Online Pharmacy News

November 18, 2009

Health & Drugs Together

Filed under: Health Care, online pharmacy — admin @ 3:09 pm

I was going through some of the years that I passed by using various drugs to prevent from certain disease. I started analyzing myself and asked what did i intake till now ?
Working in front of the computer for more than 12 hrs a day drains my blood supply up to the brain and makes me unhealthy . I take various medications to keep me recharged.
I try to take good food which avoids any malnutrition. I do stuffs which seem natural . But at the end of the day i can only do that much. When i am sick i run to a chemist or check an online pharmacy website to buy any medications online. That;s my necessity and I cant help it . I cannot remain healthy and avoid drugs. I wonder how many of you agree to me.

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November 14, 2009

Google Launches Flu Shot Finder

Filed under: Drugs, Health Care — admin @ 7:54 am

Will Goolge’s Flu Shot Finder be Helpful for the Users around the world ?

Flushot Finder

You can check out the flu shot finder at www.google.com/flushot. The same tool will also be available shortly on www.flu.gov and the American Lung Association websites. It’s important to note that this project is just beginning and we have not yet received information about flu shot clinics for many locations. In addition, many locations that are shown are currently out of stock. We launched this service now in order to help disseminate information about locations where vaccines are available, and also to make more vaccine providers aware of the project so that they can contribute.

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October 31, 2009

Best Selling Drugs Been Published

Filed under: Drugs, Health Care, Online Medical Store, online pharmacy — admin @ 5:36 am

www.oursafeonlinepharmacy.com has published the best selling drugs . Now customers are able to find the best selling drugs at the company website www.oursafeonlinepharmacy.com . The evaluation has been done taking the consideration of best sellers versus the price for over 12 month period.
Alternatively customers can also follow the link below to download the list.

Best Selling Drugs

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October 15, 2009

Viagra Buy Easy , Safe , Secure or Difficult to Buy viagra or cheap viagra online at drug store

Filed under: Drugs, Health Care, Online Medical Store, online pharmacy — admin @ 7:23 am

Viagra

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or

without jelly

Its easy to get jelly ones than non jelly viagra .

You can debate on whether or not the viagra thing actually works . Well i know it works I have used them many times and i feel it works and it has never let me down. I like because it helps me to do what i otherwise cant do .

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July 31, 2009

How do I FIND Safe Online Pharmacy ?

Filed under: Health Care, Online Medical Store, online pharmacy — admin @ 12:27 am

How do i find a Safe Online Pharmacy?

I was looking to buy drugs online as i am not able to get a prescription from the General Practitioner so please suggest the safe online pharmacy .

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July 30, 2009

Complications From Swine Flu Hit Pregnant Women Harder, US Study

Filed under: Health Care, online pharmacy — admin @ 12:17 pm

Swine FLU

A US study published online ahead of print in a leading medical journal suggests that complications from H1N1 swine flu could hit pregnant women harder, and that pregnant women infected with the virus are hospitalized at four times the rate of infected people in the general population. The authors recommend that pregnant women infected with swine flu should start antiviral treatment straight away, and those that are healthy should receive the vaccine as soon as it becomes available.

The article, which appeared as an online first issue on 29 July in The Lancet is written by Dr Denise J Jamieson, of the Division of Reproductive Health, at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in Atlanta, Georgia, and colleagues.

Last month the World Health Organization (WHO) declared that the novel H1N1 swine flu virus that is sweeping the world is a global pandemic. Cases and deaths started being reported from Mexico, followed by the USA, and while experts were expecting the virus to wane in the northern hemisphere during the summer months it has not done so and continues to infect people in the US, as other countries, with more deaths occurring.

For the study, Jamieson and colleagues focus on cases of infection among pregnant women identified during the first month of the outbreak and deaths among pregnant women that were linked with H1N1 swine flu during the first 2 months.

As part of enhanced surveillance, the CDC began systematically to collect data on cases of H1N1 infection in pregnant women soon after initial cases emerged, and the authors used this data, together with population estimates from the 2007 census to calculate rates of illness and admission to hospital.

They defined a confirmed case as:

“An acute respiratory illness with laboratory-confirmed pandemic H1N1 virus infection by real-time reverse-transcriptase PCR or viral culture.”

And a probable case as:

“An acute febrile respiratory illness who was positive for influenza A, but negative for H1 and H3.”

The results showed that:

* Between 15 April and 18 May 2009 (the first month of the outbreak), the CDC received reports of 34 confirmed or probable cases of pandemic H1N1 in pregnant women from 13 states.

