Sunday, April 29, 2007

 

Directory of Safe and Licensed Online Pharmacies

 
eDrugSearch.com Accepts PharmacyRxWorld.com Into the eDrugSearch.com Directory of Safe and Licensed Online Pharmacies

In accepting PharmacyRxWorld.com into its prescreened online pharmacy directory, eDrugSearch.com has added the pharmacy's inventory of prescription drugs to the eDrugSearch.com database of 30,000 prescription drug listings.

San Antonio, TX (PRWeb) April 29, 2007 -- eDrugSearch.com, a free search engine and online community for Americans interested in purchasing safe, low-cost prescription drugs from prescreened Canadian pharmacies and other prescreened international pharmacies, announced that is has accepted PharmacyRxWorld.com into its pharmacy directory. In accepting PharmacyRxWorld.com into its directory, eDrugSearch.com has added the pharmacy's inventory of prescription medications into the eDrugSearch.com database.

"Because PharmacyRxWorld.com is properly licensed and meets eDrugSearch.com's standards of quality and professionalism in online pharmacies, we have accepted its inventory of prescription medications into the eDrugSearch.com database," said Cary Byrd, president of eDrugSearch.com.

With more than 30,000 drug listings, eDrugSearch.com brings together licensed and accredited pharmacies from around the world in one comprehensive, easy-to-use database. The pharmacy page for PharmacyRxWorld.com is located at: http://www.edrugsearch.com/pharmacies/pharmacyrxworld.html .

While many Americans are interested in Canadian pharmacies or other international pharmacies as a means of saving money on their prescriptions, they are often concerned about whether they can trust the quality and safety of the prescription medications they find online. eDrugSearch.com addresses these concerns by only accepting online pharmacies in the eDrugSearch.com database that pass a rigorous prescreening process -- including proof of home-country government licensing and third-party accreditations.

eDrugSearch.com expects to increase online prescription drug listings in the eDrugSearch.com database to 100,000 later this year -- making it easily the most comprehensive resource of its kind.

Additionally, eDrugSearch.com offers up-to-the-minute price search, extensive information on drugs and medical conditions and other features that make it the most advanced destination for online pharmacy consumers. Consumers can register for a free membership with eDrugSearch.com at the following url:
http://www.edrugsearch.com/members/register-member.php .

Popular medications available through the eDrugSearch.com database include:

- Accupril
- Actos
- Ambien
- Avandia
- Buspar
- Cephalexin
- Evista
- Lamisil
- Lotensin
- Monopril
- Naproxen
- Prevacid
- Prilosec
- Prozac
- Remeron
- Risperdal
- Wellbutrin SR

.. along with thousands of other listings.

About eDrugSearch.com

Based in San Antonio, eDrugSearch.com is the Internet destination for those seeking the cost benefits, enhanced privacy and convenience of ordering prescription drugs online from licensed international pharmacies, primarily in Canada. eDrugSearch.com's advanced search features allow members to identify pharmacies with specific licensing requirements and third-party accreditations. eDrugSearch.com is an impassioned advocate for consumers interested in lower drug prices. Visit the company's Web site at www.eDrugSearch.com or the eDrugSearch Blog at www.edrugsearch.com/edsblog .

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Press Contact: Cary Byrd
Company Name: eDrugSearch.com
Phone: 972-235-3439
Website:
http://www.edrugsearch.com


Friday, April 13, 2007

 

Pharma Greed Reality; Zyprexa Internal Marketing Documents Unstoppable

 
 
Med Ad News



Welcome to the inaugural Pharma Blogs e-newsletter. If you'd like to receive this e-newsletter next week, click here for a free subscription.  With the proliferation of pharmaceutical industry blogs concentrating on breaking news, the purpose of this newsletter is to take a longer look at some of the issues that have popped up in the past week. This week, I'm looking at how the pharmaceutical industry is struggling with Internet communication.

Crass comments or just plain honesty?
Take, for instance, the firing of Michael Zubillaga, a former regional sales director for AstraZeneca. As has been reported in even the mainstream media, Mr. Zubillaga was fired last Friday for comments made in an internal oncology newsletter published for AstraZeneca's mid-Atlantic region employees. In one of his comments, he exhorted sales representatives to make their calls because every office they visit represents a "big bucket of money," and in every visit, they should just "reach [their] hand into the bucket and grab a handful." When the print newsletter was anonymously sent to former Pfizer executive and now industry blogger Dr. Peter Rost, he posted it, and it was spread around the pharma blog universe in an eyeblink.

AstraZeneca's excuse for firing Mr. Zubillaga was that his comments violated the company's compliance program for sales and marketing practices. The cynical sales representatives that haunt Café Pharma, however, say Mr. Zubillaga was just being honest, if crass, in his comments.

John Mack of the Pharma Marketing blog views the flak over Mr. Zubillaga's comments as a sign that the pharmaceutical industry will not be sponsoring any employee-written blogs any time soon. He believes, however, that such blogs can actually benefit pharma companies and even offers a primer on how they develop them.

Speed of the courts outstripped by the Internet
Here's a second example of how the Internet's immediacy can create a furor. Internal documents about the marketing of the schizophrenia drug Zyprexa were leaked in December. The documents, released because of a legal loophole, were spread far and wide over the Internet and obtained by the New York Times. If you want to download them all for yourself, go here.

When
Eli Lilly and Co. tried to include five Websites in a permanent injunction against further distribution of the documents, Senior U.S. District Judge Jack B. Weinstein refused. Judge Weinstein cited the impossibility of monitoring millions of Internet sites and said making such a judgment against free speech would be beyond the court's powers. For more details about how the documents were released and what lessons Lilly and other companies can gain from the leaks, I refer readers to the upcoming May issue of Med Ad News.

