MP resorted to mail-order medicine

25 February 2013 Last updated at 07:33 ET

An MP says he resorted to mail-order medicine to cope with the debilitating pain he endured from a form of arthritis.

Ogmore MP Huw Irranca-Davies is calling for improvements in the diagnosis and treatment of ankylosing spondylitis.

He tried homeopathic treatments and "vile concoctions involving exotic mushrooms from Russia" in an attempt to deal with the symptoms.

Around 200,000 people in the UK are thought to have the condition.

Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is a form of arthritis that can cause the spine to fuse, but can also affect other parts of the body.

No one had diagnosed any condition for me. So I was trying anything

During a debate in Parliament on Monday, Labour MP Mr Irranca-Davies will reveal how he was diagnosed late in life.

He will describe how he started getting a stiff neck and spine as a badminton player in his youth.

"I just thought it was part of a sporting life. You creak a bit," he says.

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MP resorted to mail-order medicine

Digital Medicine: Machines for living

25 February 2013 Last updated at 04:25 ET By Peter Bowes BBC News, Los Angeles

Prevention not cure has always been good health advice but the trick has been to diagnose early enough. Now a range of medical technologies for use both inside and outside the body may give prevention the upper hand and close the gap between diagnosis and cure.

Nowadays doctors are able to monitor the health of their patients without meeting them. Sensors, such as heart monitors or other implanted devices, can send data via smart phones to hospitals and health professionals to help them spot problems before they occur.

But in the future this growing area of medicine may go from the edge to the centre of medicine and have an impact on human longevity.

The Qualcomm Tricorder X Prize will give $10m (6.5m) to the developer of a wireless hand-held device that monitors and diagnoses health conditions. Its sponsors, the X-Prize Foundation, a US charity, and Qualcomm, a US telecommunications technology firm, were inspired by the tricorder - a hi-tech sensor used by the characters in Star Trek, the science fiction television serial.

"If we look at the history of technology over the last hundred years, it has extended life in a dramatic way," says Don Jones, vice president of global strategy and market development, with Qualcomm Life, a company that makes wireless technology for use in healthcare.

Body monitoring and body computing will become so ubiquitous that they will be part of our cultural dialogue

"I think we're going to see new technologies we have trouble imagining today, in the same way that Star Trek imagined the tricorder in the 1960s. Today we actually believe that such things are possible," he says.

The plan is to develop a device that can scan the body and obtain measurements of different medical states or conditions.

"The data would be used to inform the consumer about their state of health and potentially make recommendations about what they might do," says Mark Winter, senior director at the X-Prize Foundation.

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Digital Medicine: Machines for living

Eyewitness to Socialized Medicine and Gun Control in the Soviet Union – Part 1 of 3 – Video


Eyewitness to Socialized Medicine and Gun Control in the Soviet Union - Part 1 of 3
Yule Gurreau describes his experience of socialized medicine and gun control living in the Soviet Union. His testimony is particularly valuable, as politicians in our own country are now attempting to impose the same upon us today. Yule gives us his account in his own amusing style and sense of humor. We are glad to have him with us today in the USA. KEYWORDS: medicine, firearms, guns, news, gun control, socialized medicine, legislation, russia, dianne feinstein, assault weapons, magazine ban, California, second amendment, constitution, sheriffs, truth movement, eyewitness, congress, history, schools, barack obama, gun confiscation, atascadero, speech, tea party, protest, day of resistance, infowars, NRA, GOA, USSR, soviet union, communism, testimony, demonstration, right to bear arms, environment, NWO, liberty, libertarian, democrat, republican, america, american, meeting, obamacare, reality, medical, unconstitutional, tyranny, socialism

By: BenjaminsCamera

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Eyewitness to Socialized Medicine and Gun Control in the Soviet Union - Part 1 of 3 - Video

Eyewitness to Socialized Medicine and Gun Control in the Soviet Union – Part 2 of 3 – Video


