Tag: treatments

  • Wisconsin’s ‘chronic Lyme’ patients embrace alternative treatments, rack up big bills

    Wisconsin’s ‘chronic Lyme’ patients embrace alternative treatments, rack up big bills

    Reading Time: 11 minutes

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    Crystal Pauley, a former physician assistant, didn’t believe in so-called chronic Lyme disease — until she became sick.

    Many health care providers reject chronic Lyme disease as a diagnosis. One 2010 survey found that just six out of 285 primary care doctors surveyed in Connecticut — an epicenter for the tick-borne infection — believed that symptoms of Lyme disease persist after treatment or in the absence of a positive Lyme test.

    When Pauley worked for the La Crosse, Wisconsin-based Gundersen Health System, she remembered hearing about a friend from high school battling chronic Lyme in Australia. But she had her doubts. “I’m working in the medical field,” she said. “We’ve never learned about that.” 

    Years later, Pauley has changed her mind. Pauley tested positive for Lyme in 2020. She suffers from unrelenting fatigue, joint pain and brain fog. She walks up stairs sideways because of the unbearable knee pain. Pauley said she has become “pseudo-Lyme literate” because of her own personal journey.

    Pauley belongs to a cohort of patients with Lyme-like symptoms but negative test results or patients with positive test results who suffer from lingering symptoms long after treatment. They call it chronic Lyme disease, while the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention labels it as Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS). The CDC says there is no known treatment for the condition. 

    “Their symptoms are always real. They’re experiencing them,” said Dr. Joyce Sanchez, an infectious-disease associate professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin who treats Lyme patients with persistent symptoms. 

    “If someone is having physical symptoms and isn’t feeling listened to, then they’ll have mental health repercussions and then that will impact their physical well-being,” she said. “And then it’s a spiral that if you don’t address both components of health, you’re not going to make much progress on either side. And they will continue to feel sick.” 

    Wisconsin Watch talked with five Wisconsin patients, all women, who have been searching for validation and experimenting with personalized treatments as part of a long and sometimes grueling battle with the illness. The infection comes from tiny ticks primarily found in the northeastern United States, including in Wisconsin — which is a hot spot for Lyme, ranking No. 5 among states for Lyme cases in 2019.

    One of the five tested positive for Lyme using a two-step testing recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Three others tested positive using a test not recommended by the CDC. The fifth woman was diagnosed as possibly suffering from the disease by a “Lyme-literate” practitioner.

    Wide-ranging symptoms

    All of the five patients share commonalities. They’ve never noticed the signature “bull’s eye” rash around the tick bite, the hallmark of Lyme disease, which is seen in 70{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} to 80{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of patients. But relentless waves of rheumatologic, cardiac and neurological symptoms have flattened their lives. Some of them were previously fit and healthy. 

    Pauley, 37, who as a student cranked through medical textbooks, began having trouble remembering a simple medication direction. She put up sticky notes around her office to jar her memory.

    Alicia Cashman, 57, runs the Madison Area Lyme Support Group. She recalled unbearable pelvic pain beginning in 2010. “This causes pain of a magnitude that makes you want to die,” she said.

    The pain metastasized quickly. She felt joint pain, headaches, insomnia and extreme fatigue. “It was so bad that I just wanted to be in a dark room with no smell, no sound, no light. Your body has succumbed to this,” she said.

    Shelbie Bertolasi, 47, is a stay-at-home mother in Waukesha with four children ages 5 to 24. Until about seven years ago, she was healthy and stuck to a workout routine. 

    Shelbie Bertolasi was diagnosed with Lyme disease in July 2020 after suffering for many years with a variety of medical issues, including sweats, joint pain, rashes, intestinal issues and a miscarriage of twins. A naturopath finally recommended a Lyme test after she visited numerous doctors who she says failed to take her symptoms seriously. “I just want people to understand that Lyme is real. It’s not in our head. I want doctors to understand. I told doctors about my brain fog. My regular doctor wouldn’t even believe me.” She is seen at her home in Waukesha, Wis., on Dec. 1, 2021. (Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Watch)

    Bertolasi’s health steadily deteriorated starting in early 2015 when she miscarried twins. Then, she developed a high fever, with stomach and intestinal pain. She lost 30 pounds in a month due to constant diarrhea. Doctors flagged and treated excessive bacteria in her small intestine. She felt better but gradually was beset by continual pain in her joints, back, knees and hip. 

    Sometimes, she loses feeling in her feet. “It’s a nuisance when you’re in the middle of (driving), and you can’t feel the pedals that well,” she said.

    Judy Stevens, 52, a former school counselor and psychotherapist from Wauwatosa, says shortly after the loss of her father, she was hit by joint pain, brain fog, insomnia, hair loss and night sweats. She was an athletic person, a cross-country coach at school and a triathlete. 

