for the Healthy Trust Medical Discount Card.

  • Healthy Trust does not ask you to fill out an application for the discount card.

  • You never have to make an appointment at Healthy Trust, just Walk-In!

  • You can use your pharmacy discount at over 59,000 participating pharmacies!

How Do I get My Free Healthy Trust Medical Clinic Discount Card?

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

18 Illinois Adults Die Each Week In Illinois Beacause of No Health Insurance

There’s a new estimate out about the consequences of being uninsured, and it’s shocking.

In Illinois, 18 adults die each week because they lack health insurance, according to a report just released by Families USA. That adds up to 960 deaths in 2006.

These are people with conditions such as breast cancer or hypertension who delayed getting medical care because they couldn’t afford it.

Scores of studies have shown that people without health insurance have poorer access to care, which often results in worse medical outcomes, which in turn results in a greater burden of disability and death.

Of course, Families USA is an advocacy group with an agenda. It believes everyone in the U.S. should have health care coverage and that government has a part to play in making that happen.
But its latest study appears sound and consistent with other findings, according to Stan Dorn, senior research associate at the Urban Institute.

In 2002, the federal Institute of Medicine, part of the National Academy of Sciences, concluded that 18,000 people die in the U.S. each year from health problems that were untreated or treated too late because they were uninsured.

In January, Dorn took a fresh look at the issue using new census data. He found that being uninsured raised the risk of dying for working-age adults (25 to 64) by about 25 percent—a figure confirmed by several other studies.

According to Dorn’s analysis, that means the lack of insurance contributed to as many as 137,000 to 165,000 "excess deaths" among adults in the U.S. between 2000 and 2006.
"What’s sad is, this is a problem we can solve, and every other developed country in the world has managed to provide insurance to all of its citizens," Dorn said in an interview.

The Families USA study takes Dorn’s analysis a step further by doing a state-by-state breakdown. The methodology is the essentially same as used in the reports from the Institute of Medicine and Dorn.

Advocates of health insurance expansions in Illinois were quick to seize on the new data. Of course, Gov. Rod Blagojevich has made this a signature issue and he continues to push his Illinois Covered plan despite significant resistance from the legislature.

"While the results of this study are particularly shocking, we have long been familiar with the significant challenges faced by the uninsured in Illinois," the governor said in a prepared statement. "That’s why expanding healthcare coverage to those in need has continued to be a priority."

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Walk-in clinic administers immediate medical care during convenient hours. See our doctors for minor injuries or health problems, such as sprains, cuts, urinary infections, colds, flu's, and for other convenient health care services.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care works with the our neighboring communities to help provide medical care to everyone at discounted rates. Healthy Trust is doing our part to make Illinois health care more affordable for all.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Baby Boomers About to Flood the Health System

Millions of baby boomers are about to enter a health care system for seniors that not only isn't ready for them, but may even discourage them from getting quality care.

"We face an impending crisis as the growing number of older patients, who are living longer with more complex health needs, increasingly outpaces the number of health care providers with the knowledge and skills to care for them capably," said John W. Rowe, professor of health policy and management at Columbia University.

Rowe headed an Institute of Medicine committee that released a report Monday on the health care outlook for the 78 million baby boomers about to begin turning 65.

The report from the institute, an arm of the National Academy of Sciences, said:

-There aren't enough specialists in geriatric medicine.
-Insufficient training is available.
-The specialists that do exist are underpaid.
-Medicare fails to provide for team care that many elderly patients need.

The study said Medicare may even hinder seniors from getting the best care because of its low reimbursement rates, a focus on treating short-term health problems rather than managing chronic conditions and lack of coverage for preventive services or for health care providers' time spent collaborating with a patient's other providers.

The American Medical Association responded that seniors' access to Medicare in coming years "is threatened by looming Medicare physician payment cuts."

"This July, the government will begin steep cuts in Medicare physician payments, and 60 percent of physicians say this cut will force them to limit the number of new Medicare patients they can treat," the AMA said in a statement.