One of the main problems confronting the industry is its abysmal image among the general public. The leaking of the Zyprexa documents and Mr. Zubillaga's comments are not helping matters. Lilly has admitted that the documents put the company in a bad light, but claim they are not truly representative of the millions of documents the company has already released in previous Zyprexa litigation. AstraZeneca has disavowed Mr. Zubillaga's comments, saying they are not truly representative of the company.


Negative but real
And then there's Café Pharma, which is read with simultaneous fascination and disdain by many folks in the industry. The overall view of the messages boards is that there are some good bits of information, but the reader has to trawl through a lot of scum to get to them. Profanity abounds, and this video, one of a series about the adventures of a fictitious pharmaceutical sales representative, humorously outlines the general Café Pharma way of commenting on subjects, their bosses, and the system in general.

Scurrilous comments from underlings about those in charge are nothing new. The avid student of medieval history is familiar with Procopius of Caesarea's "The Secret History." In his public life, Procopius was a Byzantine court official in the 6th century A.D. who wrote public accounts of events that were flattering to the emperor and empress, Justinian and Theodora. In private, however, he was writing a history that did a
real hatchet job on the rulers, with pornographic details that outdo anything said by the Café Pharma pottymouths. There's been a lot of debate about whether "The Secret History" was really written by Procopius; most historians generally agree it was. Then there is the debate about whether what he wrote was true or exaggeration.

View the whole picture
In the end, when forming a view of a time or place, a serious historian has to sit down with all of the sources, sift through them, and look for the points of intersection. Just because it's smutty and vicious doesn't make it a bad primary source. This is where the pharmaceutical industry has a problem: anything not particularly flattering is denied, covered in a mask of shiny spin. Yet the sludge of Café Pharma persists, and the lesson to be learned is that the more the sludge — and the behaviors that cause the sludge to appear — are denied and suppressed, rather than addressed or acknowledged, the more the discontent grows. Journalists twig on to this because, at their hearts, they are historians — many academics call journalism "history in a hurry." The Internet is not just history in a hurry, it's history at lightspeed. The pharmaceutical industry is unable to tell its story because it won't acknowledge the bad bits. Anything that remotely can rescue the industry's reputation gets buried under the old "trade secrets" heading, causing details to come out very slowly, if at all. So the everyday historians — journalists and bloggers alike — longing for good primary sources, focus on the sludge because it breathes an authenticity the carefully crafted press releases and press statements completely fail to do.

Procopius managed to keep his secret writings out of the public eye during his lifetime, and he had a good motive. Justinian and Theodora would have made his life very painful and very short. Today, the old boy would have blogged it all, anonymously perhaps. Today, a thousand anonymous Procopiuses have hijacked the industry's reputation at lightspeed. Pharmaceutical executives don't have the option of ordering these enemies to be executed, so the sludge bubbles on. If the industry can't counter the sludge in a fast, meaningful way, the industry's good reputation will continue to be tarnished.


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Tuesday, April 10, 2007

 

Home Health Monitoring System Web Site

 
QuietCare® Launches its Home Health Monitoring System Redesigned Web Site

The redesigned Web site includes live chat, a video presentation on how the home health monitoring system works amongst other great benefits

(PRWEB) May 30, 2006 -- QuietCare®, the vital behavior monitoring system for seniors living alone, has launched a redesigned Web site with enhanced information on QuietCare, including a video presentation on how it works, a questionnaire on whether the QuietCare system is right for elder home care, and live online chat for family members to ask questions in real time.

The live chat feature permits caregivers and seniors to ask questions about QuietCare and senior home care online, without having to wait for an e-mailed response. "With live chat, a caregiver or senior can ask questions discreetly, without picking up the phone or even giving their full name," comments George Boyajian, Living Independently Group's Executive Vice President of Strategy, Research and Development. "With their permission, we can later contact them at their convenience."

"With the video presentation, questionnaire and answers to their most frequently asked questions, the Web site presents even more information on how QuietCare works. A family caregiver and senior can view the video together, and the questionnaire helps them determine whether QuietCare will benefit the senior in home care."

Previously available only to elder care professionals in assisted living, QuietCare's innovative technology protects seniors' health and can save lives by detecting falls or other emergencies. QuietCare's wireless activity sensors in the home transmit data 24/7 to patented software that intelligently learns a senior's routine. It reports important changes in daily activities both to QuietCare and online to caregivers, alerting them to possible health problems. In a potential emergency situation, the fast-acting medical alert system notifies trained professionals who immediately contact the senior and caregivers. The QuietCare system also works in conjunction with Personal Emergency Response Systems (PERS) to provide added emergency protection.

Through powerful, unobtrusive technology, QuietCare's early detection and early warning system detects potential health risks and falls faster, helps to avoid hospitalizations, protects seniors' privacy and dignity while giving caregivers peace of mind. QuietCare is a positive alternative to nursing homes, permitting seniors to have greater freedom and independence in their daily lives.

A QuietCare professional is on hand to help determine if QuietCare is the right choice for the interested caregiver and/or senior. Consumers can call toll free 1 (866) 216-4600 for more information on this proven home safety monitoring system.

QuietCare was created by Living Independently Group, a company dedicated to helping seniors and other at-risk individuals live with greater safety in their own homes. Its patented, technology-based service provides peace of mind to families and caregivers, and helps institutions improve the quality and efficiency of their care. The QuietCare system is used by major senior care institutions and communities across the U.S. and in the United Kingdom.

###

Press Contact: Donna Cusano
Company Name:
Email: email protected from spam bots
Phone: 212 759-3588 324
Website:
http://www.quietcare.com


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