    None of these women recalled seeing a tick, except Jessica Croteau, who lives in Rice Lake. The 34-year-old noticed a tick on her neck in the summer of 2019 at home and started to have flu-like symptoms, but she tested negative for Lyme. Croteau suffered bouts of low-grade fever, a stiff neck and gastrointestinal problems. She ended up visiting the emergency room when her blood pressure spiked. 

    Going down ‘rabbit holes’

    Often, chronic Lyme patients present multiple symptoms that make their diagnosis challenging. They bounce from one specialist to another to tackle each problem, but each diagnosis cannot explain all of the symptoms they are experiencing. 

    Cashman underwent an MRI because of her severe pelvic pain, and the results found two deflating ovarian cysts which can cause severe pain in the lower abdomen. But that diagnosis did not explain the unbearable pain that gravitated to her knees and to her head. She recalled that the swollen knee “got red hot to touch,” and she developed a fever. Cashman began to look for causes. “Not everything is Lyme, but everything can be (Lyme),” she said. “It’s a weird thing, but you got to go down these rabbit holes.” 

    Croteau saw specialists, including emergency physicians, a cardiologist, a kidney specialist and an immunologist. All the tests she took were negative for Lyme disease. She was told the problems may be related to psychological issues.

    “So basically, it’s been a timeline of two years of not being taken seriously, just pushed away — either told I can’t do anything for you (or) there’s nothing really wrong with you,” Croteau said.

    Judy Stevens, 51, was diagnosed with Lyme disease in July 2017, but thinks she may have had it since childhood. Her symptoms included brain fog, depression, insomnia, and she said she was often treated as a psychiatric patient by the more than 30 different doctors she saw. Prior to remission in 2020, she says she was taking more than 40 herbs and supplements a day. She estimated it cost her $25,000 to $50,000 a year to treat her Lyme disease. “It was a huge strain on us. I can’t even imagine not having the resources,” she said. “This is people’s reality. It’s really costly to get better and stay better.” She is pictured at her home in Wauwatosa, Wis., on Dec. 1, 2021. (Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Watch)

    A medical provider suggested that she seek counseling and increase her dose of anti-anxiety medicine. But the pain in her joints and wrists were real, and her knuckles often got swollen. The brain fog made it hard for her to punch in a phone number correctly. 

    Bertolasi saw a pain specialist, a psychiatrist, a spinal therapist and a neurologist. They diagnosed her with SI joint dysfunction. Back surgery, therapy and exercise relieved some of her pain, but her knees continue to hurt. She was told, “You’re getting older, (so) things don’t work as well as they used to.” 

    Unsatisfied, in 2019, Bertolasi saw a rheumatologist who ordered several tests, including for rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, and the results were all negative. And the forgetfulness has persisted; she has left her phone in the refrigerator. 

    “You’re just surrounded by this dark (mental) fog, and you just don’t know how to navigate your way through,” she said. 

    After seeing around 30 specialists, Stevens had a bag of medications, including many prescribed psychotropic drugs. She went on those drugs, and her psychiatric symptoms got worse. However, she doesn’t blame doctors, who generally specialize in one area of the body or a family of diseases. 

    “When you have a whole slew of symptoms, it’s hard for the physicians to dig deeper,” she said. 

    Sometimes, patients with waning and waxing symptoms are labeled as malingerers who are faking symptoms to get attention. “This is very common with people with Lyme,” Stevens said.

    Sanchez, the infectious disease doctor, worries that patients who do not get answers from mainstream medicine may gravitate toward unproven — and expensive — alternatives. But she sees no harm in some strategies that may offer relief, including meditation, tai chi, acupuncture or massage therapy.

    No quick fix

    Two of the five women interviewed by Wisconsin Watch have been diagnosed through the CDC’s two-step testing regimen: the ELISA test followed by the Western Blot, two different ways of looking for Lyme antibodies in the patient’s blood. Pauley tested positive for Lyme using the CDC’s recommended criteria, and Stevens tested positive on just one of the two tests.

    Two others used a laboratory that administers the same tests but uses less-stringent criteria to determine whether a person has Lyme. Cashman and Bertolasi both tested positive through that testing. A 2014 Columbia University study found that some labs using their own criteria reported more false positive results  — 57{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} — among people with no history of Lyme than the 25{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} false-positive rate using CDC criteria. Croteau used three different laboratories but tested negative each time.

    With a Lyme disease diagnosis, Pauley took the standard treatment, doxycycline, for three weeks. 

    Judy Stevens is seen in the September 2015 photo when she says she was suffering from undiagnosed chronic Lyme disease. “I had lost 30 pounds and was almost put on a feeding tube. I clearly look very distressed and weak. At this time, I was diagnosed with an eating disorder, even though I was eating,” she said. Ten days later she had symptoms of Bell’s palsy in her face, and her husband took her to the emergency room because he thought she was having a stroke. She was told it was likely stress and was sent home. (Courtesy of Judy Stevens)

    But when she completed the antibiotic therapy, she felt even worse. While her memory has improved, she has developed muscle pain, and her knees hurt even more. She felt tired, saying she could sleep 10 to 16 hours a day. But her doctor, following standard protocol, has told her she is done with treatment.

