Sequim This Week

People’s Pharmacy: Don’t let the cure kill you

People's Pharmacy

Posted on:

Aug

11th

2010

Joe and Teresa Graedon are the best-selling authors of “The People’s Pharmacy.” Joe is a pharmacologist. Teresa holds a doctorate in medical anthropology and is a nutrition expert. Email us your questions.

Hospitals can be dangerous places.
The sickest people with the nastiest infections get treated there.
A lot of people catch bad bugs while they are in the hospital.
An estimated 100,000 people die every year because of infections they catch in a health-care setting.

We received this message from a person who came down with Clostridium difficile (C. diff), a hard-to-treat intestinal infection: “I had a double knee replacement in February.
“I was discharged to rehab two days later, but I had to return to the hospital after only two days due to a C. diff infection.
“My knees turned out fine, but I was told the antibiotic I received during surgery killed all the good bacteria and left the bad.
“During the next four months, I was hospitalized four times and put in rehab four times, although I was prescribed Flagyl and then Vancocin.
“I’m still on Vancocin and will be taking it for two more months.
“I’m worried about what will happen to me if this antibiotic fails.
“I never imagined that repairing my arthritic knees would result in five months in the hospital.
“I can finally get around without a walker or cane, but each episode of C. diff put me behind schedule.
“I’m really mad about all the unsanitary situations I saw in both the hospital and rehab facility.
“The rooms and bathrooms were not kept clean and equipment was not wiped off when someone used it before me.
“Going to the hospital is like walking into a bacteria-filled petri dish.
“If you come out infection-free, count your blessings.
“No one would take responsibility for my C. diff.
“Since I had so many stays in rehab, I’m responsible for $5,000 of the charges.
“My insurance only pays for 10 days of rehab within a 60-day period.
“So I’m a victim twice over.”

For years, hospital administrators considered such infections inevitable, just a cost of doing business.
There is even a fancy name for it: nosocomial infections.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that 1.7 million occur every year.
There is a growing recognition, however, that infection rates could be cut dramatically if health-care workers followed certain precautions.
Hand washing is the first and most basic, but it is not the only precaution that needs to be taken. In his book, Safe Patients, Smart Hospitals, Peter Pronovost, M.D., Ph.D., describes how a five-point checklist can reduce infections associated with tubes that are inserted into the body.
Broad-spectrum antibiotics also can make patients more vulnerable by killing off good bacteria.
Clindamycin is an antibiotic that has been linked to C. diff.

Here is one reader’s experience: “I was prescribed clindamycin for a tooth extraction.
“I received NO warning about this drug.
“Three weeks later, I was in the ICU in septic shock with diarrhea, fever and blood pressure in the 50s.
“No blood was getting to my organs, and they were beginning to shut down.
“Who knew having a tooth removed could kill you?
“Beware of clindamycin. It puts you at risk for C. diff, a terrible and highly contagious infection.”

The lesson to be learned from this story is that we should always ask about the risks of any proposed treatment to avoid a cure that is worse than the disease.

More People's Pharmacy

People’s Pharmacy Q&A

Q: Can you tell us about flu vaccinations? I don’t understand how the vaccine can wear off so quickly that it’s required every year. What other vaccine acts like this?… »

People’s Pharmacy: As moods sour, certain medicine use soars

Americans take an amazing number of medications in an attempt to ease their anxiety or relieve their depression.
According to our calculations, more than 280 million prescriptions are dispensed annually… »

People’s Pharmacy Q&A

Q: I have heard that the Food and Drug Administration has approved a new drug to treat symptoms of prostate enlargement.
The trouble is that I didn’t catch the name.… »

People’s Pharmacy: There are many causes, cures for bad breath

Bad breath (halitosis in doctorspeak) is not a topic for polite conversation. In fact, even your dentist or best friend may not bring up the subject of dragon breath. Many… »

People’s Pharmacy Q&A

Q: I’ve had a terrible cough, so violent that I’ve wet and sometimes even soiled myself. For several weeks, I’ve been vomiting from coughing so hard. I take lisinopril and… »

People’s Pharmacy: Are your drugs really safe and effective?

