Author Archives: Fred Kahn, M.D, FRCS(C)

The Application of Laser Therapy in Cosmetic Surgery

It has been my observation that cosmetic/plastic surgeons, no matter how meticulous they may be with regard to technique, including adequate visualization, lighting, hemostasis and suturing with extremely fine filaments — may still obtain results that are unsatisfactory, from an esthetic perspective.

The complications that may occur include hematoma, infection, scar tissue and even keloid formation, with sometimes unsightly healing. This should not produce feelings of guilt or inadequacy on the part of the competent surgeon.

More importantly, we now offer a solution to these universal problems with the utilization of Laser Therapy, which may be administered on completion of the surgery, 2-3 days subsequently or at any time thereafter.

The visual outcome can invariably be elevated to a more acceptable level and may sometimes result in dramatic cosmetic improvement.

If you are interested in exploring this now standardized approach, please feel free to contact Fernanda Saraga, Ph.D. at fernanda@bioflexlaser.com or 416-251-1055 ext. 138 for additional information.

THE STATE OF THE FINANCIAL WORLD

– and how it affects us

The world’s financial systems, as a result of the greed and corruption of Wall Street facilitated by their political cronies, unofficially have been out of control for several decades. The reason for confirmation of these events is that over the past 3 to 4 years, official interest rates in the Western industrialized nations have lingered at near zero levels. This is unprecedented in history and signals a massive disintegration of systemic failure. Quantitative easing and subterraneous inflation fuel both the confusion and conflagration. The end result, barring a miracle, is that these measures will not save the financial markets, our life savings, our pensions or the planet.

To keep the game going, the US Federal Reserve continues to resort to monetary inflation but that process is erosive in the extreme. At the corporate level, including small business, higher costs and shrinking profits compound the problems. Looming over all this is the increasing cost of imposed healthcare systems, which may be called the ‘Insurance Tarp’.

To further muddy the waters, we have the US election, which fields two candidates or parties that are literally making up the facts as required. Neither Obama nor Romney has a definite vision and the US currently has more problems than solutions. One may safely hypothesize that the upcoming election will change nothing − no matter who wins. Despite this I would favor Romney for the potential of real change.

The solutions: return healthcare to the client-provider level, erasing the costly administrative intermediary complex. Similarly, governments must solve the problems they create by radically reducing the number of politicians, political parties and bureaucracies.

Finally, solutions for individual self-preservation: do not purchase any paper – no matter who writes it, sells it or delivers it. Purchase solid income producing properties and acreage that has potential for future development. For immediate needs, purchase precious metals, diamonds, etc. for direct holding. The prognosis – critical at best!

Insurer’s New Role: Managing Treatment

U.S.-Style Approach
Company seeks alternatives to expensive drugs

I was somewhat surprised to read the enclosed article authored by Tom Blackwell in the National Post on Thursday, July 26th, 2012. The subject certainly caught my attention. The reason? For as long as I can remember, insurance companies have always interfered in healthcare – from deciding which treatment in their opinion is best, which drugs are most appropriate and whether they should pay for treatment at all. My position has always been that people pay for insurance coverage and the insurance company should therefore pay for the treatment. Simple enough, but in an increasingly complex world, nothing is simple anymore. More significantly, the insurance industry and its minions are in essence dictating medical practice, which they are not qualified to do and the influence they exert may indeed be highly detrimental to the patient’s health status.

In essence, the article states that now Canadian insurance companies are following the footsteps of what is common practice for private insurers in the U.S. but virtually unheard of in this country. In my experience, practicing medicine for over forty years, this is a completely false assertion, as the nefarious practice of denying coverage has been prevalent in this country in numerous forms, from the time insurance companies have been in existence.

In addition, the article, as is so common in Canada, “bashes” the U.S. for its practices, which are deemed to be ‘mercenary’, rather than compassionate. For a period extending over twenty years, I practiced medicine in the U.S. and found conditions there, from a comparative perspective, to be generally more liberal and never experienced the interference that exists in Canada at this time. Needless to say, this situation has changed in all countries around the world with the rising costs of providing “quality?” medical care and delivery systems under the aegis of governments, insurance companies and other gatekeepers who strive to manage healthcare, unfortunately all too often to the detriment of the standard of quality once expected. Administrative costs go up, at the expense of funds available to actually deliver therapy to patients – a circumlocular and erosive practice.