The report found there are about 7,100 doctors certified in geriatrics in the United States, one per every 2,500 older Americans.

Turnover among nurse aides averages 71 percent annually, and up to 90 percent of home health aides leave their jobs within the first two years, the report said.

But while today's elderly tend to be healthier and live longer than previous generations, people over 65 to have more complex conditions and health care needs than younger folks.

The report urged that all health care workers be trained in basic geriatric care and that schools increase training in the treatment of older patients.

The federally required minimum number of hours of training for direct-care workers should be raised from 75 to at least 120, the report said, noting that more training is required for dog groomers and manicurists than direct-care workers in many parts of the country.

And it said pay for geriatric specialists, doctors, nurses and care workers needs to be increased.

A doctor specializing in elderly care earned $163,000 on average in 2005 compared with $175,000 for a general internist, even though the geriatric specialist required more training.

The report also urged training for family members and other informal caregivers who assist the elderly.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Walk-in clinic administers immediate non - urgent medical care during convenient hours. See our doctors for minor injuries or health problems, such as sprains, cuts, colds, flu's, and for other convenient health care services.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Finding Affordable Health Care in the Chicago North Shore Suburbs

Finding affordable health care in the Chicago North Shore suburbs can be a challenge. The Chicago area is home to many of the finest hospitals, clinics, specialists, and physicians in the world. That is one of the many benefits of living in one of the most desirable urban area's of the United States.

Like many of the best things in life attaining quality health care can be very expensive if you do not have the benefit of health insurance. Even with health insurance, which has become very expensive over the last decade, higher deductibles, more restrictive terms, and limited first dollar coverage means most consumers are contributing quite a bit more towards out of pocket medical expenses than they have in the past. This can put a strain on the family budget.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care in Wheeling, Illinois believes that every citizen has the right to obtaining the best quality health care available whether they have health insurance or not. We serve the Chicago North Shore Communities of Lake County, Wheeling, Prospect Heights, Lincolnshire, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Northbrook, Highland Park, Long Grove, Riverwoods, Des Plaines, Palatine, Libertyville, Glenview, Highwood, Northfield, Libertyville, Winnetka, Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Mundelein, and Bannockburn.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care has put together a discount medical and pharmacy program which will be made available to the public on May 1st 2008. The best part of the discount program is that there is no charge to you or your family for the Healthy Trust Medical Discount Card. Unlike other similar programs we are not charging an annual membership fee. We feel that providing affordable, quality, health care is our duty to the community we live in.

The Healthy Trust Discount Card is not Health Insurance, not is it intended to be a replacement for health insurance.

The Healthy Trust Medical Discount Card can be very useful for individuals and families looking to save money on health care. That being said this discount card is not the same as health insurance. The Healthy Trust Medical Discount Program does not pay any part of your health care costs; instead, we require you to pay a negotiated discount fee for medical services at the Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Clinic in Wheeling, Illinois. Once again, the Healthy Trust Medical Discount Card is not health insurance, and it is only accepted for medical services at our clinic in Wheeling, Illinois.

Even if you have insurance, Healthy Trust Immediate Care can help you save on many health care expenses that your insurance may not pay for, such as chiropractic care, physical exams, school physicals, sports physicals, health screenings, vaccinations, elective care, or allergy shots. If you don't have health insurance, Healthy Trust Immediate Care can make medical care more affordable, and accessible.

The pharmacy part of the program is not health insurance, and is not intended to be a replacement for health insurance.

The prescription benefit part of your program provides you with discounts of up to 80% of the usual and customary costs of prescription drugs at participating pharmacies. The discount varies from drug to drug, and participating pharmacy. You can use your card at local pharmacies such as Walgreen's, Costco, Osco, Dominick's, CVS, Walmart, Target, and K-Mart plus thousands of other participating independent pharmacies nationally, and in the Chicago area.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Walk-in clinic administers immediate medical care during convenient hours. See our doctors for minor injuries or health problems, such as sprains, cuts, urinary infections, colds, flu's, and for other convenient health care services.