Commercials on television and ads in magazines make medications seem like magic. They are supposed to solve problems like overactive bladder, elevated cholesterol and erectile dysfunction. Smiling faces and cheerful… »

People’s Pharmacy: Preventing blood clots is big business

Warfarin is a lifesaving drug that doctors love to hate. It has been widely prescribed (mostly as Coumadin) since the mid-1950s to prevent heart attacks and strokes due to blood… »

People’s Pharmacy Q&A

Q: Many years ago, I developed a terrible Clostridium difficile infection in my gut from antibiotic treatment for chlamydia.
Vancomycin did not cure the C. diff, which was painful. My… »

People’s Pharmacy Q&A

Q: After my doctor prescribed simvastatin, I gradually began to lose my libido. I didn’t realize that this medication was responsible, but after I dumped the drug because of severe… »

People’s Pharmacy: Washing hands saves lives and money

Hundreds of years ago, people feared going to hospitals. These were places of last resort because they were often ill-equipped and unsanitary. Patients often died.Even childbirth was hazardous. Childbed fever… »

Animal Doctor

Animal Doctor

Dog loves seat ledge
Dear Dr. Fox,
We installed one of those seat ledges for our Chihuahua, and she absolutely loves it! She can overlook the whole backyard, including several… »

Animal Doctor

Allergies may explain dog’s oily, smelly fur
Dear Dr. Fox,
My 9-year-old border collie had a beautiful coat and skin until two years ago. He started scratching and biting himself… »

Master Gardeners

This Week’s Garden: The winter garden

Fair weather or foul, nature finds a way to create interest in the garden, and winter is no exception.
A careful selection of plants can transform your garden from a… »

This Week’s Garden – Witch hazel: the wonder winter flower

Witch hazel, a large deciduous shrub with forked branches and spider-like flowers, provides dazzling foliage in fall and brightly colored flowers to wintery landscapes. This colorful plant has enjoyed a… »

News of the Weird

News of the Weird

Questionable judgements
“Snakeman” Raymond Hoser, of Park Orchards, Australia, was about to be fined in August for violating his Commercial Wildlife Demonstrator License — by failing to keep at least… »

News of the Weird

Weird science
In July, a surgeon from Britain’s Oxford Radcliffe Hospital announced a cure for a 57-year-old man with a rare condition that made, in his mind, audible and ever-louder… »

Savvy Senior

Savvy Senior: Funeral planning tips on a small budget

Dear Savvy Senior,
I just turned 75, and have been thinking about getting my funeral and burial arrangements taken care of so my kids won’t have to. What funeral preplanning… »

Savvy Senior: How to find a good handyman or contractor

Dear Savvy Senior,
Can you offer us seniors any tips for finding a good handyman to do some work around the house?
I’m 71 and have had some bad luck… »

The Ethicist

Goodbye

I have written “The Ethicist” for 12 years: 614 columns.
This is my last.
I loved this job, especially the interaction with the readers.
I admired the moral seriousness of… »

The Ethicist

When med students post patient pictures
Some of my Facebook friends are medical students who post cell phone pictures of patients with what these friends believe to be comical maladies,… »

Features

Time for pumpkins

Jonah McFarland, 4, enjoys a trip to the Sequim Pumpkin Patch.
A trip to the Sequim Pumpkin Patch has become an autumn tradition for many North Olympic Peninsula families. The… »

Celebrating a natural gem

The Dungeness River Festival, held Sept. 23-24, celebrates the diversity of the Dungeness Valley and the river that offers great recreational opportunities for locals and visitors and supplies vital water… »

Take a walk to a historic lighthouse

New Dungeness Lighthouse awaits those who trek to the end of Dungeness Spit.
Blue skies with birds soaring in the breeze, waves meeting the shore to create a symphony by… »