But, back to Insurance. In too many instances, the insured have faithfully paid premiums for a period of several months to over thirty years, often without deriving any benefit from this so-called ‘protection’. Nevertheless, at the first hint that the insured may require some assistance, no matter how legitimate, the initial response of the representative of the insurance carrier is an almost reflex NO. The insurance salesman who has sold the policy to the client disappears after he has received his generous commission, which often continues for the life of the policy. Armed with policies covering home insurance, life insurance, disability insurance etc., the salesman ostensibly sells you whatever he can, in order to “protect” you against the many things that may at some point, strike one down. When the time of payback occurs, no matter how minute, the sales agent has long departed from the scene.

Several years ago, a mid-level bank executive, who happened to be my account manager, had purchased a $100,000 dollar policy from the bank for which he worked – no questions asked, in the event of a heart attack, stroke or other catastrophic episode. Over a 2 week period, this individual checked in and out of a hospital while sustaining two separate, severe coronary infarctions. It is truly amazing that he survived and so much for the intelligence level of bankers. Still, the $100,000 coverage, which was to be provided without question, was denied. The reason – ‘the enzyme’ profile of the hospital records did not coincide with the standard adopted by the insurance carrier. I think we all get the point. The insured was forced to hire an attorney who settled for $70,000, from which he deducted over $20,000 for his participation in this debacle. So much for advertising, integrity etc.

Historically, insurance companies love to collect premiums and hate to give up a nickel of their ill-gotten wealth at any time – particularly in the past decade, with the billions lost in the housing bubble, poorly structured investments and laboring under the bloated, undeserved salaries of senior management. Just like governments, increasing the tax base while literally putting small business out of existence, insurance carriers have followed a similar trend. Not a pretty picture – except for those who get the big salaries for making bad decisions and under-serving their clients.

In my personal medical practice, up to 80% of patients present with an initial complaint about the problems they have with the insurance companies – not the description of their illness but rather the hurdles they face in paying for healthcare.

Every day, I see a number of patients who have been denied coverage for treatment that should have been instituted immediately after the illness occurred or certainly in a more timely manner and may only be approved after a long wait time and not infrequently requiring legal recourse on behalf of the insured. This obstructive behavior pattern benefits no one. At all times, insurance companies have on retainer legions of specialists, medical assessors and other “hired thugs” to carry out the ritual of denial, on their behalf. Several weeks ago, I saw a patient whose insurance company spent over $20,000 on multiple assessments and in the end, was denied coverage for the treatment of a medical condition. With Laser Therapy, this patient’s problem was cured over 3 weeks at a cost of less than $1,000. By now, I hope that everyone is beginning to understand the problem.

Why does this state of affairs exist? The root problem is the combination of corporate behavior patterns and economics – invariably, a bad mix! The human factor may involve the lobbyist, representing the insurance company, collaborating with the political powers that are the incumbents of today or possibly those of tomorrow. By contributing to the campaigns of all political parties and candidates, regardless of stripe, the companies are virtually approved and immunized for whatever skullduggery they plan, which invariably is to their economic advantage. Insurance companies are all about making money and that is their primary objective. They do not care about the individual or their problems; indeed the latter are considered an impediment at best.

Politicians are devoted to campaigning, getting elected and staying elected. The alliances with big business carefully developed over decades, are clearly designed to the carrier’s advantage, coupled with the politician’s need to maintain their individual power base. The patient is generally forgotten. The coverage, sold to him by the super salesman, with unlimited clauses for denial hidden in the fine print, often is not worth the paper on which it is printed. The insurance company and their sales representatives make money; the politician stays in power and the patient ‘whistles in the wind’. Salesmen don’t really care what happens once they have made a sale and along with all the other players, are complicit in victimizing the patient, ie. the individual who has had an accident or has become afflicted with an illness, who in a time of need finds the support that he religiously paid for over many years – unavailable. In my mind, this is just another one of the scourges so prevalent in health care today.

Now, in order to relieve themselves of the stigma of enforcing the denial, insurance carriers plan to hire so-called legitimate “new companies” to carry out the hatchet job on their behalf, under the adage that this is impartial and protects the patient. This can hardly be construed as an event designed for the patient’s benefit. It simply removes the stigma of saying “no” from the insurance company. In essence, to protect the carrier’s economic position, a new “hired gun” will now perform the negative aspect of their premeditated actions. This measure is simply good PR and an easier way of saying no.

This entire scenario is neither new and definitely not American, even though Canadians have been conditioned to criticize the U.S. as a place where “everything is so much worse”. This is another falsehood propagated by politicians to make us feel better about being Canadian – a presumption that is entirely without justification. Both the U.S. and Canada are great countries with immense resources and many positive attributes, but the delivery of insurance policies as opposed to the delivery of quality healthcare and preserving the patient’s best interests, are definitely not part of that programme.