Healthy Trust Immediate Care Clinic is centrally for Chicago North shore residents located at 342 S. Milwaukee Avenue in Wheeling, Illinois.

Our modern facility was opened in in 2007 and is staffed with board certified physicians. We have an on site lab, and x-ray facility which means you don't have to wait for the results of most diagnostic tests.

If you have questions please give us a call at 847-243-0333.

Waiting for Three Hours at a Retail / Pharmacy Health Clinic

A 69 year old female resident of Deerfield, Illinois was having a problem with a urinary infection. It was a Friday night, she was unable to see her gynecologist till the following Tuesday. She decided to go to a so called Retail Immediate Care Clinic at a famous name chain pharmacy in Libertyville, Illinois. She logged in at the kiosk and sat there patiently for three hours until she could see a Nurse Practitioner at the pharmacy based clinic.

She was told after the three hour wait that they were sorry, they could not treat her because they could only treat problems above the waist such as a respiratory infections. The computer kiosk she logged into wasn't apparently programmed to give her that information and send her immediately on her way. She had to wait three uncomfortable hours until a human being asked her what her problem was.

The bottom line is a Nurse Practitioner is extremely limited in the conditions that they can treat without the direct supervision of a physician. Typically these retail/pharmacy based clinics are tremendously under staffed, and you can sit there for hours only to be turned away once they finally get around to seeing you if your problem does not fit their very limited critera, If you have the cold, or flu, and can afford to wait up to three hours, this type of clinic can help you, but there are much better solutions available if you need immediate, or urgent care.

We want you to know that there is no substitute for seeing a real board certified physician at a true Immediate or Urgent Care Clinic which has the ability to see you right away when you can't get in to see your regular primary physician.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care physicians are able diagnose your problem with such on site tools as a lab, and a radiology department. That means they can treat most problems and give you a definitive result which means they can immediately treat the problem which means you can start to heal and recover from your particular ailment.

You neighborhood retail pharmacy clinic can't often do that. That is the important thing to remember when you are not feeling well, and can't afford to waste time. Even more important is there isn't any difference in cost. Seeing a real physician immediately at a real immediate medical clinic costs about the same as going to your neighborhood retail/pharmacy clinic where odds are they can't help you with your problem unless you have a cold, or flu.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Walk-in clinic administers immediate non - urgent medical care during convenient hours. See our doctors for minor injuries or health problems, such as sprains, cuts, colds, flu's, and for other convenient health care services.

We serve the Chicago North Shore Communities of Lake County,Wheeling, Prospect Heights, Lincolnshire, Deerfield, Buffalo Grove, Northbrook, Highland Park, Long Grove, Riverwoods, Des Plaines, Palatine, Libertyville, Glenview, Highwood, Northfield, Libertyville, Winnetka, Arlington Heights, Mount Prospect, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, Mundelein, and Bannockburn.

Next time you feel ill, need immediate medical care, and can't see your primary care physician in a timely manner, come to Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care in Wheeling, Illinois. We can address your problem, help get you well, and not waste any of your time.

Don't waste your time at a so called pharmacy clinic that is limited in its ability to treat or diagnose your problem. See the real board certified physicians at Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care in Wheeling, Illinois, or another Immediate/Urgent Care Clinic if you are outside of our Chicago North Shore service area. There is no substitute for seeing a real board certified physician in a timely manner.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Primary Physicians in Demand

Once they discover that she is Dr. Kate, the supplicants line up to approach at dinner parties and ballet recitals. Surely, they suggest to Dr. Katherine Atkinson, a family physician here, she might find a way to move them up her lengthy waiting list for new patients.

Those fortunate enough to make it soon learn they face another long wait: Atkinson's next opening for a physical is not until early May — of 2009.

In pockets of America, both rural and urban, a confluence of market and medical forces has been widening the gap between the supply of primary-care physicians and the incessant demand for their services. Modest pay, medical-school debt, an aging population and the prevalence of chronic disease have each played a role.

In Massachusetts, in an unintended consequence of universal coverage, the imbalance is exacerbated by the state's new law requiring residents to have health insurance.

