Wellness

A Heritage of Healing 06 March 2010

 

A Heritage of Healing

Saltzer Medical Group – Caring For Generations

Sharron Pence’s baby girl doesn’t seem to mind having her bundles of warm clothes removed after being scurried in from the cold, winter weather outside. The room is toasty warm and while lying on an exam table in just her diaper, she seems to fit right in with the vibrant and colorful beach scene painted on the wall. A big-eyed, blue-shelled crab catches her attention and she begins to squirm and coo as if trying to communicate with her newfound friend. The graphics on the wall keep her occupied while her pediatrician; Katie Copeland performs a wellness check.

Sharron has just driven from Kuna for her pediatric appointment. “I was looking for a doctor who could see my newborn as well as my young son. No physician was willing to see them both until I called Saltzer Medical Group. Everyone here is so friendly and helpful. They always call me back immediately and understand my concerns and answer my questions.”

In the next room, Sicily Clark, a mother of four, extols the virtues of her pediatrician Kimberly Ferguison as she checks Clark’s newborn.  “We love doctor Ferguson because she’s a mom herself and she understands the concerns of mothers. Her staff is terrific and we feel we can trust our health care needs with them. We love the new facility and it’s location and that’s it’s close to the hospital.”

Saltzer’s newest location, which opened in July 2009, is located in Meridian on Eagle Road next to St. Luke’s Regional Medical Center. According to Janet Miller, Director of Business Development, “the great location provided the group an opportunity to consolidate their family practice clinic on Progress Avenue and other medical practices within the St. Luke’s complex, into one convenient location for our patients and our physicians who practice next door at the hospital.” Miller said the group tries to find areas where they feel the patient population could be better served.

Saltzer Medical Group, which is a local, physician-owned medical group, will celebrate 50 years of service in the area next year. “The group was formally known as Medical Center Physicians,” said Miller. “But in 2001, the group decided to change the name to honor the original founder, Dr. Joseph Saltzer.”

According to the group’s website, Dr. Saltzer, who specialized in pathology, contracted tuberculosis while practicing in New York. He was urged go "out west" where the dryer weather would be more conducive to a full recovery. When someone suggested Idaho, the doctor moved to Homedale where he put up his shingle. At first he didn't have a single patient.

That all changed when one day he was chatting with the local druggist when a rancher came in looking for veterinary pharmaceuticals for his prize bull. As he described the symptoms to the druggist, Dr. Saltzer recognized it as an upper respiratory infection. Sulfa had just come on the market and the doctor convinced the rancher he could help. The bull survived and Dr. Saltzer’s fame spread through the country. People figured if he could save the prized bull, then he could probably treat their families.

Working from Homedale with hospitalized patients was difficult since the closest hospital was in Nampa. Eventually the doctor moved to Nampa and soon teamed up with Dr. Robert Hay and Dr. Harold Brown to start a clinic. After five decades practicing medicine, Dr. Saltzer retired at the age of 76, but the friendly patient oriented approach that characterized his practice continues at the medical group that bears his name today.

It’s this philosophy that appealed to Tim Hodges, DO who has been with the group for the past 15 years. “I really like that I’m able to practice the full scope of skilled family medicine in a physician owned environment. It’s a real benefit to not to be so closely affiliated and influenced unduly by any one institution. I also enjoy working with a large multi-specialty group and having the ability to refer my patients to my partners, and with our computerized medical records system, I don’t have to transfer records – they’re readily available to them.” Hodges also likes being able to consult with the other physicians as well. “It just makes for a great learning environment and we all learn a lot from each other.”

Family practice physician, Arthur Jones IV, said these same benefits appealed to him as well. “By being a part of this group, I get more control over my own life, instead of an institution dictating my practice methods. In this environment, if I have questions, I can ask my partners and I can concentrate on just practicing medicine and what’s best for my patients.”

Saltzer Medical Group is located in the West Portico Building at 3277 E Louise Drive, Suite 200, in Meridian. (Next to St Luke’s Regional Medical Center on Eagle Road) For more information, call 208-884-2920.