How can this inequity be corrected? Obviously the burden should fall on the shoulders of politicians. But do they act? Yes, but unfortunately only in the interest of the insurance carrier – the big hungry beast that feeds them in so many ways.

How can this be changed? First of all, by no longer condoning the falsehoods put forward by the PR and sales pitch of the insurance conglomerates. Second, by ensuring the protection of the rights of those who have been victimized by purchasing policies designed primarily to increase the carrier’s bottom line. Only then will justice be served.

One must think back to the days of pre-World War I, an era when governments in Canada, the U.S. and other countries were still the servants of the people. Today, the reverse condition prevails. Profit is the name of the game. Governments are preoccupied with taxes, interfering in business and imposing unrealistic regulatory practices; the list is endless and destructive, not only in this but many other situations.

Revolution? Perhaps, but this is always messy as we see currently by the heads flying around the world; most notably, Hussein, Gaddafi and soon to be Assad. Governments must get back to the basics of governing, rather than interfering in business, with inappropriate spending and a total disregard of our constitutional rights. They should operate for the benefit of the people, which is what they are paid to do. This mandate must be reinstated and enforced.

Health insurer’s U.S.-style plan seeks to ‘manage’ members’ drug costs

Under a type of plan that is virtually unheard of in this country, Great-West Life will try to determine if appropriate lower-cost medicines are available in place of big-ticket specialty drugs

A major Canadian insurance company is getting actively involved in the medical treatment of drug-plan members prescribed hugely expensive new medicines, playing the kind of direct role in basic health care that is common for U.S. private insurers, but virtually unheard of in this country.

Under a “case management” system already implemented at hundreds of workplace drug plans, Great-West Life’s representatives will try to determine if appropriate lower-cost medicines are available in place of big-ticket specialty drugs, work with the patient and doctor to “understand different treatment options” and assess the effectiveness of the drug therapy.

The program also requires clients prescribed specialty drugs to use pharmacies that Great-West designates, raising a red flag with at least one regulator.

“Is that an appropriate type of care, where some third party is telling you where you should go? asked Don Rowe, secretary-registrar of the Newfoundland-Labrador Pharmacy Board. “I have concerns about big businesses cutting deals with one another to be the exclusive, sole provider.”

Some analysts, however, say such measures are becoming a necessity as drug plans financed by employers, workers and unions grapple with a new wave of medicines that target small clusters of patients — but can cost as much as $500,000 a year.

“If somebody else is footing the bill … there’s going to be a lot more scrutiny for these claims,” said Michael Sullivan, whose company Cubic Health advises employers and other private drug-plan sponsors. “It [the GWL plan] could usher in a new generation of more American-style managed-care in Canada.”

He stressed, though, that the development is “brand-new” and it remains to be seen how extensively or effectively Great-West will manage cases. Such insurers process claims, but do not underwrite the cost.

Close to 2,000 private drug plans are now operating with the new system, and most of the 30,000 or so other plans administered by the Winnipeg-based company will likely join them by the middle of next year, said Brad Fedorchuk, the insurer’s vice president of marketing.
The prescriber is still responsible for the appropriate treatment, but it just needs to be demonstrated to us that is also the most cost effective

He touted the idea as a way to let plans afford the cost of new, potentially life-saving drugs that otherwise might be too dear for them to cover — and often are not funded at all by government programs. Case managers would simply ensure all options are considered before a drug is administered, said Mr. Fedorchuk.

“Doctors may not be aware of the cost differences between various treatments,” he said. “At the end of the day, the prescriber is still responsible for the appropriate treatment, but it just needs to be demonstrated to us that is also the most cost effective.”

Prescription drugs have long been one of the biggest and fastest growing costs in health care, accounting for about $26-billion annually. The sector’s growth slowed to a halt in the last two to three years, as many blockbuster drugs lost their patent protection, ushering in cheaper generic copies.

That downward trend is expected to be short-lived, though. Coming on the market are “biologics” and other, extremely expensive, specialty drugs for relatively small groups of patients with cancer, auto-immune diseases and less-common conditions. Remicade, for Crohn’s and rheumatoid arthritis, costs up to $50,000 annually per patient; Soliris, at $500,000 per sufferer of a rare blood-disorder, has been dubbed the world’s most expensive medicine.