Eyewitness to Socialized Medicine and Gun Control in the Soviet Union - Part 2 of 3
Yule Gurreau describes his experience of socialized medicine and gun control living in the Soviet Union. His testimony is particularly valuable, as politicians in our own country are now attempting to impose the same upon us today. Yule gives us his account in his own amusing style and sense of humor. We are glad to have him with us today in the USA. KEYWORDS: medicine, firearms, guns, news, gun control, socialized medicine, legislation, russia, dianne feinstein, assault weapons, magazine ban, California, second amendment, constitution, sheriffs, truth movement, eyewitness, congress, history, schools, barack obama, gun confiscation, atascadero, speech, tea party, protest, day of resistance, infowars, NRA, GOA, USSR, soviet union, communism, testimony, demonstration, right to bear arms, environment, NWO, liberty, libertarian, democrat, republican, america, american, meeting, obamacare, reality, medical, unconstitutional, tyranny, socialism

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Eyewitness to Socialized Medicine and Gun Control in the Soviet Union - Part 2 of 3 - Video

Eyewitness to Socialized Medicine and Gun Control in the Soviet Union – Part 3 of 3 – Video


Eyewitness to Socialized Medicine and Gun Control in the Soviet Union - Part 3 of 3
medicine, firearms, guns, news, gun control, socialized medicine, legislation, russia, dianne feinstein, assault weapons, magazine ban, California, second amendment, constitution, sheriffs, truth movement, eyewitness, congress, history, schools, barack obama, gun confiscation, atascadero, speech, tea party, protest, day of resistance, infowars, NRA, GOA, USSR, soviet union, communism, testimony, demonstration, right to bear arms, environment, NWO, liberty, libertarian, democrat, republican, america, american, meeting, obamacare, reality, medical, unconstitutional, tyranny, socialism

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Eyewitness to Socialized Medicine and Gun Control in the Soviet Union - Part 3 of 3 - Video

On Wednesday February 27th My Medicine TV premieres "The Medicine Men"

On Wednesday February 27th My Medicine TV premieres "The Medicine Men" weeknight prime-time show, featuring Dr. A. J. Farshchian.

(PRWEB) February 23, 2013

Farshchian also appeared on CNN Headline News earlier last year.

Farshchian, who has been mostly behind the camera creating shows like "The Knee Diaries," or "Chi Ga, an exercise video," now will be hosting a live show.

When asked whether Farshchian will return to CNN Headline News he said, "That's a great question. We'll see, at this point I will be hosting a live show on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 5:30."

As for what he wants the show to be, Farshchian says, "The basic notion is setting the record straight, getting it right and asking the right question.

"We're going to do that with interviews with experts, panels, celebrities, whatever it might be to create good conversation on that topic."

The show will broadcast live, and in live TV anything goes. A.J. Farshchian MD says, "I don't think we could avoid the advancements in stem cells and regenerative medicine. I would talk to patients, people who've been in pain and are now out, and have them talk about what it feels like to have been in that state."

As a practicing orthopedic regenerative medicine physician, Farshchian wants to get behind the headlines to the motivations of the news makers.

Roman Garcia, an expert in the field of physical therapy and a celebrity among his patients, will be joining the show to co-host.

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On Wednesday February 27th My Medicine TV premieres "The Medicine Men"

Global Leaders in Oncology Voice Support for WIN Consortium’s 2013 Symposium in Personalized Cancer Medicine

VILLEJUIF, France--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The Worldwide Innovative Networking (WIN) Consortium in personalized cancer medicine is a global network of 28 leading academic, pharma, life science, and patient advocacy organizations spanning 13 countries. WIN2013, the 5thin a series of Symposia dedicated to advancing personalized cancer medicine through global collaboration, will be held July 10-12, in Paris, France.

The WIN2013 theme, Personalized Cancer Medicine: From Innovation to Implementation, will bring leaders from around the world together in a collaborative, global forum to share innovations that represent the most promising advances in personalized cancer care.

Global leaders in oncology have voiced their support for WIN2013. I do not know of another forum which is designed to enable the globalization of patient specific cancer care; the discussions cover new technology through to clinical trials stated Mike Pellini, CEO of Foundation Medicine. The forum's perspective is powerful. I look forward sharing our learnings with one another so we can take one more step in the direction of truly personalized cancer care.

John Mendelsohn, Director, Khalifa Institute for Personalized Cancer Medicine and Past-President, MD Anderson, noted "The annual WIN Symposium in Paris provides a unique opportunity for leading stakeholders from academia, industry, government and advocacy groups in genomic cancer medicine to present data, exchange ideas and develop new research collaborations."