Landmark law

Since last year, when the landmark law took effect, about 340,000 of Massachusetts' estimated 600,000 uninsured have gained coverage. Many are searching for doctors and scheduling appointments for long-deferred care.

Here in western Massachusetts, Atkinson's bustling 3,000-patient practice, which was closed to new patients for several years, has taken on 50 newcomers since hiring a part-time nurse practitioner in November. About a third were newly insured, she said.

Whether there is a national shortage of primary-care providers is a matter of considerable debate. Some researchers contend the U.S. has too many doctors, driving overutilization of the system.

But there is little dispute that the general practice of medicine is under strain at a time when there is consensus that better prevention and chronic-disease management would not only improve health but also help control costs.

With the population aging, the country will need 40 percent more primary-care doctors by 2020, according to the American College of Physicians, which represents 125,000 internists, and the 94,000-member American Academy of Family Physicians.

Community-health centers, bolstered by increases in federal financing during the Bush years, are having particular difficulty finding doctors.

"I think it's pretty serious," said Dr. David Dale, president of the American College of Physicians and former dean of the University of Washington's medical school. "Maybe we're at the front of the wave, but there are several factors making it harder for the average American, particularly older Americans, to have a good personal physician."

Studies show that the number of medical-school graduates in the U.S. entering family-medicine training programs, or residencies, has dropped by 50 percent since 1997. A decadelong decline gave way this year to a slight increase in numbers, perhaps because demand is driving up salaries.

There have been slight increases in the number of doctors training in internal medicine, which focuses on the nonsurgical treatment of adults. But the share of those residents who then establish a general practice has plummeted, to 24 percent in 2006 from 54 percent in 1998, according to the American College of Physicians.

Perks for primary care

While fewer U.S.-trained doctors are pursuing primary care, they are being replaced by foreign medical-school graduates and osteopathic doctors. There also has been rapid growth in the ranks of physician assistants and nurse practitioners.

Numerous studies, in this country and others, have shown that primary care improves health and saves money by encouraging prevention and early diagnosis of chronic conditions like high blood pressure and diabetes.

In Massachusetts, legislative leaders have proposed bills to forgive medical-school debt for those willing to practice primary care in underserved areas; a similar law, worth $15.6 million, passed in New York this week. Massachusetts also recently authorized the opening of clinics in drug stores, hoping to relieve the pressure.

"It is a fundamental truth — which we are learning the hard way in Massachusetts — that comprehensive health-care reform cannot work without appropriate access to primary-care physicians and providers," Dr. Bruce Auerbach, the president-elect of the Massachusetts Medical Society, told Congress in February.

Jon Kingsdale, executive director of the agency that oversees the Massachusetts initiative, said he had not heard of major problems, but acknowledged "the prospect of a severe shortage" as newly insured patients seek care in doctors' offices rather than emergency rooms.

Given the presence of four medical schools and Boston's dense medical infrastructure, it might seem difficult to argue that Massachusetts has too few doctors. The state ranks well above the national average in the per-capita supply of all doctors and of primary-care physicians.

But those measures do not necessarily translate into adequate access, particularly in remote areas. Work-force studies by the medical society have found statewide shortages of primary-care doctors in each of the last two years.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care in Wheeling, Illinois has plenty of openings for primary care, and immediate care patients. You won't have to wait till 2009 to get a comprehensive physical exam from us, we can see you now.

Experts Not Rattled About Drugs in Drinking Water

Lots of people lunged for bottled water after they were told last month that tap water in many U.S. cities contains traces of pharmaceuticals.

"They wanted five-gallon bottles, half-liter cases, anything that wasn't municipal water," said Jennifer Brandon, who was taking phone orders for home-delivered Deer Park water.
Responding to the public alarm, Sens. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., and Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., called for a hearing on the federal response to drugs in drinking water, scheduled for Tuesday.
Despite the sudden clamor, however, many water-quality researchers kept doing what they had done for years about contaminants in tap water: nothing. They kept drinking local tap or well water, a half-dozen of them said.