Private drug plans, provided to many Canadians through their employer, cover about 36% of the cost of prescriptions, but are expected to absorb the bulk of the specialty-drug burden, since their clients tend to be younger and often need the medicines their whole lives.

While specialty products — nick-named “niche busters” — are prescribed now to less than 1% of plan members, they account for 17% of costs — a number projected to keep climbing, said Mr. Sullivan.

“This notion of these expensive biologic drugs is perceived by entire countries as being a major policy challenge,” said Steve Morgan, a pharmaceutical-policy expert at the University of British Columbia.
This whole proposition seems to be a very concerning step on a dark path toward the American model

Restricting how the drugs are covered is a reasonable response, said Aidan Hollis, a University of Calgary health economist. “Some doctors prescribe very expensive drugs when there are equivalent, lower-priced drugs available.”

Yet the GWL program is already creating a stir in the pharmacy world, with its requirements that some patients get their specialty drug from a designated store. Mr. Fedorchuk said Great-West Life has made agreements with certain pharmacies to win better prices, try to avoid wastage of the costly drugs and more efficiently serve patients.

That reasoning did not hold much sway, however, with a Newfoundland woman who was recently told by GWL she would have to start using a pharmacy in Ontario instead of her local druggist for a specialty arthritis drug. Partly out of concern about how the temperature-sensitive substance would be handled, she fought the move and for now has managed to stay with the local business, said her Newfoundland pharmacist, who asked not to be named.

“The fact they’re restricting the patient’s right to choose is a huge issue,” he charged. “This whole proposition seems to be a very concerning step on a dark path toward the American model.”

Sports Medicine – An Advisory

High profile athletes, much like MDs, often receive inadequate medical therapy, thereby compromising the quality of health care they need and deserve. It is therefore incumbent that all athletes take note of the following advice. Unfortunately, physicians often do not accept advice beyond their sometimes narrow scope of knowledge.

Over the past twenty years, our company has worked with an extensive number of high-level professional and amateur athletes and sports organizations. Some of our prominent clients have included the Toronto Maple Leafs Hockey Club, the Toronto Raptors, the Miami Heat and periodically, individual members of the Blue Jays. On most occasions, we have been able to successfully rehabilitate players suffering from a variety of musculo-skeletal problems that failed to heal utilizing traditional methods.

During this period, we have learned that team owners, managers, agents and trainers come and go – each with their own particular objectives and philosophies. Many of the teams are guided by a variety of advisors with regard to the maintenance of the athlete’s health, the treatment and prevention of injuries and related problems. All too often, this arrangement is not in the athlete’s best interest.

Most significantly, I would like to stress that all athletes should take a measure of control with respect to their individual welfare and health status. Do not rely on those who may lack the medical knowledge and expertise to provide the best possible solutions. The list of high-level athletes whose careers have been cut short by adhering to inappropriate therapies, is infinite. In my mind, there is no question that the correct application of Laser Therapy could have healed most of these injuries rapidly, thereby prolonging the athlete’s career.

I read the sports pages daily and see many top-level athletes plagued by back injuries, shoulder problems, tendonitis, epicondylitis, etc. who elect to have surgery with subsequent termination of their career. In many of these instances, ten Laser Therapy sessions over approximately two weeks, could have resolved these problems promptly and completely.

The most productive associations that we have experienced in the field of sports medicine have been formed by working with the individual athlete, unencumbered by agents, decision makers and those who have a vested interest in advancing their personal agendas. It is for this reason that I appeal to the athlete directly. Remember – when your career is finished, no one will care about you, your pain or your arthritis. It is therefore incumbent that you educate yourself to make the appropriate choices regarding to the most effective medical solutions available today.

In the past four years particularly, an increasing number of athletes have acquired BioFlex Laser Therapy Systems for their personal use, in order to be able to treat their injuries immediately after occurrence and utilize the therapy with protocols specific for their particular problem. In these situations, rapid and complete recovery is almost assured. Indeed, employing the BioFlex Laser Therapy System almost invariably results in a success range approaching 100%, when dealing with the athlete directly and no third party interferes in the process or compliance.

A number of golf professionals have learned “never to leave home without it” (i.e. the BioFlex System), knowing that they can independently treat their injuries on the road and immediately when a new injury occurs. Several baseball pitchers in the Major Leagues have followed suit. The benefits resulting from this approach are vastly superior to the utilization of the large jars of toxic pharmaceuticals (analgesics, anti-inflammatories, muscle relaxants) that are so often indiscriminately dispensed, in almost every locker room.