The 11 specialties featured at this location include:

Audiology

Dermatology

Family Practice

General Surgery

Internal Medicine

Neurology

OB/GYN

Occupational Medicine

Orthopedics

Otolaryngology (ENT)

Pediatrics

Saltzer Medical Group also has several other locations in Nampa, Caldwell and Boise. For more information about these facilities, call 463-3000 or visit their website at www.saltzermed.com





Written by: Tia Markland
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It's Not Rocket Science 10 September 2009

It’s Not Rocket Science

Market share, health scare and the truth about Bioidentical hormones.

By: Dr. Tamara Simon

There has been great controversy lately about the benefits and risks of Bioidentical hormone replacement vs. synthetic hormone therapy. This article will discuss the history of hormone replacement, talk about how big pharmaceutical companies try and fight to keep their market share, and the finally where we should go from there. Hormone replacement is not new and it’s not rocket science. The goal is to replace what your body used to make on its own so you can enjoy good health and a high quality of life.

We are bombarded with information daily-from television, radio, newspapers, magazines, brochures and the internet- and, for many people, these have become the primary sources of information about hormone therapies. However, while it may be helpful, the information disseminated may be only part of the story, or sometimes even biased, based on its sources.

The not so brief history of hormones.

Hormones for the treatment of menopause have been prescribed since the 1930’s. By the 1950’s research revealed that there were potentially harmful effects from oral estrogen, including blood clots and stroke (not breast cancer). For reasons unknown, the results were never published. Weird.

 Then in the 1960’s the book Feminine Forever was published and claimed that menopause was   “completely preventable”. Overnight it became a best seller. The book claimed that hormones could keep a woman happy, healthy and beautiful forever. Suddenly all the harmful effects were ignored and everyone looked the other way. The book’s author, Robert A. Wilson, started the equivalent of a rock star’s concert tour across the country, extolling the miraculous benefits of HRT, (hormone replacement therapy). The miracle drug was Premarin made by Wyeth Pharmacies.
Soon however reporters from The Washington Post disclosed that Dr. Wilson’s lecture tour and book were funded by the company that actually made the drug in question, Wyeth.
 Again Weird!

 However, by this time, 30 million women were being prescribed Premarin. Then in the 1970’s, studies revealed that estrogen by itself caused uterine cancer (PEPI Trials). This concern was quickly overcome by adding progestin (synthetic progesterone) to Premarin, creating Prempro. Now Wyeth had the two most prescribed hormones in the U.S. This is referred to in pharmacy lingo as a “99 Ton Gorilla”, meaning they had their golden goose.  

It should be noted that the rest of the world, however, refused to take Premarin and Prempro since they were manufactured using pregnant mares (female horse) urine, hence the name Pre (pregnant) mar (mares) in (urine).  Instead they continued taking their Bioidentical hormones, created by compound pharmacies to be equivalent to their own, as they had been for 50 years without any adverse effects. To clarify this point, Premarin would therefore be Bioidentical only if you were a horse! (Other examples of human Bioidentical hormones are Insulin and Thyroid. Nobody’s disputing these, though.)

By 2001, due to aggressive marketing and multimillion dollar advertising campaigns, 60 million women were on Premarin or Prempro. This is despite the fact that for decades there had been no further studies done to prove effectiveness or safety. In 2002, the WHI (Women’s Health Initiative) was published revealing an increase in blood clots, stroke, heart attacks and breast cancer. OOPS!

Now we have the great debate of the century. “Are Bioidentical hormones better tolerated, since they are similar to our own, or safer than synthetic (fake) hormones?”

Wyeth now scared out of their minds that the golden goose was about to croak, launched a multimillion dollar campaign to discredit Bioidentical hormones. They involved lobbyists, senators, NAMS (National Society for Menopause), ACOG ( American College of Obsetrics and Gynecologists) and lastly, but most importantly the FDA.
Fast forward to 2009 and several billion dollars later, (spent by Wyeth) to the results of the big controversy surrounding hormones.

Bioidentical versus Synthetic

The biggest question you should be asking yourself right now is, “Why doesn’t Wyeth just manufacture Bioidenticals?” Aah, good question. Here’s the problem. Since Bioidenticals are our own and Wyeth doesn’t have to do any research or development (R&D) to manufacture the hormones, they can’t obtain a patent. A patent is what makes gobs of money for drug companies. Without a patent the drug is virtually useless. That’s why when the patent runs out for drugs like Claritin and Prilosec, they become over the counter drugs. This lends me to the question, “Why did they ever need to be prescription then?” The answer- to make money. Once they go generic the company can’t demand the high prices anymore to recover their R&D.

