Penn Elm Medical Group
488 E. Valley Parkway
Suite 411
Escondido, CA 92025 (760) 745-2000
News
You Can Use Breast
Feeding Still the Best Choice Over Formula The
American Academy of Family Practice position on breastfeeding states
infants not breastfed have higher rates of illnesses, including ear infections,
allergies, lung and urinary tract infections, and—later in life—diabetes,
Lymph cancer and inflammatory bowel disease. Doctors will continue
to stress to mothers who have no medical reason not to breastfeed that
their breast milk is specifically designed to provide the best nutrition
for their babies. For more information see The
National Women's Health Information Center.
Speaking of Breast Milk The FDA is warning women against using domperidone to increase
their supply of breast milk. The FDA has not approved the drug for any use,
but has received information that some women are purchasing the drug from
compounding pharmacies and sources in foreign countries to increase milk
production. According to the agency's June
7 press release "There
have been several published reports and case studies of cardiac arrhythmias,
cardiac arrest, and sudden death in patients receiving an intravenous
form of domperidone that has been withdrawn from marketing in a number of
countries." The oral form of domperidone still marketed in some countries
to treat stomach disorders has product labeling warning breastfeeding women
not to use the drug. The FDA has alerted its field personnel to be on the
lookout for attempts to import the drug, and has sent warning letters to
pharmacies that compound products containing domperidone and to firms that
supply domperidone
for use in compounding.
Help With the Cost of Medication Uninsured
Americans gained a financial edge on July 7, 2004, when pharmaceutical
giant Pfizer Inc. launched a program offering savings on its prescription
drugs. "Pfizer Pfriends," scheduled to begin enrolling participants
in August, will give uninsured American families earning less than $45,000
per year the ability to buy Pfizer medications at discounts of up to
37 percent—the same rates paid by large purchasers. Families
without drug coverage earning more than $45,000 will be eligible for
discounts
of up to 15 percent. The company will also expand its existing free-medicine
programs to families making less than $31,000 annually; they can receive
free Pfizer medications from their physicians' offices or through qualifying
community health centers and hospitals. See Pfizer's
press release to learn more. The AAFP has commended Pfizer's
actions, along with about 40 other health and patient advocacy organizations
and numerous governmental
leaders.
Eli
Lilly and Company's "LillyAnswers" is a patient assistance
program for low-income Medicare enrollees who do not have prescription
drug coverage. The centerpiece of the program, the LillyAnswers card,
allows seniors and people with disabilities under Medicare to pay a flat
$12 fee for a 30-day supply of certain retail-distributed Lilly drugs.
More than five million Americans are said to be eligible to receive the "LillyAnswers" card.
To be eligible for the LillyAnswers program the applicant must be a Medicare-enrolled
senior or a Medicare-enrolled person with disabilities who has no other
prescription drug coverage, and individual annual income below $18,000
or household income below $24,000. Eligibility will be verified through
copies of your most recent tax return and Medicare card. Please visit
LillyAnswers for
more information.
Link
of the month A new, animated Web site uses lay terms to describe
the findings in "The Health Consequences of Smoking," released
May 27, 2004 by the U.S. surgeon general. The 960-page report conclusively
links smoking with leukemia; cataracts; pneumonia; and cancers of the
cervix, kidney, pancreas and stomach. Smoking, the report says, causes
disease in nearly every organ of the body. "The toxins from cigarette
smoke go everywhere the blood flows," said U.S. Surgeon General
Richard Carmona, M.D. See "The
Health Consequences of Smoking on The Body"
for the interactive site that explains the effects of smoking on each
organ system. This is an impressive display to convince you or someone
you know you who smokes why it is essential to quit.
Important Announcements Fall School Physicals It’s that time of year again ... Kids are back
in school! Which means school physicals will be
required for
many students, especially athletes. To expedite this process
please review your school’s documentation.
Most require the physical and a doctor to fill
out specific information, but some also require lab work.
Please fill out
all of the medical information you can prior to your visit with
your doctor. And allow at least 2 weeks between the time
documentation is needed and when the student will begin
to participate. If a problem is discovered, your doctor would like
to have time to address the issue before authorizing participation.
What’s
New at Penn Elm? Electronic
Medical Records (coming soon)
Penn Elm is firmly entering the 21st century to improve
our services for you. Many national medical organizations,
including the Institute of Medicine, American Academy of Family Practice,
American Medical Association, and numerous others, have discovered the
power and improvement in quality that electronic medical records provide.
Converting medical records, lab orders, radiology results, referrals
to specialists,
and communications with pharmacies and insurance companies to a paperless
system will be one of the most important
changes in medical care in 50 years ... comparable in impact to
the invention of HMOs. In fact, this movement to the Electronic Health
Record
is on the
White
House agenda for improving the national medical system. Over the past
year, Penn Elm has been
in the process of choosing a system that will best serve
the needs of our doctors, staff, and patients. We hope to finish the
selection and institute the new system in
full by next summer. If you have specific questions about this exciting
change, please speak with our office supervisor,
Judy Shaw.