Finally, you, the athlete, owe it to yourself to become educated with regard to the most effective therapies available, in order to maintain your physical skills, as long as possible and prolong your career, beyond what is commonly regarded as normal. Moreover, this approach also provides preventative therapy, precluding the need for knee replacements, back surgeries, etc. – areas that so frequently become symptomatic soon after retirement. Baseball pitchers, gymnasts, golfers, etc. are just some of the professionals who benefit most significantly. Pitchers in baseball particularly should utilize Laser Therapy, prior to pitching and at the termination of a game. Careers can be extended for an extra decade or even more. Early institution of therapy that cures the problem, coupled with the ability to prevent progression, is the optimal solution, both short and long term.

For further information, please contact Slava Kim at slavamd@bioflexlaser.com or 416-251-1055.

THE SHOE IS ON THE WRONG FOOT

Today, shoes are available in a bewildering number of styles from the 6 inch stiletto heel to the shoe sock. The offerings are eclectic, to say the least. In my extensive medical practice, in which I see approximately fifty new patients each week, many present with problems originating from improper footwear, therefore incurring pathologies such as Plantar Fasciitis, Achilles Tendonitis, Bunions, Hammer Toes and most significantly of all – secondary problems of the spine, the result of biomechanical imbalances.

To advise you with regard to selecting proper footwear, I wish to provide some guidelines to be heeded, whenever you buy your next pair of shoes. Most people, as we all know, have more than a sufficient number of styles and patterns in their closets, however economics permitting are always adding to these reserves. Whereas fashion and the environment may be taken into account, do not let these factors dictate your choice.

Personally, I am aware how much the soft spike in golf shoes, as opposed to those made of steel, predominant as recently as 10 years ago, have preserved the careers of not only many golf professionals, but also the average amateur. With the use of soft spikes, the trauma to the feet is comparatively minimal and one can easily walk 36 holes without discomfort. In the era when the metal spike was still in vogue and as much as I like the game, I often prayed for the season to end. By late November, my feet were killing me and I welcomed the conferred winter respite.

Now on to the selection process – First of all, make certain that you are dealing with someone who understands how to fit a shoe properly, never mind the sales pitch. Once that has been accomplished, allowing for adequate but not excessive width and length, walk around the store for an appropriate period of time, to determine if the fit appears to be satisfactory. These are simple, but often disregarded rules. Next, I generally arrange with the store manager that I will wear them at home for a short period of time and request permission to return them, if the fit is uncomfortable. If that is acceptable to management, one can feel safe and proceed to complete the purchase.

Tips – Today, many people walk a great deal at work, pursue sporting activities or even walk several miles daily in their own home. A soft sole is therefore paramount. Whereas these types of shoes may not be suitable for social occasions, including some offices, they will preserve the health of the feet and avoid back problems.

In situations where running shoes are not permitted in the workplace, obtain black comfortable shoes with a soft sole and a good arch support. In my experience, these are best found in shoes manufactured by New Balance, Asics and a number of other companies. The two mentioned above are personal favorites as they are sufficiently wide, although I have worn others in the past, also with a significant level of comfort. Sometimes, even a good manufacturer, for whatever reason, makes products that are less satisfactory than previous versions. On occasion, Nike has been found to be guilty of this transgression. This is knowledge that I have gained from both personal experience and the observation of patients and for obvious reasons have developed a special interest in this area.

On the other hand, I fail to understand why manufacturers keep changing the models other than for competitive reasons. For instance, New Balance put out a model 6 years ago, but only for a short period of time. With much effort, I was able to purchase 2 pairs of this type (now both worn out). That said, I would still love to have them bring the old model out of the vault. For my needs, it was ‘the absolute perfect shoe’ and hopefully, they may take note of these comments and recreate this particular model.

The advice provided should be helpful to those purchasing new shoes. Most important, make sure that ‘the shoe fits’ and do not rush into a purchase.

Patients often inquire about the treatment for “shingles” (herpes zoster). Here is a typical report from a patient in his own words that confirms the point. There are many others that travel a similar course however some require more prolonged treatment and a certain degree of persistence. Eventually all can be cured.


Dr. Fred Kahn


July 10, 2012

Orville Baily
orvdean@sympatico.ca

Dear Dr. Kahn,

I know I am late in sending this to you and was waiting to see if I had a recurrence of the problem. I can happily say that there has been nothing since I had the last Laser Treatment on July 2011.

To explain my situation, I sustained a very painful case of shingles while on a river cruise through Europe. I went to an MD in Venice on July 6th and was told there is no cure and “here are some pain pills for you to take”. On arrival home on the 9th I went to the Emergency room at Mississauga Hospital and was told the same thing. The next day I saw another MD and now the same familiar response happened.

