By Dr. Mercola on Aug 15, 2008 in Health, Main Content | 0 Comments
Nearly half of cancer patients in England are being forced to cut back on food or heating in order to pay for their prescriptions drugs. Almost two-thirds miss out on simple leisure activities, like family days out, to cope with their medication costs.
A survey of nearly 500 cancer patients in England found that 44 percent were struggling to cope with drug costs.
Prescription charges were eliminated in Wales in 2007, and will be phased out in Scotland by 2011. Northern Ireland has frozen its charges while it considers whether to abolish them entirely. In England, however, the government has ruled out any move towards free prescriptions.


By Dr. Mercola on Aug 14, 2008 in Health, Main Content | 0 Comments
The situation is infrequent, but happens several times a year: someone goes surfing for the first time, develops low back pain, comes out of the water, feels that their legs are weak, and can’t urinate. It’s known as surfer’s myelopathy each year, and most first-time surfers — and even most surfing instructors — have never heard of this rare complication and have no idea what the warning signs are.
Unlike most sports injuries, surfer’s myelopathy is not the result of an obvious accident or trauma. Instead, it seems to be a mechanical problem that starts in the blood vessels surrounding the spine.
When the spinal cord is hyperextended — as when a surfer arches his back on the board — it can interrupt the blood flow to the spine, he explained. One theory holds that frequent repetition of this motion causes a kink in the blood vessel. The spinal cord is starved of oxygen.
For now, there is no medication or surgery to treat surfer’s myelopathy. Many patients do recover, however, often through intense physical therapy.


By Content Keyword RSS on Aug 13, 2008 in Health, Main Content | 0 Comments
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By Dr. Mercola on Aug 12, 2008 in Health, Main Content | 0 Comments
Physicians who prescribe hormones containing estriol have grown concerned about the FDA’s so-called “abbreviated” Investigational New Drug (IND) application for estriol. The process will effectively ban most physicians from prescribing a medication they consider best for their patients.
The IND places a significant financial burden on physicians, most notably by requiring them to submit applications to an Institutional Review Boards (IRB). Submitting necessary documentation and contracting for a private IRB can easily cost between $10,000 and $25,000 and can take months.
The FDA’s new policy threatens the access of this important medication for my patients who rely on hormones containing estriol to relieve the symptoms of menopause. It could force them off of treatment their doctors have deemed necessary, and would either deny them treatment or subject them to the unnecessary expense and inconvenience of a new treatment regime.
Millions of women have been prescribed estriol and have used it safely for decades.


By Content Keyword RSS on Aug 11, 2008 in Health, Main Content | 0 Comments
When a person is diagnosed with diabetes, initial treatments would include managing nutrition and diet, regular physical exercise, and in extreme cases, medication and regular insulin treatments. Along with medications, it is vital that a patient follows a strict regimen on managing weight and sticking to a recommended dietary plan. Over the years though, natural remedies or diabetes herbal remedies have become most popularly recommended as alternative treatment to diabetes even by the medical