For one thing, they know bottled water is less-regulated than are municipal supplies.
There are reasons to worry about the safety of drinking water. Contaminants commonly found in drinking water include traces of pesticides, herbicides, flame retardants, DEET, mosquito repellent, aircraft de-icers, lead, arsenic, mercury and esters, ketones and other chemicals found in personal-care products. Not to mention additives in toothpaste meant to retard gum and tooth disease.

So why are experts relatively unfazed?

Here are some reasons:

• Improved detection technology means that we're concerned about levels of contamination that were undetectable in years past.

In the 1970s, the best detection technology picked up compounds at concentrations of one part per million. Today, concentrations of one part per trillion or even quadrillion are detectable.
With each zero of added sensitivity, myriad other chemicals are evident in water, said Christian Daughton, a research scientist at the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) National Exposure Research Laboratory in Las Vegas. Among them are many of the drugs now reported in drinking water.

• Even poisons are not always toxic.

Toxicology's most basic principle, researchers said, is the maxim that "the dose makes the poison." One margarita is fine for most people, in other words, but 10 could be fatal, depending on vulnerability and timing.

Toxicologists apply this principle to all poisons, but the public doesn't, according to a landmark 1991 study that examined differences in how the two groups regard risks. Its lead author was University of Oregon psychology professor Paul Slovic, founder of Decision Research, a think tank for risk assessment in Eugene, Ore.

According to Slovic, people take an "all-or-none" view of toxicity when it comes to unwanted exposures.

"What's critical to understand is that it's the dose that's important," Daughton said. "Just because a toxic substance is around, doesn't mean you're exposed to it. Your body has to come in contact with it. Your body has to absorb it. Your exposure has to be of some duration and during a critical period of time."

• Effects on animals may not predict effects on humans.

In Slovic's study, two-thirds of laypeople believed a substance that causes cancer in animals is reasonably sure to cause cancer in humans. (Six in every 10 toxicologists disagreed.)
In the case of drugs in water, reproduction in fin- and shellfish and amphibians seems to be the most affected, and the suspected culprits are natural and synthetic forms of the female hormone estrogen and substances that mimic them. In a widely cited experiment, fish in an otherwise pristine Canadian lake lost reproductive vitality when exposed to less than six parts per trillion of a commonly used synthetic form of estrogen.

The findings "raise a red flag" about other effects these drugs may be having on wildlife and possible risks to humans, said Karen Kidd, an environmental toxicologist at the University of New Brunswick's Canadian Rivers Institute who led the study.

But it is important to realize, Kidd said, that estrogens rarely are found in drinking water. Moreover, one reason fish are affected is because they're always taking up compounds through their gills. Hence, "they're getting exposed to more drugs than the average human would be from drinking water," she said.

No research has found a hazard to humans from estrogen or any other pharmaceutical in drinking water, Kidd and others noted, and Kidd said she continues to drink tap water.

• Scientists understand big numbers and use them to gauge risk. Most other people get lost in the zeros.

"There's no evolutionary reason for them to understand very big or very small numbers," said Ellen Peters, a colleague of Slovic's at the University of Oregon and at Decision Research.
When faced with a probability like one chance in a million, Peters and others said, most people glom onto the "one" and exaggerate its importance.

• Most people think irrationally about risks.

David Ropeik, a risk-communication consultant in Boston, said people feel less threatened by health risks that they choose, such as smoking, than by risks imposed on them, such as contaminated drinking water. They accept familiar risks, such as riding a bicycle, more than risks that surprise them. They also tolerate visible risks, such as choppy seas, better than invisible ones, Ropeik said. Drugs in drinking water earn mistrust on all counts.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care to Offer Discount Card

Healthy Trust Immediate Care in Wheeling, Illinois will be offering a discount card for medical services provided at the clinic, and pharmacies across the greater Chicago area. The card debuts on May 1st and the first distribution point will be at Chocolate Fest in neighboring Long Grove, Illinois during the first week of May.