* 3 of the women were in their first trimester, 19 were in their second, 9 were in their third, while the trimester stage of the other 3 was unknown.

* 5 women were under 18 years of age, 17 women were between 18 and 29 years, 11 were aged between 30 and 39 and one was over 40.

* 9 of the women were non-Hispanic white, 2 were non-Hispanic black, 15 were Hispanic, 1 was Asian, 1 was American Indian/Alaskan Native, and 6 were of unknown race.

* 4 of the women had been in Mexico in the previous 7 days, 27 had not, while there was no information about travel on the other 3.

* 11 of the cases (32 per cent) were admitted to hospital.

* During the first month of the outbreak, the estimated rate of hospital admission for pregnant women infected with pandemic H1N1 virus was higher than it was in the general population.

* For pregnant women the hospitalization rate in the first month was estimated to be 0·32 per 100,000 and for the general population it was 0·076 per 100,000.

* Between 15 April and 16 June 2009 (the first two months of the outbreak), the CDC received reports of 6 deaths among pregnant women, all of whom had developed “pneumonia and subsequent acute respiratory distress syndrome requiring mechanical ventilation”.

The authors noted that the admission rates for pregnant women could be higher than that for the general population because doctors were probably more likely to admit a pregnant woman than a person from the general population with the same symptoms.

Nevertheless, the authors interpreted the findings as suggesting that:

“Pregnant women might be at increased risk for complications from pandemic H1N1 virus infection.”

The authors suggest these findings support the present recommendation to:

“Promptly treat pregnant women with H1N1 influenza virus infection with anti-influenza drugs.”

Although the decision to admit a pregnant woman is not a simple one, wrote the authors, and might include considerations beyond the severity of the illness, they said it was still a worry that over 10 per cent of the influenza-related deaths in the US have been in pregnant women.

This trend appears to be shared with the 1918 and 1957 pandemics, when mortality among pregnant women was also higher than in the general population.

“During the pandemic of 1957, 50 percent of deaths due to Asian influenza in Minnesota among women of reproductive age occurred in pregnant women, ” wrote the authors.

They also noted that while the CDC recommends that pregnant patients be given antivirals (they mentioned two in particular) as soon as possible after the onset of flu, because the benefit is expected to be greatest if the drugs get to work within 48 hours of onset, many of the pregnant women included in the study:

“Were not treated with either of these drugs at the time of their presentation with influenza-like illness.”

“Furthermore, none of those who died were treated within 48 h of illness onset,” they added.

The authors added that in view of the anticipated effects of novel H1N1 on pregnant women, the benefits of giving them antivirals are likely to to outweigh potential risks to their unborn baby.

However, since most of the women included in this study are still pregnant, as most of the other women infected elsewhere in the world, it is not possible to say how the novel H1N1 virus and treatments for it might have affected the fetus.

The authors also noted that while vaccination, once available, “will be an essential component of the public health response to this influenza, and US guidelines place pregnant women in a high-priority group for receipt of pandemic influenza vaccine,” they expressed concern that few women actually come forward to be vaccinated for seasonal flu when they are pregnant.

Among their concluding remarks they wrote:

“Findings from this study will be crucial to inform public health planning for pregnant women, both for this virus and for other novel pathogens.”

“Crucially, health-care providers have to realise that pregnant women are at increased risk for severe disease and complications from pandemic H1N1 influenza virus infection, and should start treatment with anti-influenza drugs promptly,” they added.

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New Drug-Resistant Malaria

Filed under: Drugs, Health Care — admin @ 12:11 pm

New Drug-Resistant Malaria

A new study published in a leading medical journal today shows that in Western Cambodia, the parasites that cause malaria have developed resistance to first line drugs, thus reducing their effectiveness and potentially putting at risk the lives of millions of people.

The study, which was funded by the Global Malaria Programme of the World Health Organisation, the Wellcome Trust and the Li Ka Shing Foundation, was the work of researchers from the Wellcome-Mahidol University Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Programme, based in Bangkok, Thailand, and colleagues at other research centers, and is published in the 30 July issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, NEJM.

The Research Programme in Bangkok is a collaboration between Mahidol University, Bangkok, and the University of Oxford, supported by the Wellcome Trust. The WHO Programme funds came from grants provided by the Melinda Gates Foundation and the Western Pacific Regional Office.

