Showing posts with label medication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medication. Show all posts

Drinking anti depression medication while pregnant harm the baby

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Drinking anti-depression medication while pregnant harm the baby - Pregnant women are prone to depression should be wary before taking anti-depression medication. One study found that taking anti-depression drugs are quite popular during pregnancy can increase the risk of children born with heart defects.

Professor Stephen Pilling explains that women who take antidepressants during pregnancy early risk of having a child with a heart defect until doubled.

So far, scientists and doctors believe that eating oat anti-depression during pregnancy will not be a problem for the fetus in the womb. But Pilling said that it should be changed and straightened again.

"Mothers should be aware that they are causing more than doubled the risk (if taking anti-depression medication). I do not think that in most cases, the risk is worth taking," said Pilling, as reported by the BBC.

Pilling explains that the babys risk of having heart problems at birth are two of the 100 births. Meanwhile, when the mother taking anti-depression medication, this risk increased to four out of 100 births. Pilling suggested that pregnant women who are depressed and do not rush taking anti-depression medication.
Read More..

Youre not sick youre thirsty Dont treat thirst with medication

Monday, May 19, 2014


Our life, our planet. Over 70% of the earths surface is water. However, most of it—98%--is salt water. Only 2% of the earths H20 is fresh water that we can drink, and of this, almost all is trapped in frozen glaciers.


You are not just what you eat; you are what you drink.

This is why water is so important to your health.

The Water Cure (TWC) does not sell water or purification systems or any related products. We offer insights and information; both free and in books that give you easy-to-understand scientific explanations on why water is vital to your well-being.

TWC believes promoting "water for health, for healing, for life" is an invaluable public health message. We can all change the way we drink – by drinking pure, natural water that is good for our health, our pocket book, and our environment.

No miracles. Just common sense backed by Dr. F. Batmaghelidj’s years of research and investigation into why water works so well in keeping us healthy and pain free. It can even cure illness in some people who get sick.

Water is the basis of all life and that includes your body. Your muscles that move your body are 75% water; your blood that transport nutrients is 82% water; your lungs that provide your oxygen are 90% water; your brain that is the control center of your body is 76% water; even your bones are 25% water.

Our health is truly dependent on the quality and quantity of the water we drink.

Dr. Bs pioneering work shows that Unintentional Chronic Dehydration (UCD) contributes to and even produces pain and many degenerative diseases that can be prevented and treated by increasing water intake on a regular basis.

If you are committed to a healthy lifestyle, make drinking enough natural water a habit in your life. It wont take long for you to feel the benefit.

It is a free investment for your long-term health.
Read More..

Youre not sick youre thirsty Dont treat thirst with medication

Sunday, May 11, 2014


Our life, our planet. Over 70% of the earths surface is water. However, most of it—98%--is salt water. Only 2% of the earths H20 is fresh water that we can drink, and of this, almost all is trapped in frozen glaciers.
You are not just what you eat; you are what you drink.
This is why water is so important to your health.
The Water Cure (TWC) does not sell water or purification systems or any related products. We offer insights and information; both free and in books that give you easy-to-understand scientific explanations on why water is vital to your well-being.
TWC believes promoting "water for health, for healing, for life" is an invaluable public health message. We can all change the way we drink – by drinking pure, natural water that is good for our health, our pocket book, and our environment.

No miracles. Just common sense backed by Dr. F. Batmaghelidj’s years of research and investigation into why water works so well in keeping us healthy and pain free. It can even cure illness in some people who get sick.
Water is the basis of all life and that includes your body. Your muscles that move your body are 75% water; your blood that transports nutrients is 82% water; your lungs that provide your oxygen are 90% water; your brain that is the control center of your body is 76% water; even your bones are 25% water.
Our health is truly dependent on the quality and quantity of the water we drink.
Read More..

Asynchronous Prescribing A Primary Care Divorce and the Basis for Medication Irreconciliation

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

The Disease Management Care Blog welcomes this essay from a physician colleague.

When I first started in practice, face-to-face “medication reconciliation” was built into my drug prescribing.  The prescriptions were written by hand at the time of the clinic visit and each one, including the dosing and their purpose, were discussed with the patient.  New prescriptions by physician-specialists were noted during the time of the initial history taking, meds that the patient stopped on their own and the reasons why were reviewed, intolerances to recently prescribed meds were discussed, allergies were updated, and side effects were explained.  Prescriptions were written for one month supplies and enough ills were given until the next encounter.  They were then handed to the patient.  If there was a problem, I could count on my patient to notify me right away.

As time went on, things changed.  Thanks to how many pharmacy benefits plans are run, mail order prescriptions are now typically given for ninety days with four ills.  I think of this as medication irreconciliation.

While ninety days may look like a good idea, for the primary care physician, this was the beginning of a divorce between medication prescribing and the clinic visit.  Face-to-face medication reconciliation is no longer synchronized with the doctor visit.  Since this now asynchronous disconnect allows patients to skip appointments and continue medications, many physicians no longer

1) perform frequent medication reconciliations and

2) use the reconciliation process to monitor their patients.  

This problem is greatest for those diseases that require more than annual visits.  Instead of using the medication reconciliation process to follow complex hypertensive, hypercholesterolemic or diabetic patients every three months, one-on-one appointments, because of skipped appointments, are now happening annually.   This has made it difficult to schedule other appropriate preventive interventions such as testing, preventive screening and immunizations such as flu shots and other timely care.  

This was the reason that primary care often wrote prescriptions that were only good until the next encounter.  As Reaganites like to quote “Trust and Verify”.

It doesnt stop there.  What has finalized the divorce between the drug and the visit is the new auto ill program being used by many pharmacies (examples are here and here).

Thanks to auto ill, the patient and physician are even more disconnected with each other.  Under this system, expired ills prompt automatic ills requests that are not patient or physician initiated.  I have found in my practice that these auto ills are often for discontinued medications.  What’s worse, I have also received ill requests from pharmacy benefit managers that have apparently opened expanded operations in the afterworld for deceased patients. Humorously, one note attached for the deceased patient’s request stated that he was expecting to pick it up at 11 am on Thursday.

I am not the only one who has noticed this (here and here).

This divorce between face-to-face visits with my patients and medication prescribing has made the problem of “medication irreconcilation” even worse. It’s now necessary to reconcile each and every prescription asynchronous with the office encounter.  This may be efficient for the pharmacy providers, but it is disastrous for primary care and dangerous for patients.  For many primary care physicians, the best time to reconcile medications is when all parties are present.  During a traditional office visit, patient labs and tests are reviewed, vital signs are taken, the history is updated and an exam is performed.  That’s the perfect time when all the appropriate medications for an appropriate length of time should be prescribed.

Thanks to the divorce, accurate reconciliation has become at times impossible.  Physicians can’t use clinic visits to query their patients about new developments in their care or new prescriptions by other providers.  New doses can’t be reviewed, compliance can’t be discussed and patient concerns can’t be addressed. 

This divorce between prescribing and seeing the patient has become grounds for irreconcilable differences.  It sure was easier when it was the other way around.
Read More..