Archive for September, 2008

Stronger with less

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

There is a silent rule that you should never write what is impolitely called “knocking copy”. This way we call articles that contrast good and bad products. We don’t do that here. We are always absolutely fair and never do more than state facts, not opinions. So here is something you can check out for yourself. Most men seem to do best with an average dose of 50mg. Levitra, on the other hand, comes in 2.5mg, 5mg, 10mg and 20mg. Most men seem to do best with 10mg tablets but many get perfect results with the lower dosages. Why should anyone care? Well, you’re taking five times less of the same active ingredients to achieve the same results. Do many people have side effects? Not that many with either drug but, if you were looking for a reason to prefer Levitra, safety would be top of the list for most. As a general rule in the world of medication, the smaller the dose, the lower the risk you will experience any side effects.

Buying drugs online is much better say researchers

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

Shopping online is a good thing because it’s convenient and most of the time you have your privacy is protected. Whether people should be allowed to buy drugs over the internet is more controversial. So the New York National clinic has just published some research from Utah. One bought Cialis online, the other went to see their local health providers. The results of the research make interesting reading.

The headline is that buying Cialis online was “safer”. Obviously, both groups got the drug in its full strength version. There were no problems in delivery. The key advantage to buying online lay in “patient education”. People buying online received targeted email messages about the product and how to use it safely. Combined with the more general introductory material available online, patients were better informed than those who went to see a physician. Amazingly less than half the patients who had a face-to-face discussion with their physician were given any instructions on how to use the medication safely. It’s alarming that physicians should prove so bad at communicating with their patients. Some allowances can be made because those in general practice are under great pressure to see patients quickly. But, not to give proper directions on safety. . .

Well, everyone should make the choice. Buying Cialis, Levitra or any drug for that matter online is better. This will reduce the number of patients asking for prescriptions and give physicians more time to do a better job.

What will the world be like when the sleeper awakes in 2018?

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

I am sometimes amused by the science of futurology. This is, as the name suggests, the willingness of experts to predict what will happen in the future by applying probabilities and other scientific methods. Basically, it is extrapolation from the current state of affairs and, as such, much beloved of those who engage in the “art” of marketing. Indeed, the most recent data on the number of prescriptions for ambien continues a trend of upward demand. To understand the market, we need to factor in two other factors:

  • people are growing more aware of the treatments for “insomnia” which will drive further market growth for sleeping medications, and the pharmaceutical companies are investing in research and development to produce new products for the sleep disorders market.

This second point requires clarification. Never one to skimp, the medical profession has identified some eighty different sleep disorders. Such exuberance is extraordinary to describe a condition in which people cannot get to sleep or sleep for very long. But, of course, that is only insomnia. When we get started on the other disorders, we include narcolepsy (involuntary sleep), sleep apnoea (brief periods when you stop breathing while asleep), bruxism (grinding your teeth while asleep), night terrors, and so on. On the basis of current medical research, it is estimated that some 200m people around the world may be affected by sleep disorders. If that is the case, pharmaceutical companies working in the sleep field have only just begun to scratch the surface of the total market. As the public become more aware of the range of these disorders and of the existing and pending treatments, demand should continue to grow. For the insomnia market, the focus remains on the existing medications with the fewest side effects, i.e. the benzodiazepines and nonbenzodiazepine hypnotics such as ambien. But even that market is likely to continue growing because:

  • US government is relaxing their advertising rules to allow the direct marketing of prescription medications to the general public;
  • more pharmacies are coming online and they are likely to boost the market because no prescription is required;
  • new technologies will allow new products to emerge.

As it stands, ambien is the brand to beat for insomnia. Which new medications will emerge to treat the other sleep disorders is difficult to predict.

McCain and the GOP on the defensive

Saturday, September 6th, 2008

Many people think that watching records of candidates can help them to make the right choice. Not everyone votes according to their conscience when up on the Hill. But, hey, when news is in short supply, you go for the jugular with what you’ve managed to dig up from the past. Seems that McCain has been voting against laws to force medical insurance companies to make some scary thing. The argument is one of gender discrimination. The same insurers pay for Cialis when men ask for their pills. But why women don’t even try to treat? “Ah ha,” you say, “these are two different things. Men need the pills to get back to work. Women are working just as God intended without the pills, thank you very much.” Well, since Cialis and Levitra work so well, this is adding to the world’s chronic overpopulation at a time when global warming is reducing food and oil supplies. Millions of children die every year from malnutrition, thousands of women die from back-street abortions gone wrong. Cialis is not a treatment for a life-threatening condition. Birth control pills reduce the loss of menstrual blood so less anemia and reduce the pain of menstrual cramps and eliminate acne. But there are no health benefits in the eyes of the insurance companies. Go figure.

It’s official. Win gold at the Olympics with Cialis

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

One of the world’s leading scientists specialising in sports drugs, Dr Robin Parisotto, has gone on the record. It’s official. There are now new uses for existing drugs (and some new drugs) that will fly under the radar of the World Anti-Doping Agency’s tests. Perhaps some of the better informed athletes have been using these techniques at the Olympics at Beijing. If so, we’ll never know. Researchers at the Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum - the cancer research center in Germany - have shown that tattooing is sixteen times more effective than injections in delivering a drug into the body. So, you get the same effect with one-sixteenth of the dose and that makes the dose so much harder to detect. But the most interesting ideas are the use of Cialis pills and nitrous oxide gas. Yes, friends, inhaling laughing gas makes you go faster, jump higher, and so on. The point is that both operate as vascular dilators - they open up your blood vessels. Blood flows increase and bring more oxygen to those working muscles faster. The advantage of Cialis is that it stays in the body for longer - it’s not called the “weekend” pill for nothing. So the next time you see a runner coming down the street towards you covered in tattoos, popping pills and breathing from a gas canister, this is your next Olympian in training.

Hot spots in Indonesia. What’s that all about?

Monday, September 1st, 2008

Can you imagine anyone thinking spots are hot? Jeez. There you are in the morning, looking in the bathroom mirror in despair. That acne is just crowding out all your good features and leaving a red, spotty mess. You’re lining up to take the Accutane - signing up for the iPledge is a real pain but it will all be worth it when the acne’s gone. And then you catch sight of the headline in a newspaper as you’re on your way to school - “Hot Spots in Indonesia”. Foreigners are really weird. Indonesia is just so way out there. Actually, you probably don’t know where Indonesia is, but, hey, it’s weird that anyone should talk about spots like that. So you stop and then smile. It’s not quite what you thought. No-one knows why we’re spying on Indonesia but it all fits because your deep-seated spots burn fiercely and nothing else has been able to make them go away. That’s why you’ve signed the iPledge and your parents are going to buy Accutane online. With a little luck, it will all be gone in six months time.