On the 13th my nephew who is a chiropractor in Vancouver and uses Dr Kahn’s Laser Treatment called me and got me into Meditech and I had my first treatment on the 13th. I had some relief after 2 days. I had a total number of 3 treatments over 14 days and as I have said earlier, have had no trouble since. I would recommend this treatment to anyone.

Incidentally, I should also mention that the severe degenerative osteoarthritis of my spine cleared up completely at the same time.

From a very satisfied patient,

Orville Baily

GlaxoSmithKline fined $3-billion in largest health fraud settlement in U.S.

July 9, 2012

The article included in this message stimulates serious reflection about the efficacy of our educational systems along with our moral and ethical standards.

In the past week alone, evidence has emerged that JP Morgan Chase gambled away 9 billion dollars of investor assets, nevertheless I am confident that management will not reduce their unrealistic, bloated salaries.

In the same week, Barclays Bank was fined $500,000,000.00 for cheating the world at large by conspiring to fix the Libor rate, the basis of the international financial system, and now GlaxoSmithKline —- one of the so-called protectors of our health status has committed what I feel is the most serious fraud of all, as the article clearly confirms.

The first two criminal activities are only monetary in scope, but this one plays with your health and indeed facilitates your demise while profiting from the process.

Really, what is the world coming to?

GLOBE AND MAIL – JESSE J. HOLLAND

GlaxoSmithKline Plc agreed to plead guilty to misdemeanor criminal charges and pay $3 billion to settle what government officials on Monday described as the largest case of healthcare fraud in U.S. history.

The agreement, which still needs court approval, would resolve allegations that the British drugmaker broke U.S. laws in the marketing and development of pharmaceuticals.

GSK targeted the antidepressant Paxil to patients under age 18 when it was approved for adults only, and it pushed the drug Wellbutrin for uses it was not approved for, including weight loss and treatment of sexual dysfunction, according to an investigation led by the U.S. Justice Department.

The company went to extreme lengths to promote the drugs, such as distributing a misleading medical journal article and providing doctors with meals and spa treatments that amounted to illegal kickbacks, prosecutors said.

In a third instance, GSK failed to give the U.S. Food and Drug Administration safety data about its diabetes drug Avandia, in violation of U.S. law, prosecutors said.

The misconduct continued for years beginning in the late 1990s and continued, in the case of Avandia’s safety data, through 2007. GSK agreed to plead guilty to three misdemeanor criminal counts, one each related to the three drugs.

Guilty pleas in cases of alleged corporate misconduct are exceedingly rare, making GSK’s agreement especially unusual.

The agreement to settle the charges “is unprecedented in both size and scope,” said James Cole, the No. 2 official at the U.S. Justice Department. He called the action “historic” and “a clear warning to any company that chooses to break the law.”

The settlement includes $1 billion in criminal fines and $2 billion in civil fines.

GSK said in a statement it would pay the fines through existing cash resources. The company announced a $3 billion charge in November related to legal claims.

Chief Executive Officer Andrew Witty said the misconduct originated “in a different era for the company” and will not be tolerated. “I want to express our regret and reiterate that we have learnt from the mistakes that were made,” he said in a written statement.

The GSK settlement surpasses what had been the largest criminal case involving a drugmaker in U.S. history. In 2009, Pfizer Inc agreed to pay $2.3 billion to settle allegations it improperly marketed 13 drugs.

The cases follow a trend of U.S. authorities cracking down on how pharmaceuticals are sold, in part because of the rising cost of providing drugs through government programs.

Part of civil fines address allegations that, from 1994 to 2003, GSK underpaid money owed to Medicaid, the healthcare program for the poor run jointly by states and the federal government. The company had an obligation to tell the government its “best prices” but failed to do so, prosecutors said, and $300 million of the settlement will go to states and other public health authorities.

A portion of the $2 billion in civil fines may go to a group of whistleblowers who contributed to the government’s investigation and who are eligible to share in the recovery under the False Claims Act. Cole said the amount has not been determined.

As part of the settlement, GlaxoSmithKline agreed to new restrictions by the U.S. government to prevent the use of kickbacks or other prohibited practices. The inspector general of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will oversee the “Corporate Integrity Agreement” for five years.

The company will not be able to compensate its salesmen based on sales goals for territories. It was also required to change its executive compensation program to allow the company to “claw back” certain pay for those engaged in misconduct.