Patient advocacy leader and breast cancer survivor Janelle Hail, Founder and CEO of the National Breast Cancer Foundation, noted, WIN has become the catalyst for global advancement in personalized cancer care. With the growing constituency of academia, industry, government, and genomic cancer medicine advocacy groups collaborating through WIN, answers will emerge to empower patients to have some part of control over their own destiny.

Featuring globally recognized experts from academia, life sciences, pharma, healthcare IT, and patient advocacy, WIN2013 includes plenary sessions on:

- OMICS Assays That Support Personalized Clinical Care Today

- Analysis and Clinical Application of Genomics

- Clinical Progress in Personalized Cancer Therapy

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Global Leaders in Oncology Voice Support for WIN Consortium’s 2013 Symposium in Personalized Cancer Medicine

Medicine Take-Back Program Proves Successful for City

In an effort to prevent drug use youth among Dana Point youth, the citys medicine take-back box at Dana Point Police Services helps get unused and expired medications out of the home.

By Andrea Papagianis

Over-the-counter and prescription drugs anonymously disposed of through the citys medication drop-off box at Dana Point Police Services, located at City Hall. Photo by Andrea Papagianis

The Orange County Sheriffs Department and city of Dana Point have collected more than 50 pounds of prescription and over-the-counter medications, since introducing a medicine take back box in December.

Its safe, free and anonymous, said Deputy John Good, who encourages parents to clean out medicine cabinets to prevent youth medicinal drug use. Good sighted national trends and studies that show children gaining access to prescription and over-the-counter drugs from their own home or grandparents and friends homes.

Parents can take charge of this, Good said.

Unwanted, unused and expired prescription and over-the-counter medications can be dropped off anonymously at Dana Point Police Services, 33282 Golden Lantern, Suite 140. The drop-off box is accessible Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Tuesday and Thursday from 7:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. No syringes, illicit drugs, medical or hazardous waste can be accepted.

The drop-off box is cleared out regularly and medicines are booked into evidence for destructionand disposed of to eliminate environmental contamination.

On Tuesday, March 5, a community meeting aimed at preventing underage drinking and prescription drug use among Dana Point youth will be held at Dana Hills High School, 33333 Golden Lantern, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

The Building Healthy Families: Parenting Strategies and Solutions meeting will focus on community awareness and solutions to prevent and reduce alcohol and drug incidents among area youth. The Orange County Community Alliance Network and Dana Hills High School PTSA will host the event.

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Medicine Take-Back Program Proves Successful for City

Penn Medicine decision not to hire smokers part of a controversial trend

Don Sapatkin, Inquirer Staff Writer Posted: Thursday, February 21, 2013, 3:01 AM

Penn Medicine's decision to hire only nonsmokers starting July 1 is part of a slow-moving trend that goes back decades and that is still controversial even among public health workers, who often see tobacco as enemy No. 1.

"I'd be much more enthusiastic about them providing programs" - which Penn also does - "to help employees stop smoking," said Kathleen Sebelius, U.S. Health and Human Services secretary, who was asked about the decision Wednesday during a visit to The Inquirer.

Some large national companies, such as Turner Broadcasting, stopped hiring smokers in the 1980s. Twenty-nine states, including New Jersey, outlawed the practice as discriminatory. As a result, the University of Pennsylvania Health System's new policy will apply only in Pennsylvania.

Hospital systems, citing their mission of caring for patients and serving as community leaders as well as a need to save money on employee health insurance, have taken the lead with various tobacco policies in recent years. Smoking is now prohibited on all hospital campuses in South Jersey and on most in Southeastern Pennsylvania.

The Cleveland Clinic was among the first to stop hiring smokers. Among the large systems that followed were Baylor and the Geisinger Health System in central Pennsylvania.

Locally, St. Luke's Hospital & Health Network in the Lehigh Valley was an early adopter, in 2010. Abington Memorial Hospital joined a year later. Roxborough Memorial Hospital stopped hiring smokers on Sept. 1.

"It's been a non-event," said Roxborough administrator Michael Henrici, adding that one potential employee had been turned away.

When the decision was announced to the medical staff, "they actually broke out in applause," he said. "The goal is to be a leader in the community here in Roxborough in establishing a healthy workplace."