The whole idea of the card is to substantially lower health costs, and increase access to health care and prescriptions to residents of the surrounding Chicago North Shore communites.

The Healthy Trust Medical Discount Card is not Health Insurance

Too many families are going without adequate health care because of rising costs, high deductibles, no, or limited co pays, and in a lot of cases, no health insurance. The Healthy Trust Discount Medical card is not health insurance, and it is not intended to be a replacement for health insurance. However it provides significant discounts to those that use it at the medical clinic in wheeling, and at participating pharmacies in the area. the whole idea is to make quality health care more affordable, and give patients more access to quality health care.

No Charge, No Applications, No Hassles

There is no charge, or application to fill out for the Healthy Trust Medical Discount Card. The Healthy Trust Medical Discount card is provided at no charge. You can either pick one up in person after May 1st at the Healthy Trust Clinic in Wheeling, or you can visit the website after May 1st to actually print your own card.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care
342 S. Milwaukee Avenue
Wheeling, IL 60090
847-243-0333

Health care costs at end of life varies greatly

For chronically ill patients in their last two years of life, Medicare spends an average of $59,379 in New Jersey but only $32,523 in North Dakota. The difference is primarily a result of patients getting more hospital care, but not necessarily better care, according to a new report.

Researchers at Dartmouth Medical School say that vast differences in spending patterns nationally point to why policymakers need to focus on volume when it comes to restraining costs — not just on the price of a particular service or on expanding health coverage to the uninsured.

The national average for spending on such chronically ill patients was $46,412.

In Washington state, the average cost was $40,649 and the average number of hospital days per patient was 12.91.

A large share of Medicare's expenses — about $1 out of every $3 spent — is generated by enrollees with chronic conditions in their final two years of life. That's the group of patients that researchers focused on when compiling the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, which comes out every two years. For this year's version, they examined the records of 4.7 million patients who died during 2001-2005.

They found that the number of days those patients spent in the hospital varied greatly depending upon where they lived. For example, chronically ill patients in Bend, Ore., spent 10.6 days in the hospital. Patients in Manhattan spent 34.9 days in the hospital.

In New Jersey, patients in their last two years of life spent 27.1 days in the hospital, which was the highest state rate in the nation, followed by New York at 27 days. At the other end of the scale, patients in Utah spent 11.6 days in the hospital.

Dr. Elliott Fisher, who led the study, said more days in the hospital did not necessarily lead to better outcomes. Those patients were usually seen by more specialists, and they spent more time in the intensive-care unit, but they did not live longer, on average.

So, what led patients to visit the hospital more often? The report says it's the supply of beds — not how sick patients are — that is the key driver. Fisher said patients in the low-cost regions still got care, but they were more likely to get their care at the doctor's office or at home because there was a smaller supply of hospital beds per patient.

Besides comparing states, the researchers compared the cost of treating chronically ill patients at well-respected hospitals. Again, there were huge variations in costs. Medicare spent about $34,372 for the chronically ill at the Mayo Clinic's St. Mary's Hospital in Rochester, Minn.

Medicare spent $63,900 for the chronically ill at UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles.

Some of the difference can be explained through higher reimbursement rates, but volume was the key factor, Fisher said.

The patients at UCLA Medical Center spent 11.6 days in intensive care, on average, versus 4.2 days at the Mayo Clinic's hospital. The average patient at UCLA was visited by a doctor nearly 53 times, versus 24 physician visits at the Mayo Clinic.

Medicare spending for the population in the study totaled about $289 billion. If the spending per patient for the entire population mirrored the rates in Rochester, Medicare could have saved $50 billion.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Mumps Vaccine Outbreak Concerns

Most of the college students who got the mumps in a big outbreak in 2006 had received the recommended two vaccine shots, according to a study that raises questions about whether a new vaccine or another booster shot is needed.

The outbreak was the biggest in the United States since shortly before states began requiring a second shot for youngsters in 1990.