The main estrogen in Bioidenticals is 17 beta estradiol and unfortunately for Wyeth it is produced naturally from our premenopausal ovaries and requires no R&D God owns the patent. Dang!

What to do? Some smart pharmaceutical companies (not Wyeth) have figured out how to make Bioidenticals and get them patented and FDA approved. Eureka!  They don’t mention the estrogen. They just patent the unique cream, gel or patch. In other words the delivery system the estrogen is embedded within.

Okay so now what? Wyeth can’t attack Bioidenticals anymore because their colleagues are making them as fast as the drugs fly off the proverbial assembly line!

Then they make what I think is their critical mistake. They claim it isn’t really Bioidenticals that they are concerned with but the OTHER estrogen (Estriol) that compounding pharmacies often mix with estradiol to create Biest and Triest. Estriol is the most gentle of the body’s estrogens that is produced by the placenta when a woman is pregnant. Ironically, compounding pharmacies are the Big Pharmaceutical Companies’ greatest competitor.
Last Updated ( 10 September 2009 ) Written by: Tia Markland
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The Circle of Health Can Help 15 May 2009

The Circle of Health started locally in Eagle

With the average cost of health care in the treasure valley many cannot afford to have a health plan. The Circle of Health has designed a plan that allows an individual coverage just short of hospitalization, with no pre-existing conditions, no expense out of pocket for day to day care from the family practice physicians and chiropractic doctors that provide service to the circle of members. If the member wants to add the hospital side there is licensed agents that can provide that. The circle has a prescription, lab, counseling, hearing and dental plan.

The Single plan per month is $118.00 and the family plan per month is $238.00 up to 6 members. Our plan fills the gap, bridges the rivers that will allow a single or family or senior the access to a family Dr, Chiropractor, on an unlimited basis with no pre-existing conditions to set the course of treatment that the patient will need to reach a stable condition and maintain it. So many folks put off their visits to the Dr because the lack of funds or insurance. And let’s face it, just about anyone over the age of 40 has some pre-existing condition. Idaho is one of the States that don’t require small companies to allow laid-off employees to continue group health insurance coverage. The Circle can help, no where else can you get the health care to take care of you and your family for the cost of the circle.

This is how the circle started; a patient of Dr Todd Cramer had lost her position with the company that she was employed at when the corp. sold out to an asset management group. She came to Dr Todd in a panic and in tears, as a single mother of 4 children, one of them disabled and the patient herself having an autoimmune disease, she needed to have health care BUT she could not afford her COBRA, at  $590.00 a month( for just her) and her meds alone totaled about 300.00 a month. The unemployment was about $1400.00 a month. She didn’t know what she was going to do, or where she could turn for help. Dr Cramer, opened up the phone book and called just about every health broker and or plan in the area, to discover that there was nothing less expensive because of her pre-existing conditions. Than Dr Cramer opened the newspaper and started to call all the health discount plans, to discover that if they were in the area, they didn’t have the network that would work for his patient, and the discount they offered was less than if he were to call direct and set up something  with the physicians, and most services were not willing to discount.

This became a MISSION to Dr Cramer, he did not realize how difficult it was for a single person or family to maintain their health with little to no options they could afford. This is when Dr Cramer with a small group from the valley joined together and decided that they would form a health care network, one that really worked, that brought value to the folks that live and reside in the Treasure Valley. One that would allow unlimited access for day to day health care just short of hospitalization. A way to have access to affordable pharmacy, lab, dental, counseling, hearing. For a cost that would not break the bank and allow folks to have quality health care. That was in December 2008. Dr Todd opened the doors of “The Circle of Health” on April 15th, 2009. His patient has lowered her cost to $238.00 a month for the Family Plan, with this plan she has no up front office visit cost., no Hugh deductable to meet and the per-existing conditions are not an issue. This will see her through this rough spot and provide the care for her and her children. These are hard time that the Treasure Valley Residences  and Business are going through. The “ Circle of Health” can provide savings not only to the single or families but to business owners . Finally affordable Health Care through membership.

(That COH is not an insurance plan or major medical.) COH is a group of providers bringing a health plan to the Treasure Valley through affordable membership.

www.circleofhealth.org

208-938-1122

Last Updated ( 27 May 2009 )
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