Witty said GSK’s U.S. unit has “fundamentally changed our procedures for compliance, marketing and selling. When necessary, we have removed employees who have engaged in misconduct.”

Prosecutors have not brought criminal charges against any individuals in connection with the GSK case, although the settlement expressly leaves open that possibility. Cole declined to comment on the possibility of future charges.

Almost exactly a year ago GSK agreed to pay nearly $41 million to 37 states and the District of Columbia in an unrelated case about substandard manufacturing processes at a Puerto Rico factory.

In 2010, the company took a $2.4 billion charge in connection with Avandia to settle claims from patients.

An Update on Awesome Feather

Congratulations are in order to Adena Springs Stables, Chad Brown the trainer and Jeffrey Sanchez the jockey, on winning today at Gulfstream Park. This brings Awesome Feather’s undefeated streak to nine over the course of her short career.

The victory was truly impressive as she went into the lead mid-race and won by six lengths over Delightful Mary, who ran 2nd after putting on a tremendous late charge.

Our previous commentary on this horse October 5, 2011, Awesome Feather Wins Comeback at Belmont, provides a description of her progress after she was sidelined by a “bowed tendon”, subsequent to her 7th victory.

After her 7th race she was treated extensively with the BioFlex Laser Therapy System and has made a complete recovery from her injury, as indicated by her victory in the Gazelle on November 26, 2011 and confirmed by today’s spectacular win.

F Kahn, MD

Awesome Feather

‘Feather’ blows ‘em away

Awesome Feather lived up to her first name, putting on a dazzling show in Gulfstream’s Sunshine Millions card Saturday.

The 2-year-old champion of 2010 galloped to an almost six-length win in the $300,000 Distaff to remain undefeated in her nine-race career.

Awesome Feather won the mile and eighth stakes as if she was just toying with a well credentialed field. She stalked Tiz the Argument, who had won her past three starts by more than 15 lengths, to the far turn. Jeffrey Sanchez gave Awesome Feather her cue and she accelerated effortlessly past the early leader.

Delightful Mary, going for her third straight, charged up to challenge but Sanchez let out another notch and it was over. Awesome Feather, the 4-to-5 favorite, increased her margin with every stride, crossing under the wire in 1:49.17. Delightful Mary held second over late-running Sweet Repent.

“She just exploded like she always does,” Sanchez said. “She’s the best horse I’ve ever ridden. She’s the best filly in the world.”

Awesome Feather missed most of 2011 with a tendon injury. Trainer Chad Brown said as good as she is there might be more to come. “She’s a remarkable horse. I don’t know that we’ve seen all her gears. I really have never pressed the gas pedal. I’m afraid to.”

Awesome Feather remains undefeated in nine starts with earnings of almost $1.7 million.

Classical Cases Treated in the Past Week at Meditech

Case #1

Diagnosis – Neuropathy

67 year old executive with three year history of ulcers of the left foot

Previous treatment:
• Weekly visits to university centre wound clinic
• Dressing changes several times per week
• Intravenous antibiotics- 6months
• No improvement over three years of continuing care
• Estimated cost of treatments prior to Meditech intervention – $150,000

Course at Meditech
• Treatments on three consecutive days
• Wound left open
• Continuous saline compresses during the night
• Discontinuation of all medications

Result
• Major wound reduced from 0.92cm to 0.18 after three treatments (in essence wound is healed)
• Cost of treatments at Meditech – $500

You might term this “the battle of three years vs. three days”.

Anecdotal or Evidence-based? Judge for yourself!

Neuropathy

Case #2

Diagnosis – Gout

69 year old retired professional athlete (NHL) with gout of the right foot

• Acute pain, 2 days in duration
• Right foot inflamed (pain, edema, tenderness)
• Unable to walk

Status after 1 Laser Treatment:
• Zero pain
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The moose and the modern welfare state