Nearly 6,600 people became sick with the mumps, mostly in eight Midwest states, and the hardest-hit group was college students ages 18 to 24. Of those in that group who knew whether they had been vaccinated, 84 percent had had two mumps shots, according to the study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and state health departments.
That "two-dose vaccine failure" startled public-health experts, who hadn't expected immunity to wane so soon — if at all.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care is your local destination for vaccinations.

The mumps virus involved was a relatively new strain in the United States, not the one targeted by the vaccine, although there's evidence from outbreaks elsewhere the shots work well against the new strain.

The researchers, reporting in the new issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, noted the virus likely came from travelers or students from the United Kingdom, where mumps shots are voluntary and there was a much larger mumps outbreak of the same strain. Many countries don't vaccinate against mumps, so future cases brought from overseas are likely.

"If there's another outbreak, we would evaluate the potential benefit of a third dose to control the outbreak," said Dr. Jane Seward, deputy director of the CDC's viral-diseases division.
Mumps is spread by respiratory secretions and saliva among people in close contact, making college students particularly susceptible. Students' sharing of drinks and utensils, and sexual activity, probably increased their exposure.

Mumps causes fever and swollen salivary glands in the cheeks. Before the vaccine, complications such as deafness, viral meningitis and testicle inflammation, which can cause sterility, were common, and there were a couple of million U.S. cases a year.

The only U.S. vaccine, made by Merck, hasn't been changed since its introduction in 1967 and there are no plans to change it, said Barbara Kuter, Merck's executive director of pediatric affairs.

More than 500 million doses have been sold since the 1970s, when it was put in the combination measles-mumps-rubella shot.

Dr. John Bradley, a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics committee on infectious diseases, said his group is talking about possible changes to the vaccine recommendations schedule with CDC and other health agencies.

Now two shots are recommended, one at 12 to 15 months and the other at age 4 to 6.
It might not be cost-effective to give everyone a third shot, but it should be considered for college students, said Dr. Stephen Marcella, an epidemiologist at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey's School of Public Health.

Dr. William Schaffner, head of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, said what's needed is a longer-lasting shot: "We need a better vaccine."

Seward said other CDC studies in the 2006 outbreak found two mumps shots protected about 85 percent of people from the new strain, not enough to prevent spread.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

An Alligator Could Save Your Life

Someday, an alligator might save your life.

Researchers in Louisiana say they've discovered unique antibiotic proteins in the blood of American alligators that can kill a wide range of deadly bacteria, halt the spread of common infections, and perhaps even stop HIV, which causes AIDS.

If they're right, and they're able to sequence the genetics of 'gator blood, the researchers say superdrugs based on their findings might be available within 10 years.

"It's pretty exciting," said Lancia Darville, a Louisiana State University researcher who is to present the findings at a meeting of the American Chemical Society in New Orleans this week.
So far, the researchers say they've determined that the proteins found in alligator blood can fight 23 different types of bacteria, nearly three times as many as the proteins found in human blood.
At least in lab experiments, proteins extracted from 'gator blood destroyed the bacteria behind deadly staph infections, different fungi behind yeast infections, and in at least one study, most of a sample of HIV, the researchers said.

Darville explained that alligators have developed unique immune systems during the course of their long evolution.

"If you think about alligators, they usually get into a lot of fights and get cuts and bruises and torn limbs, and they live in swamps that have a whole lot of bacteria," she said. "But even in the presence of all that bacteria, they [almost] never get any infections."

The reason, Darville explained, is that 'gators have unusually strong immune systems. Unlike humans, their immune systems can fight off different types of bacteria, viruses and fungi without having been previously exposed to them.

Technology, however, is taking research to new levels. Darville and study co-author Mark Merchant now are sequencing the genetic makeup of alligator blood to figure out how to make chemicals based on it — the next step in developing new drugs.

Possible drugs include creams that could be used to treat ulcers of diabetes patients or prevent infections in amputees, and pills to fight internal infections and bacteria.

Healthy Trust Immediate Medical Care Walk-in clinic administers immediate medical care during convenient hours. See our doctors for minor injuries or health problems, such as sprains, cuts, colds, flus, and for other convenient healthcare services.