Henrici said the hospital got more complaints two years ago when it implemented a health insurance surcharge, now $25 every two weeks, for employees who smoke. Like other hospitals, Roxborough offers free smoking-cessation programs to workers and has grandfathered in smokers already on staff.

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Penn Medicine decision not to hire smokers part of a controversial trend

Penn Medicine Establishes New Institute for Biomedical Informatics

PHILADELPHIA ThePerelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvaniaannounces the creation of theInstitute for Biomedical Informatics(IBI).

With support from the naming gift of theSmilow Center for Translational Research,the IBI will bring together the large number of Penn faculty who work in the broad field of biomedical informatics to inform science and medical care. We will expand the number of faculty even more to create a wide-ranging program of research and education to find and clinically apply the treatments of the future and to train the next generation of physician-scientists, saysJ. Larry Jameson, M.D., Ph.D., Executive Vice President for the Health System and Dean of the Perelman School of Medicine.

John Hogenesch, Ph.D.,professor of Pharmacology, has been named interim director of the IBI. Given the breadth of this field, three associate directors have also been named: John Holmes Ph.D., associate professor of Medical Informatics in Epidemiology; Klaus Kaestner, Ph.D., professor of Genetics; and Curtis Langlotz M.D., Ph.D., professor of Radiology. A national search will be launched this spring for the institutes permanent leader.

Big data is increasingly driving both biological research and clinical care. In biomedicine, this information runs the gamut from bioinformatics at the genome and molecular level, to health-care informatics at the clinical level, to public-health informatics at the population level.

The IBI, in partnership withthe Schools of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Arts and Sciences, Nursing, and Veterinary Medicine, as well as The Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, will tacklechallenges directly relevant to patient care, as well as improve basic research that leads to more personalized care.

The Institute will also focus on educating the next generation of biomedical informaticians by folding in a new Masters in Biomedical Informatics degree program with the existing Ph.D. program in Genomics and Computational Biology and by creating additional graduate and medical training programs as this field evolves.

###

Penn Medicine is one of the world's leading academic medical centers, dedicated to the related missions of medical education, biomedical research, and excellence in patient care. Penn Medicine consists of the Raymond and Ruth Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (founded in 1765 as the nation's first medical school) and the University of Pennsylvania Health System, which together form a $4.3 billion enterprise.

The Perelman School of Medicine is currently ranked #2 in U.S. News & World Report's survey of research-oriented medical schools. The School is consistently among the nation's top recipients of funding from the National Institutes of Health, with $479.3 million awarded in the 2011 fiscal year.

The University of Pennsylvania Health System's patient care facilities include: The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania -- recognized as one of the nation's top "Honor Roll" hospitals by U.S. News & World Report; Penn Presbyterian Medical Center; and Pennsylvania Hospital the nation's first hospital, founded in 1751. Penn Medicine also includes additional patient care facilities and services throughout the Philadelphia region.

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Penn Medicine Establishes New Institute for Biomedical Informatics

Regenerative medicine and Stem cells Partnering Terms and Agreements

NEW YORK, Feb. 19, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

Regenerative medicine and Stem cells Partnering Terms and Agreements http://www.reportlinker.com/p01098514/Regenerative-medicine-and-Stem-cells-Partnering-Terms-and-Agreements.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Biological_Therapy

The Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cells Partnering Terms and Agreements report provides comprehensive understanding and unprecedented access to the Regenerative medicine and Stem cells partnering deals and agreements entered into by the worlds leading healthcare companies.

Trends in regenerative medicine and stem cells deals Deal terms analysis Partnering agreement structure Partnering contract documents Top deals by value Most active dealmakers Average deal terms for regenerative medicine and stem cells

The report provides a detailed understanding and analysis of how and why companies enter regenerative medicine and stem cells partnering deals. The majority of deals are development stage whereby the licensee obtains a right or an option right to license the licensors regenerative medicine and stem cells technology. These deals tend to be multicomponent, starting with collaborative R&D, and commercialization of outcomes.

This report provides details of the latest regenerative medicine and stem cells agreements including cell therapy agreements announced in the healthcare sector.

Understanding the flexibility of a prospective partner's negotiated deals terms provides critical insight into the negotiation process in terms of what you can expect to achieve during the negotiation of terms. Whilst many smaller companies will be seeking details of the payments clauses, the devil is in the detail in terms of how payments are triggered contract documents provide this insight where press releases and databases do not.