On Wednesday, December 28th, 2011, I noted an article by Neil Reynolds in the Toronto Globe and Mail. This piece aptly explains the economic morass, currently prevailing.
In essence, the problem results from the existing poor leadership in so many countries and at so many levels. All decisions, in one form or another, emanate from the top and poor leaders impoverished in thought and action can only produce a negative impact, leading to disastrous outcomes in health-care, economic status, etc.
To reverse this process is frequently difficult – if not impossible. All countries and organizations must therefore periodically re-examine and revise their form of governance, in order to establish a structure that functions in an effective and reasonable manner.
In the age of technology, it is no longer permissible to state that “this is the best we have”; all countries and institutions must strive to become better. The initiation of this step is of the utmost importance, although sometimes it may lead to revolution.
At Meditech, we are aware of our mission to achieve a high level of success in treating a diverse number of pathologies, as we are focused on that objective at all times.
Similarly, in the political arena, the focus of the state should be on the welfare of its population and nothing else. Unfortunately at this time this does not appear to be the case; it is imperative that solutions be found and implemented.
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Globe and Mail – Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011
The moose and the modern welfare state
NEIL REYNOLDS
Dr. Seuss’s story of Thidwick moose begins one autumn day on the northern shore of Lake Winna-Bango where a herd of moose – big-hearted Thidwick and 60 others – are seeking moose moss to munch. A Bingle Bug happens by and asks Thidwick for permission to ride on his antlers. Thidwick consents: He has plenty of antler to share. The bug tells a tree spider about the deal and the spider is soon building webs in Thidwick’s antlers.
A bird settles next, then the bird’s wife, and then the bird’s uncle, a woodpecker who drills holes in the antlers and makes nesting places for four squirrels. More squatters arrive: a bobcat, a turtle, three mice, a fox, a bear, and 362 bees. Winter approaches and Thidwick must get to the lake’s distant southern shore. His beneficiaries refuse permission. They proceed to decide the argument democratically and, predictably, Thidwick loses the vote. Suddenly, the big-hearted moose realizes that he has lost his freedom – and that he lives solely for the creatures who have staked claims to his benevolence.
It would be mean to reveal the ending but as the author himself put it, in life-cycle terms, the “old horns came off so that new ones can grow.” Thus concludes the cautionary tale of Theodore Seuss Geisel’s Thidwick, the Big-Hearted Moose, a parable more evocative now than when first published in 1948. Mr. Geisel was famously liberal, a champion of FDR’s New Deal, yet his liberalism was neither squishy nor sentimental. He once said that his children’s stories were “as subversive as hell,” as Thidwick’s adventures in a modern welfare state wickedly confirm.
Across Europe these days, countries are taking a lesson from Thidwick and shedding tens of thousands of public-sector workers. Much pseudo austerity has taken place. But many benevolent countries are shaking off civil servants at a rapid clip: 20,000 in Denmark; 55,000 in Germany; 70,000 in Romania; 13,000 in Spain – and 490,000, over four years, in Britain.
Other countries prefer hefty salary cuts. In Greece, public-sector wages have been cut by 25 per cent; in the Czech Republic, by as much as 40 per cent.
For these countries, austerity is a form of repentance for cheating, after years in which they routinely borrowed and spent more than they were permitted by European Union rules. They had pledged to keep budget deficits to less than 3 per cent of GDP. In 2009, of the 27 EU countries, 21 were in violation of this commitment, with Britain (at 14.4 per cent) the worst fiscal offender of all.
Sweden was perhaps the most fiscally disciplined of the EU countries, a discipline maintained since the 1990s when it hit the wall early on (as did Canada). In 2009, Sweden’s deficit was running at 0.9 per cent of GDP, the lowest in Europe. It became the only euro-club member to need no extraordinary fiscal restraint.
Paradoxically, however, Sweden employs more public-sector workers, as a percentage of labour force, than any other OECD country: 31 per cent. (South Korea employs the fewest: 7 per cent.) In its analysis of public-sector employment in Canada, Statistics Canada provides an answer. The further a government goes into debt, Statscan says, the more aggressively it tends to cut public-sector jobs, an ostensibly obvious conclusion that nevertheless leads to intriguing tradeoffs. People who want to expand public-sector payrolls must logically champion paying down of the debt. Sweden has roughly half the federal-provincial public debt of Canada, and sets a good example of pay-as-you-go government.
Canada sustains 3.6 million public-sector workers – one in every five jobs in the entire economy. The country went through a public-sector downsizing in the 1990s but has since more than replaced the jobs that disappeared. In Newfoundland and Labrador, public-sector workers constitute 30.9 per cent of all jobs, essentially matching Sweden. In Alberta, public-sector workers constitute only 17 per cent. Go figure.
Statscan identifies a number of idiosyncratic traits in provincial public-sector employment. The Atlantic provinces employ far more public-sector workers, with 135 per 1,000 inhabitants, than the Canadian average of 105.8. British Columbia and Alberta employ the fewest. Nurtured in socialism, Saskatchewan requires 50 per cent more workers, per 1,000 inhabitants, than Alberta, its next-door neighbour. And Ontario employs more than one million public-sector workers – roughly 100,000 more than when Premier Mike Harris left office in 2002.