    The same thing happened to Stevens. The doctor prescribed her 30 days of doxycycline and suggested that she seek a “Lyme-literate” doctor as she could not prescribe any longer course of antibiotics.

    Stevens’ doctor followed CDC guidance, which recommends against prolonged antibiotic treatment, saying the harm outweighs the benefit. Sanchez echoed the argument, saying that doctors must weigh the risks and benefits of antibiotics, just like other prescribed medications.

    “If we don’t see any plus side benefit to it, then we’re only exposing people to unnecessary risks,” she said. “Nothing comes with a free lunch. It’s important to be thoughtful about the right antibiotic at the right dose for the right amount of time.”

    She also said some antibiotics could bring down inflammation as a side effect, making some patients feel better. This is also the point at which some patients begin experimenting with treatments that mainstream medicine does not recognize.

    Sufferers try unconventional treatments

    Cashman, living in Cataract, Wisconsin was also diagnosed with Bartonella, or Cat scratch disease, and went through five years of “systemic, holistic” treatments, which included a host of herbs, antibiotics, a high dose of vitamin C and supplements. She also received ozone therapy and laser therapy for pain relief. She is now nearly symptom-free, but still deals with spine stiffness. 

    Alicia Cashman shows a variety of treatments she uses for her chronic Lyme disease. Seen on her counter is a jar of homemade Japanese knotweed tincture, as well as a bottle of Dimethyl Sulfoxide (DMSO) and MSM power, which she puts into a homemade pain ointment — seen in the jar on the right. “We call it a ‘do it yourself disease’ because you have to be an active participant in your own healing,” she says. “I attribute my health today to doctors who were willing to work outside the box.” Photo taken Jan. 31, 2020. (Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Watch)
    A bottle of A-Bart, an herbal supplement, is seen at the home of Shelbie Bertolasi in Waukesha, Wis., on Dec. 1, 2021. The bottle costs $90 and is just one of the many supplements Bertolasi takes to treat her chronic Lyme disease. “We spend tons and tons of money on treatments. There are things my family can’t do because of all the money we have to spend to treat the Lyme,” she says. (Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Watch)

    Stevens found two Lyme-literate doctors in Wisconsin who are versed in both Western and alternative medicine. She said she was co-infected with Relapsing Fever, Babesiosis and Bartonella. She said her treatments are highly individualized, and her doctors tweak her therapies from time to time. At one point, Stevens was on more than 40 types of herbs and supplements.

    “I’m living proof that I got better as a result of all those herbal treatments,” she said. “I was not on antibiotics for four or five months.” 

    Bertolasi turned to a Lyme-literate doctor who also treats one of her friends with similar symptoms. Besides Lyme, she was also diagnosed with Bartonella. She has completed a 14-month course of antibiotics. Now, besides taking herbal supplements, Bertolasi follows a strict diet excluding alcohol, dairy, gluten and sugar to reduce inflammation in her body.

    Shelbie Bertolasi explains the variety of supplements she takes to treat her Lyme disease. Bertolasi has spent the past few years treating her symptoms with a variety of supplements, some of which cost anywhere from $30 to $90 a bottle. She estimates she spends about $500 a month on supplements. She is seen at her home in Waukesha, Wis., on Dec. 1, 2021. (Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Watch)

    She said she is at least 80{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} better than about a year ago. Her memory has somewhat returned. Still, brain fog waxes and wanes — as does pain in her joints and lower back.

    Croteau tested negative with three Lyme disease tests, but she was diagnosed by a Lyme-literate doctor with Bartonella and “questionable” Lyme disease. The doctor prescribed her doxycycline, triggering a severe reaction that Lyme-infected patients sometimes experience during treatment. 

    When Croteau found herself pregnant, the doctor suggested she take amoxicillin and clindamycin in low doses during her pregnancy. She stopped taking them after giving birth to her second child in late October 2021 and has been symptom free for the following two months. Croteau said her symptoms have returned since January, including fatigue and brain fog, neck stiffness, headache and nausea. She cares for her newborn at home and hasn’t started any treatment due to financial constraints.  

    ‘A rich person’s disease’

    Since chronic Lyme is not a recognized disease, it’s difficult to get insurance coverage, so patients are usually stuck paying out of pocket for treatment.

    Pauley, who lives in Woodstock, Illinois, is still searching for affordable treatments.

    Her dementia-like symptoms made it impossible to continue working as a veterinary assistant, and she quit her veterinary clinic job in 2020. Previously, she had quit her physician assistant job in La Crosse and moved back to Illinois. 

    “It was hard,” she said. “I went from the middle-upper class to the poverty line.” 

    She went to see a Lyme-literate doctor in Milwaukee in August, when she was also suspected to have Bartonella. Pauley was charged $525 per hour for the initial consultation fee, not counting testing fees and supplements. She was irritated to hear the doctor refer to it as “a rich person’s disease.”