Just to make you smile

Photo provided by Roger Parkins. Naomi Foley, left, also known as Peaches the Clown, and Roger Parkins, aka Rudiger Roo, of Laff Pack Clown Alley entertain children attending the Dungeness… »

Winners announced for STW’s ‘Lavender Weekend Photo Contest’

Laurie A. Garner of Elmira, N.Y., won first place in Sequim This Week's online Lavender Weekend Photo Contest for a photo of a bee at work at CreekSide Lavender Farm,… »

Holiday fundraiser, bake sale set

SEQUIM — The third annual Philanthropic Educational Organization (P.E.O.) Holiday Bazaar, Bake Sale and Raffle will be held in the Pioneer Memorial Park Clubhouse, 387 E. Washington St., from 9… »

Olympic Orchard Society fruit show plans underway

SEQUIM — The Olympic Orchard Society of Clallam County will hold its biannual Fall Fruit Show at Trinity United Methodist Church, 100 S. Blake Ave., from 10 a.m. to 3… »

Nonprofit to sponsor free festival

SEQUIM – Snap, a local nonprofit for people with development disabilities and their families, will sponsor the free Sprout Film Festival on Saturday, Oct. 15.
The event will be held… »

‘Big Broadcast’ fundraiser planned to help KSQM purchase bigger tower

Tickets are available for “The Big Broadcast,” a dinner and dance fundraiser for KSQM, Sequim’s community radio station at 91.5 FM.
The event, which will include entertainment, silent and live… »

Master Gardeners fall plant sale set for Oct. 1-2

SEQUIM — Clallam County Master Gardeners have potted and priced thousands of plants for the group’s annual fall plant sale.
The sale will take place at Woodcock Demonstration Garden, 2711… »

Briefs

Soroptimists honor SHS students

SEQUIM — Soroptimist International of Sequim honored Sequim High School students Bailey Rookard and Sara Marble as its Girls of the Month for October and November.
Rookard, the October honoree,… »

Art show, sale entries sought

SEQUIM — Entry forms are available for the third annual Small Works Show & Sale, a December featured art exhibit and joint fundraiser for Sequim Arts and the Museum &… »

Thrift shop has Saturday sale

SEQUIM — The Sequim Dungeness Hospital Guild Thrift Shop, 204 W. Bell St., will be open from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5.
The shop is stocked with… »

Musical benefit for scholarships

SEQUIM — Readers Theatre Plus will present its annual scholarship fundraiser, “Plaid Tidings,” during the first two weekends in November.
Directed by Dewey Ehling, this holiday musical features four vocalists… »

Sequim mayor certified

SEQUIM — Laura Dubois, mayor pro tem for the city of Sequim, recently received a Certificate of Municipal Leadership from the Association of Washington Cities.
Dubois attended AWC-sponsored workshops and… »

Advertising

Jen

Advertising Rep.

Jenifer Clark

360-681-2390

jenifer.clark@peninsuladailynews.com

Jen

Advertising Rep.

Sara Schaefer

360-681-2390

sara.schaefer@peninsuladailynews.com

About STW

Sequim This Week, your weekly community news magazine, is published weekly by Peninsula Daily News.

Sequim This Week is free to households in our distribution area.

For delivery issues, phone 360-417-3510.

Free copies are also available at Mailboxes Too, The UPS Store, the Sequim Post Office, Co-Op Farm & Garden, the Carlsborg Shell Station, Carlsborg Chevron Station, Sunny Farms Country Store, Sequim City Hall, QFC, Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center (SARC), D&L Grocery, Sequim Senior Activity Center, Jim Carl Insurance, Tuttle’s BP, 7 Cedars Casino Gift Shop, Sequim-Dungeness Chamber of Commerce, Mini Fairmont, Rite Aid and Agnew Grocery.

In Port Angeles, Sequim This Week is available at the Peninsula Daily News office, Clallam County Courthouse, Port Angeles Post Office, Jackpot West and Mt. Pleasant IGS.