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11 July 2016 at 12:51 pm in reply to: Looking for support in creating a motto for the HCV fight #20800
Break free from HCV
Generic medication can break you free from HCV
Patient rights, not patent rights
Greed is good, unless you’re a patient
But it’s hard to top Jonas Salk and “You can’t patent the sun” although you have to know what he’s talking about.
[video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ie4Mtwc4-IQ[/video]
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How about a comment surge!
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Here is a blog post of mine about testosterone from an update. The experts now agree! (See the attached PDF with new consensus guidelines).
There’s an apocryphal story in medicine that goes like this:
An eminent professor concluded his speech to the graduating class with the following comment:
“Ladies and Gentlemen, 50% of everything we have taught you about medicine is wrong, the trouble is, at the moment, we don’t know which 50%. Your job is to work it out”
In medicine we have interesting, and contradictory, positions with respect to hormone replacement.
In women we recognise a condition called menopause, which happens to women in their 40s and 50s when the levels of the hormones oestrogen and progesterone fall rapidly and the menstrual cycle becomes first erratic, then stops altogether.
We know that many women get symptomatic relief from symptoms of menopause like hot flushes, night sweats, and mood swings if we give them small doses of these missing hormones.
In men the situation is a little different. Testosterone is the primary male hormone, and levels start falling more or less immediately after sexual maturity is reached in the early 20s.
It has taken medical science a long time to get it’s head around thinking that males also experience a form or menopause, which some people call Andropause. Perhaps it’s because the decline is so slow, or it’s because there is no obvious “change of life”, other than the pervasive male middle aged spread?
We are now at the point where it has been found that men with Testosterone levels in the lowest 25% actually have the highest levels of cardiovascular mortality – ie die from strokes and heart attacks
Furthermore supplemental testosterone is safe for cardiovascular health, according to research presented at a meeting of the American Heart Association in Chicago.
It shows men on supplementation have reduced overall rates of major adverse cardiac events at one and three years after their initial low levels of testosterone were measured compared with men with persistently low levels of testosterone.
The study results coincide with an FDA evaluation of the safety of testosterone supplementation and whether it is a risk to the health of older men.
The researchers say it provides reassurance to doctors who can use testosterone with less concern about its effect on patients’ heart health.
“With this study we are getting closer to defining the true associations between testosterone treatment and cardiovascular risks or benefits,” says study leader Jeffrey Anderson, a cardiologist at the Intermountain Medical Center Heart Institute.
So if you’re a man, battling middle aged spread and loss of libido perhaps you should talk to your doctor about having you testosterone level measured, and if it’s low, considering supplementation?
FundamentalConceptsRegardingTestosterone.pdf
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Hi MtGoat
I was SVR4 and SVR12!!!
Great news for you
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Yes, but getting SVR4 is about 96% predictive of getting SVR24 so the odds are currently 25:1 in your favour of being cured.
Cause for celebration without any doubt.
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6 July 2016 at 3:27 pm in reply to: Swollen Mouth Allergic Reaction? Sovaldi/ Daclinza Combo? #20576Hello Happylady,
Yes it could be an drug reaction. If so stopping the drugs should see it go away and stopping them immediately was sensible.
If it does not go away then it must be something else and must be looked into. Even if it does go away it’s still possible it is, say, something you ate. I have a friend who gets that reaction from strawberries.
Assuming it goes away we get to the interesting part. To restart, or not to restart. Provided you did not get hives, wheezing, swollen tongue/throat or problems with breathing this should be safe enough.
If you restart the meds once things are settled and get the same reaction there is no doubt it’s the meds…..
I noticed you used the words Sovaldi and Daklinza so presume it’s originator medication, not that that matters. More important would be if that indicates you are GT3.
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HCV incubation Period 15 to 50 days (average: 28 days).
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Mohs surgery is where you have a skin cancer in a cosmetic area where there is not much spare skin.
Normally we cut out the cancer and a good margin of normal tissue around it to make sure we get it all.
With Mohs you cut out a bit and then a pathologist looks at it. If there is cancer at the edge we cut out more. Repeat until no cancer seen.
Now fix the hole….
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The reporting is opaque with respect to income although you would have to wonder if the source(s) of the education grants and the research contract trace back to Big Pharma. In Australia we do see that sort of sum donated by Pharma.
Operating revenue comprises:
Contract Income 3,456,405 3,956,205
Education Grants 210,000 154,500
Research Contract 0 133,184
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4 July 2016 at 9:23 am in reply to: USA Today article: Help with the high cost of Hepatitis C drugs #20435Thanks Hazel, Tina and Matt!
Anyone with a moment should go and have a look, like the comments from team HTM, and (if you’ve got a Facebook account add something)
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/07/02/kaiser-help-with-high-cost-of-hep-c-drugs/86636294/
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“Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming “Wow! What a Ride!”
― Hunter S. Thompson, The Proud Highway: Saga of a Desperate Southern Gentleman, 1955-1967
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How on the one hand are you running a $2 million surplus but on the other hand closing down resource centres?
If that was a $2 million dollar deficit you could understand, but a surplus?
It appears that unlike in Australia there is not an annual report that provides some oversight of the books?
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Bulgarian would be awesome.
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http://fixhepatitis.gr/ is the beginnings of a Greek version of Fixhepc. It is run by a patient there.
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3 July 2016 at 1:57 am in reply to: Looking for people from Greece that have joined the trial #20342Please see: http://fixhepatitis.gr/
It is a work in progress but in short there is no problem getting the medications into Greece.
This site is being made by a patient in Greece who wanted to spread the news.
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