    “It’s hard to understand any doctors that charge like Beverly Hills lifestyle out in the Midwest,” she said. “We’re not celebrities, and I don’t get paid 30 million per film.” 

    Stevens said her average costs out of pocket range from $25,000 to $50,000 a year. “It was a huge strain on us,” she said. “This is why a lot of people can’t get better, because they can’t afford it.” 

    Cashman knows the financial burdens chronic Lyme patients bear, too.

    She estimates she has spent $150,000 out of pocket for treatments that she and her husband — who also is a chronic Lyme patient — have taken over the years. Cashman has found ways to reduce the costs by, for example, buying pounds of ground herbs and making her own capsules at home.

    Although all five women interviewed by Wisconsin Watch have tried unconventional treatments, they say they are skeptical about anyone who claims their chronic illness can be cured quickly. 

    Alicia Cashman leads a meeting of the Madison Area Lyme Support Group at the East Madison Police Station in Madison, Wis., on Feb. 8, 2020. About 13 other people were in attendance, some of whom had driven from more than an hour away. The group shared personal experiences with chronic Lyme disease. Also pictured is Olivia Parry of Madison, Wis. (Coburn Dukehart / Wisconsin Watch)

    “(If it) is just a quick fix to make money, and I’m just very leery of it,” Bertolasi said. 

    And they are using their experiences to help others. Pauley has become an advocate for lower health care costs. Bertolasi is writing a Lyme-friendly cookbook to chronicle recipes that have worked for her. 

    Although Stevens said being a chronic Lyme patient is “like a full-time job,” she wants people to know there is hope. 

    “You can be in terrible shape, but you can get better,” Stevens said. “It’s really easy to go down the road of ‘poor me,’ but it is possible to get better. There is hope. You can reach remission.”

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  • Researchers Develop a Cheaper and Less Invasive Alternative to IVF Treatments

    Researchers Develop a Cheaper and Less Invasive Alternative to IVF Treatments

    University of New South Wales (UNSW) researchers have made a much less expensive and fewer invasive different to traditional fertility treatment options that is now readily available at Sydney’s Royal Clinic for women.

    In vitro fertilisation or IVF has been the founded remedy for infertility for a extensive time. Even so, this technique is pricey, and to promote egg progress ahead of extraction, it calls for sufferers to inject follicle-stimulating hormones (FSH) that can inflict considerable discomfort and lead to some health-related difficulties.

    UNSW’s recently produced option to IVF, CAPA in vitro maturation (CAPA-IVM), involves retrieving immature eggs from the ovaries and maturing them outdoors the overall body, demanding less hormone injections at a reduced cost. The cure was created by Prof. Robert Gilchrist from UNSW Medicine & Health in Sydney, and Prof. Johan Smitz from Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) in Brussels, Belgium.

    “The IVM fertility method originates from UNSW laboratory analysis, so this is a great illustration of the lifecycle of investigate and the large variation it can make in people’s lives,” explained Gilchrist in a UNSW information launch.

    “It is evidence that ‘bench-to-bedside’ research is alive and nicely in Australia,” he ongoing.

    “I’ve labored for a lot of decades on this system with my analysis associates, and getting it translated into a fertility remedy available to individuals in Australia is quite fulfilling.”

    Epoch Times Photo
    Embryologist Ric Ross retains a dish with human embryos at the La Jolla IVF Clinic on Feb. 28, 2007, in La Jolla, California. (Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images)

    How Do CAPA-IVM Solutions Work

    Ahead of the discovery of CAPA-IVM, the in vitro maturation technique was not the advised variety of fertility procedure mainly because pregnancy prices following IVM ended up reduced than IVF.

    “IVM has been all over for many years, but it’s by no means been pretty effective since it’s challenging to replicate what the ovary does in a laboratory,” explained UNSW Professor Bill Ledger from the Royal Medical center for Ladies.

    “The trouble has been when you acquire an egg out of the human human body, it matures incredibly rapidly, even when it could not be ready to, but this new technique referred to as CAPA switches off the progression of the egg for 24 hours,” Ledger explained. “So it grows extra slowly, and it matures much more healthily. And it’s much more fertile when you introduce it to the sperm. It’s providing us a for a longer time window of time to function with the egg.”

    Prof. Gilchrist mentioned that the CAPA-IVM treatments are comprised of two techniques that have been made to imitate the pure processes of egg development and maturation that manifest in the ovaries. To command egg maturation in cell cultures, CAPA-IVM  adds a advancement factor called cumulin, which was uncovered by Gilchrist, and cAMP modulators—small signalling molecules that keep organic egg processes— to the egg cells.

    ”We have demonstrated that it is attainable to make improvements to egg high quality and embryo produce with next to no medicines, applying strong expansion aspects produced by the egg,” Gilchrist explained in the before UNSW launch that circulated CAPA-IVM.

    The treatment was to start with tested on pigs, and then, after the trials showed improvements in egg high-quality and a doubling in embryo manufacturing when compared to existing IVM therapies, preclinical trials on human eggs have been launched. The preclinical trials had been done by Prof. Smitz from VUB’s Follicle Biology Laboratory in Brussels and showed related outcomes to the pig trials, with the high-quality of eggs improving and embryo generation raising by 50 percent.