Malaria is a potentially fatal disease that kills more than a million people every year; mostly young children and pregnant women. The disease is caused by a parasite called Plasmodium that enters the bloodstream or lymphatic system of humans via bites from the parasite-carrying Anopheles female mosquito.

The most deadly form of malaria is caused by the parasite Plasmodium falciparum which kills 9 out of 10 of the people it infects.

The recommended first line treatment for P. falciparum malaria is combination therapies that use drugs derived from artemisinin which comes from the sweet wormwood plant (Artemisia annua) used by practitioners of Chinese medicine for centuries under the name Qinghaosu.

Drugs based on arteminisin are considered better than other anti-malaria drugs like chloroquine and mefloquine because, until now, malaria parasites appear unable to resist it.

However, recent reports from the Thai-Cambodian border, where resistance to anti-malaria drugs has occured a number of times before, suggest that a strain of malaria parasite is emerging that is resistant to artemisinin-based drugs.

The authors decided to investigate this further by conducting two open-label (that is unlike a blinded trial, doctors and patients knew which drugs they were getting) randomized trials to compared the effectiveness of two anti-malaria treatments in two groups of 40 patients.

One group of patients was in Pailin, western Cambodia, and the other was in Wang Pha, northwestern Thailand.

Each patient received the relevant dosage appropriate to their body weight of either artesunate or a combination of artesunate and mefloquine. (Artesunate is an artemisinin derivative). Thus 20 patients in each country received monotherapy (artesunate on its own) and 20 received combination therapy.

The results showed that on average, the patients in Thailand were clear of the parasite within 48 hours, but in western Cambodia it took nearly twice as long for the parasite to clear: there it took 84 hours.

Another way to test for drug resistance is to see if the disease recurs after treatment. If the drug is effective, the number of parasites should fall during the treatment period and the infection should clear.

In the trials the researchers found that among the patients in each country who received monotherapy, infection recurred in 6 out of 20 patients in western Cambodia and in only 1 of the 20 patients in Thailand.

Similarly, of the 20 patients in each country who were treated with combination therapy, infection recurred in 2 in Cambodia compared with only 1 in Thailand.

Lead author Dr Arjen Dondorp of the Faculty of Tropical Medicine at Mahidol University told the media that:

“Our study suggests that malaria parasites in Cambodia are less susceptible to artemisinin than those in Thailand.”

“This means that it takes longer to kill the parasites,” added Dondorp, explaining that:

“Artemisinin should clear the parasites at an early stage, preventing them further maturing and reproducing. When the drug’s action is impaired, it becomes more difficult to eliminate the parasites from the body.”

As the artemisinin derivative loses its potency, artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) begin to rely increasingly on the weaker partner drug, which increases the chance that resistance will also evolve toward the partner drug.

“This has very important consequences for the lifespan of ACTs. Losing ACTs would be a disaster for malaria control,” warned Dondorp.

Speculating on what may have caused this decrease in suscpetibility, there are a number of possible contributing factors, although the study iteself did not examine them.

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Reputable Online Pharmacy-no Prescription?

Filed under: Drugs, Health Care — Tags: , , , — admin @ 6:14 am

I was wondering if any of you out there have ever ordered meds online without a prescription…what site did you use and did everything go smoothly? I am looking to purchase some Clonazepam.

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June 29, 2009

Safe Online Pharmacy

Filed under: Drugs, Health Care — Tags: — admin @ 4:21 am

Safe Online Pharmacy

Rated as “The best Online Pharmacy by most of the online magazines”.Our online pharmacy acts as one stop solution to your medications need. We are safe & secure yet we sell drugs at affordable cost.

They have redefined the general meaning of online pharmacy by providing a monthly drug analysis at no cost. They have a sophisticated medical analytics system that looks for the patient history and evaluates the past and the present data collected in a secured database to produce reports. These reports allows identify the need of drug for each patient registered with oursafeonlinepharmacy.com.
A secure medium of buying drugs online.

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June 28, 2009

When they safe are they really safe online pharmacies ?

Filed under: Drugs, Health Care, Online Medical Store, Pharmacies, online pharmacy — Tags: , — admin @ 3:44 am

Safe Online Pharmacy

There are lots of web advert you might see where you see companies stressing on their website being safe to purchase medications online . But as a layman are they really safe and up to the task. I wonder they are really safe and they take care of customer privacy who are buying medications online. I doubt on the legitimacy but still I am a customer of few online pharmacies myself as i find it convenience buying drugs online.

Make sure when you purchase medications online next time you better make sure they are really safe online pharmacy.

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