    Epoch Times Photo
    A donated human embryo is witnessed through a microscope at the La Jolla IVF Clinic in La Jolla, Calif., on Feb. 28, 2007. The clinic accepts donated embryos from around the region through The Stem Cell useful resource, which are then presented to stem cell analysis labs for analysis. (Sandy Huffaker/Getty Visuals)

    Long run of CAPA-IVM

    Prof. Jeremy Thompson, from the University of Adelaide’s Robinson Study Institute said that the CAPA-IVM therapy was a substantial progression in fertility investigate.

    “It will remove the have to have for a girl to inject herself with high doses of hormones for up to 12 times,” Thompson said. “Most importantly, it could give a lady nearly the very same opportunity of starting to be pregnant as with hormone-stimulated IVF.”

    “A new randomised demo in Vietnam discovered pregnancy charges had been the identical with CAPA-IVM as they are in regular IVF, despite the fact that IVF patients experienced far more embryos to freeze,”  Gilchrist stated.

    Having said that, IVM therapies are not for everybody. It is estimated that only about 15 p.c of infertile women of all ages will be qualified for CAPA-IVM.

    The ladies most effective suited for this cure involve individuals with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) and these who have been diagnosed with most cancers and urgently will need to get preservative action to safe their fertility. According to Fertility Specialists of WA, the hormone injections included in IVF can stimulate most cancers cells and bring about women of all ages with PCOS to produce the affliction ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome—swelling and soreness in the ovaries—.

    Professor Michel De Vos at UZ Brussel said in the before release that the new cure would eradicate the risk of ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome.

    “Young women experiencing cancer cure, who desire to preserve their fertility but usually don’t have time to freeze their eggs, will also profit from this breakthrough,” Prof. De Vos reported.

    The Royal Hospital for Women was permitted by the Therapeutic Merchandise Administration to present CAPA-IVM procedure in 2021, producing it one of the initial 5 places to make the procedure out there. Additionally, this is Australia’s initially medical center outside the house of Perth to supply IVM solutions.

  • Facebook is bombarding cancer patients with ads for unproven treatments

    Facebook is bombarding cancer patients with ads for unproven treatments

    One from Verita Lifestyle, in Bangkok, Thailand, targeted Australians like Autar, falsely boasting that a hypothermia cure presented there would “destroy most cancers cells.” When Autar took a screenshot of the ad in his news feed in August of 2020, it experienced more than a thousand likes and 600 shares. 

    Autar reported the adverts he observed to Facebook applying its in-system programs, but they remained up. At one particular issue, he says, he utilized a Silicon Valley relationship to try to flag the advertisements immediately to Facebook management. He stopped looking at the clinic’s advertisements in the Ad Library and on his personal feed right after that, but they returned a handful of months afterwards. 

    Equally CHIPSA and Verita Lifestyle had a number of ads working on Facebook and Instagram in advance of MIT Know-how Overview inquired about them, in accordance to the Advert Library. Verita Lifetime was equipped to position an advertisement as not long ago as June 18, 2022, advertising the testimonial of a affected individual with prostate most cancers. MIT Know-how Evaluation flagged that ad, alongside with two many others marketing the similar testimonial. All 3 continue being energetic.

    1 of CHIPSA’s advertisements, removed soon after we flagged it to Meta (MIT Know-how Evaluation)

    Meta assessments new ads by means of a largely automatic course of action prior to they go dwell. The business observed that advertisements and posts from CHIPSA’s Fb page and Instagram account are qualified to be flagged and truth-checked by 3rd-celebration simple fact checkers. If a enterprise frequently violates its insurance policies, Meta states, it will quickly suspend the company’s means to place adverts. 

    While Meta has rules pertaining to, for instance, misleading promises in adverts, all Fb and Instagram advertisements have to also abide by Meta’s group pointers. The rules ban articles “promoting or advocating for unsafe miracle cures for wellness issues” when these promises both equally contribute to severe personal injury or demise and have no legit wellbeing use. 

    Individuals principles, even when swiftly enforced, can leave a good deal of grey place for sensational promises, Gorski states, because “a great deal of quackery could have a legitimate wellness use.” For instance, he claims, “vitamin C naturally has authentic health and fitness works by using it just does not cure most cancers.” 

    So what about Apatone, the cure marketed by CHIPSA? Pre-medical analysis implies some anti-cancer outcome, but it “has not been shown to be much more advantageous than normal therapies we are utilizing presently in people,” states Skyler Johnson, a cancer researcher who reports misinformation at the University of Utah.

    The danger is not simply just that the remedies are unproven or ineffective. Some choice cancer therapies advertised on the system can cause actual physical harm. Coley’s contaminants, a therapy developed in the late 19th century and provided at CHIPSA, arrives with hazards including infection, internet site reactions, anaphylaxis, and in intense cases shock, suggests Johnson. 

  • COVID-19 treatments widely available for people at high risk of severe disease

    COVID-19 treatments widely available for people at high risk of severe disease

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    News Launch
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    April 8, 2022
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    COVID-19 treatment plans are now extensively accessible and can be accessed at quite a few pharmacies, clinics and wellbeing devices throughout the condition. These solutions can assistance stop intense disease, hospitalization and demise from COVID-19, in particular when taken early.

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    Not everybody who checks beneficial for COVID-19 desires to consider medicine. People who are at bigger threat for significant health issues are most likely to reward from therapy, even if they have moderate signs or symptoms. People can be large danger for several reasons. Some of the most frequent danger components are: becoming age 65 and older being overweight owning persistent medical ailments this kind of as coronary heart, lung, kidney ailment or diabetes staying on remedy that suppresses your immune method or pregnancy. To locate a comprehensive checklist of factors that may well set anyone at better threat, visit CDC: People with Sure Health care Disorders.

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    If you are at larger danger, get tested as shortly as achievable following currently being in get hold of with a man or woman who has COVID-19 or if you develop signs or symptoms and discuss to a health and fitness care provider ideal away. To be helpful, cure need to get started as shortly as achievable after symptoms start off or you check constructive. It is crucial for a company to overview your healthcare problems and present medicines to determine which treatment is right for you as some COVID-19 treatments might interact with some drugs.

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    “Early testing and treatment for COVID-19 can necessarily mean the distinction between a clinic remain and currently being equipped to get medicine at household for people who are at larger possibility for intense condition,” mentioned Dr. Ruth Lynfield, MDH condition epidemiologist and medical director. “COVID-19 remedies are now a lot more commonly readily available and acting proper absent by obtaining examined is vital simply because solutions will need to be started out early to do the job.”

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    To get entry to COVID-19 treatments, men and women can:

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    “COVID-19 therapies are a incredibly useful software in our toolbox, but protecting against an infection is additional productive than treating infection. We have the applications to avoid an infection, which stops transmission and aids to preserve degrees of COVID-19 down in our communities,” Dr. Lynfield added.  

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    Critical instruments to retain COVID-19 stages down include things like vaccines, boosters, washing palms usually, receiving analyzed if you are sick or are uncovered to an individual with COVID-19, and staying residence when you are ill. In addition, it is important to stick to the CDC COVID-19 local community amount in your space, use very well-fitting significant-quality masks when necessary or based mostly on particular desire, and abide by other community wellbeing direction.

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    Dr. Lynfield mentioned that COVID-19 group amounts are currently low across the point out even so, there are still situations happening, and we do not know if circumstances could enhance all over again in the upcoming.

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    For a lot more information and facts on COVID-19 solutions, such as wherever to uncover treatment method locations in Minnesota, go to the MDH COVID-19 Medication Options webpage.

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    For extra information on COVID-19, including information and facts on vaccines and recommendations for carrying masks, go to MDH Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).
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    -MDH-

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    Garry Bowman
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  • Michael Fraczek Explores Alternative Treatments for Allergic Asthma as Sophomore at Rose-Hulman

    Michael Fraczek Explores Alternative Treatments for Allergic Asthma as Sophomore at Rose-Hulman

    Michael Fraczek, a sophomore majoring in biology, has been invested in the research of microbiology from a quite younger age. When the Anchorage, Alaska native was 5 yrs aged, he was diagnosed with Guillain-Barré syndrome, a exceptional autoimmune dysfunction that attacks a person’s individual immune technique and results in muscle weakness. After suffering from paralysis, Fraczek was in the clinic for six times and obtained infusion therapy solutions. Although the ordeal was scary, it is also what began his desire in immunology.

    “It was actually interesting that my immune system was so fantastic and then it all of a sudden started out attacking by itself,” says Fraczek, a member of the Noblitt Students Plan. “So often, in the again of my brain, I would feel, what if I could assist make solutions that would assistance an individual who has MS or Parkinson’s Sickness … and I can assist make someone’s lifetime better, make their high quality of lifestyle far better.” 

    When Fraczek was in substantial school, he attended a exploration science internship by way of MIT where he met Dr. John Rickert, professor of mathematics at Rose-Hulman. Rickert advised he look at Rose when making use of to college or university. Fraczek needed to go to a tiny faculty with substantial-high-quality investigate prospects for undergraduates. Immediately after learning additional about Rose, he knew it was the ideal choice to research molecular biology and gain practical experience in investigation.

    Though only a sophomore, Fraczek conducts analysis that explores the use of antibody fragment proteins as an choice to existing therapies for allergic asthma. Under the direction of Dr. Stephanie Hill, assistant professor of biology and biomedical engineering, Fraczek examines how to change the molecular construction of a extended-time period medication to take care of allergic bronchial asthma and make that treatment a lot more successful and expense-effective.

    “One way we can address allergic bronchial asthma in really serious conditions is with a drug, but the draw back is you have to retain using it for the reason that your system will continually build that allergic response if it does not have it,” says Fraczek. “My research is seeking at how we can enhance the sustainability of this previously-present excellent drug by tweaking it molecularly … and as a end result, you don’t have to retain getting it. You acquire it once, or a number of instances, and then it stays in your procedure.”

    The strategy of modifying a drug at a molecular amount to produce a superior substitute is usually utilised in the generation of amino therapies for cancer cure. It requires engineering the immune cells so the procedure stays in the system and proliferates. Fraczek is combining this novel method to molecular drugs with what’s now existing in present allergic bronchial asthma cure.

    Fraczek sought the steerage of Hill, who conducts related analysis with protein engineering, at the stop of his very first 12 months at Rose. He familiarized himself with her lab and procedures to comfortably function on the venture in the course of the summer season immediately after his very first yr and in the course of his sophomore 12 months. The process has been an outstanding mastering expertise and foray into investigation, he says. With respect to functioning with Hill, Fraczek was thrilled to have a mentor he could find out from and assistance guideline his understanding experience.  

    “I realized so considerably about carrying out independent study and the capabilities demanded with managing a lab and lab notebook,” says Fraczek. “All these things that, for a person who would like to go to graduate school, are genuinely quite valuable. … I know that if I had absent to a faculty other than Rose, like a big exploration college, I would not be performing a undertaking like this. The area to do unbiased investigation at Rose is rather astounding.”

    Outdoors of researching in the lab and attending classes, Fraczek is involved in quite a few place of campus existence. He is the sophomore advisor at Scharpenberg Corridor and helps initially-year learners transition to faculty by assisting them build a community in the hall and on campus. He also functions with the Safe Zone Task to come to be a accredited trainer to aid pupils and leaders study how to be LGBTQ+ allies in the campus community.

    Fraczek encourages prospective learners not to forget about biology at Rose-Hulman. “The biology big truly will allow you to have entry to the campus labs pretty quickly, and you’ll have the opportunity to encounter investigate as an undergraduate,” he claims. “Rose has the amenities and school who want do that for you and will guidebook you as a result of your finding out approach.”

    Right after Fraczek graduates from school, he ideas to go to graduate school and receive a Ph.D. in both molecular biology, immunology or connected subject. He hopes to function at a investigation healthcare facility or in a study lab, most very likely in the industry of most cancers or autoimmune issues. 

  • Anti-vaccine group uses telehealth to profit from unproven COVID-19 treatments : Shots

    Anti-vaccine group uses telehealth to profit from unproven COVID-19 treatments : Shots

    Ben Bergquam was hospitalized with COVID in January. He says he brought his own prescription for ivermectin — an unproven COVID therapy.

    Screenshot by NPR/Facebook


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    Screenshot by NPR/Facebook


    Ben Bergquam was hospitalized with COVID in January. He says he brought his own prescription for ivermectin — an unproven COVID therapy.

    Screenshot by NPR/Facebook

    Just before Christmas, a right-wing journalist named Ben Bergquam became seriously ill with COVID-19.

    “My Christmas gift was losing my [sense of] taste and smell and having a 105-degree fever, and just feeling like garbage,” Bergquam said in a Facebook video that he shot as he lay in a California hospital.

    “It’s scary. When you can’t breathe, it’s not a fun place to be,” he said.

    Bergquam told his audience he wasn’t vaccinated, despite having had childhood asthma, a potentially dangerous underlying condition. Instead, he held up a bottle of the drug ivermectin. Almost all doctors do not recommend taking ivermectin for COVID, but many individuals on the political right believe that it works.

    The details revealed in Bergquam’s video provide a rare view into the prescription of an unproven COVID-19 therapy. Data shows that prescriptions for drugs like ivermectin have surged in the pandemic, but patient-doctor confidentiality often obscures exactly who is handing out the drugs.

    Bergquam’s testimonial provides new and troubling details about a small group of physicians who are willing to eschew the best COVID-19 treatments and provide alternative therapies made popular by disinformation — for a price.

    Ivermectin is usually prescribed to treat parasitic worms, and the best medical evidence to date shows that it doesn’t work against COVID-19. The Food and Drug Administration, National Institutes of Health, American Medical Association and two pharmaceutical societies all discourage prescribing ivermectin for COVID-19, and many doctors and hospitals will not give it to patients who are seeking treatment.

    But fueled by conspiracy theories about vaccine safety and alternative treatments, many on the political right incorrectly believe ivermectin is a secret cure-all for COVID. As millions of Americans fell ill with COVID last summer, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported ivermectin prescriptions were at 24 times pre-pandemic levels. The agency says prescriptions again rose during the latest omicron surge.

    A significant number of these prescriptions come from a small minority of doctors who are willing to write them, often using telemedicine to do so, according to Kolina Koltai, a misinformation researcher at the University of Washington. The same doctors frequently promote anti-vaccine conspiracy theories.

    “They’re profiting off misinformation, using their medical expertise as currency,” she says.

    A look into the world of unproven COVID treatments

    Bergquam told his audience he got his ivermectin from a group known as America’s Frontline Doctors. Their leader, Dr. Simone Gold, is currently facing multiple charges related to her role in the insurrection at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. She is well known for spreading anti-vaccine propaganda, and she also tells audiences across the country to give her a call for prescriptions of unproven drugs like ivermectin. Her group charges $90 for the call, and Koltai believes the prescriptions are among its primary sources of income.

    “I would reckon that telehealth and telemedicine is one of the major income-generating streams for America’s Frontline Doctors,” she says.

    Last year, online publication The Intercept published a story based on hacked documents, which showed that the group was potentially making millions by selling thousands of prescriptions (Gold denies that story in public speeches, saying that the hack did not occur).

    In his video, Bergquam thanked the doctors repeatedly for prescribing him ivermectin. In doing so, he revealed the name of the licensed doctor writing the prescription: Kathleen Ann Cullen.

    Cullen, 54, is based out of Florida and has a troubling professional history. She spent most of last year under investigation by the state of Alabama, which eventually revoked her medical license in November, two months before Berquam entered the hospital. The cause was her involvement in a separate telemedicine company, according to E. Wilson Hunter, general counsel at the Alabama Board of Medical Examiners.

    “She was working with a telemedicine company and was utilizing her medical license to further their ability to generate billable events, without actually providing health care to the patients,” he says.

    In other words, Cullen was ordering a battery of expensive genetic tests remotely, without ever seeing or speaking to the patients she was testing. It was so bad, Hunter says, that she was ordering prostate cancer screenings for female patients, who do not have prostates.

    The company Cullen was working for at the time was called Bronson Medical LLC. It no longer has a functioning website, and its owner pleaded guilty in 2020 to federal health care fraud charges.

    When the Alabama board confronted Cullen, she failed to produce patient records.

    “At the hearing, she knew nothing, saw nothing, heard nothing, understood nothing and did not take responsibility for her actions,” Hunter says.

    These are not the only blemishes on her record. Cullen’s medical license in Kansas was suspended for failure to pay fees. And her American Board of Internal Medicine certification has lapsed (the board declined to say when the lapse occurred).

    In pandemic, dubious prescriptions continue

    Despite these problems, Cullen still has active medical licenses in North Carolina and Florida. It appears she is now using those medical licenses to prescribe ivermectin on behalf of America’s Frontline Doctors.

    In January, thousands of protesters gathered in Washington for a rally against vaccine mandates. Many believe in alternative therapies like ivermectin.

    Patrick Semansky/AP


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    Patrick Semansky/AP


    In January, thousands of protesters gathered in Washington for a rally against vaccine mandates. Many believe in alternative therapies like ivermectin.

    Patrick Semansky/AP

    “Where’s the accountability in all of that?” says Ashley Bartholomew, a nurse with No License For Disinformation, a group of medical professionals who are trying to force medical boards to take action in cases like these.

    Bartholomew was the first to notice Cullen’s name on the bottle. She said the entire video made her nervous because Ben Bergquam appeared to be bringing in his own outside medication to a hospital setting.

    “Is the nurse aware he’s also taking these prescribed medications from this doctor in Florida while he’s a hospitalized patient? And is his team of doctors aware? And is the pharmacy aware?” she asks.

    Even if they were, she worries the video — which has 23,000 views on Facebook — will encourage others to bring in outside meds, increasing their risk for complications.

    NPR contacted Bergquam, Cullen and America’s Frontline Doctors, and none provided comment for this article.

    As for the states where Cullen still holds a license, public records show the Florida Department of Health has filed two administrative complaints, but her license is listed as clear and active on their website. The department did not respond to repeated requests for comment. The North Carolina Medical Board meanwhile would not confirm whether an investigation was underway, but Brian Blankenship, the board’s deputy general counsel, says that investigations take time: “State Agencies have to give people due process rights based on evidence,” he says.

    “How many patients have to suffer?”

    Cullen’s case is somewhat unusual. The Federation of State Medical Boards says its data show that 94{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of doctors have licenses in just one or two states. The federation runs a database that helps notify states when disciplinary action is taken.

    “Within a day after cataloging and categorizing the disciplinary order, we’ll share with other states and territories,” says Humayun Chaudhry, the federation’s president.

    But often states must conduct their own, sometimes lengthy investigations. To streamline that process, Chaudhry says his organization is encouraging states to adopt a new Interstate Medical Licensure Compact that, when signed into law, would allow states to see when investigations are started against a physician. Although it would apply only for physicians who seek licensure through the compact.

    For Ashley Bartholomew, the nurse fighting disinformation, this case shows just how broken America’s medical licensing apparatus is. Cullen has already lost her license for poor telehealth practices, and yet, a tangle of state medical boards, laws and procedures continues to allow her to write prescriptions for questionable treatments.

    “How many patients have to suffer from disinformation,” Bartholomew asks, “until we actually have action?”

    NPR’s Sarah Knight contributed to this report.