This report contains a comprehensive listing of all regenerative medicine and stem cells partnering deals announced since 2008 including financial terms where available including over 550 links to online deal records as disclosed by the deal parties. In addition, where available, records include contract documents as submitted to the Securities Exchange Commission by companies and their partners.

Contract documents provide the answers to numerous questions about a prospective partner's flexibility on a wide range of important issues, many of which will have a significant impact on each party's ability to derive value from the deal.

For example, analyzing actual company deals and agreements allows assessment of the following:

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Regenerative medicine and Stem cells Partnering Terms and Agreements

Enovate's e5000 Tele-Medicine Cart Offers Powerful Tools for Remote Consults

CANTON, Mich.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Enovate unlocks the full power of tele-medicine with the e5000 cart equipped with high-definition video and audio in a compact, durable package that is easy to use and effortlessly mobile.

The e5000 is designed to meet FDA Class 1 MDDS requirements, and has a pan/tilt/zoom camera, 22-inch high-definition LCD monitor with built-in speakers, codec, SLA battery power and microphone. It can be equipped with a locking drawer, work surface, storage basket and various other attachments for medical equipment.

The e5000 makes mobile video conferencing possible anywhere its needed, said Kevin LHeureux, Enovates tele-presence product manager. Its scalability, mobility and adjustability make it perfect for patient rooms, emergency and operating rooms, labs, radiology centers, nurse stations or doctors offices.

The e5000s 1080p high-definition resolution and 60 frames-per-second provides one of the sharpest, smoothest pictures on the market. Data compression helps users reduce their bandwidth needs and cost. It also offers an advance plug-n-play scaler that allows additional analogue peripherals to connect effortlessly to the codec.

Electronic height adjustment and independently adjustable work surfaces allow clinicians to work in comfort whether they are sitting or standing so they can focus attention on the patient.

Small, lightweight and easy to maneuver in tight areas, Enovates concave base design and smooth-rolling casters glide easily around corners and across hard floors or carpeting.

About Enovate

Headquartered in Canton, Michigan, Enovate is a leading international provider of mobile and wall-mounted computer workstations for healthcare, office and home. Enovates scalable, easy-to-use, ergonomic designs feature the best technology to create a flexible work environment that enhances productivity and performance. Enovate has been named by Inc. Magazine as one of the fastest-growing companies in the U.S. for the past four years, is celebrating 10 years of innovation in 2013. For more information, please contact Enovate at 877-258-8030 or visit http://www.enovateusa.com.

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Enovate's e5000 Tele-Medicine Cart Offers Powerful Tools for Remote Consults

ETAS Releases Inaugural Edition of Internal Medicine In-Review Study Guide

NEW YORK, Feb. 20, 2013 /PRNewswire/ --Educational Testing and Assessment Systems (ETAS), the creators of a comprehensive exam prep resource for internal medicine residents, has developed and released the inaugural edition of the Internal Medicine In-Review Study Guide. The Study Guide, which is sectioned into a convenient three-module book set, concisely provides all the information needed to pass the Board exam.

Internal Medicine In-Review is a Board exam prep program, which debuted in April 2012 at the Association of Program Directors in Internal Medicine (APDIM)Spring Conference; in the past ten months, the program has gained significant momentum with a user base of over 4,900 healthcare professionals. Educational components include an interactive Q&A website and a web-based smartphone app, optimized for iPhone and Android devices. The comprehensive Study Guide is the most recent addition to the Internal Medicine In-Review study system, which was published in November 2012 with distribution now underway.

The Study Guide covers the Board's top-tested categories, and has been authored and edited by a team of over 20 veteran physician educators. For quick and convenient exam prep, the Study Guide has been divided into 17 in-depth Board-relevant chapters, and is formatted with clinical-pearl call-outs. In developing this inaugural edition, ETAS has collaborated with its esteemed faculty, and has worked in partnership with Castle Connolly Graduate Medical Publishing (CCGMP).

Through support from the makers of TYLENOL, Internal Medicine In-Review Study Guides are available free of charge for US-based IM residents and program directors. These guides provide essential information needed to prepare for exams in an engaging, interactive format. To request a print copy or download a PDF of the book set, healthcare professionals can register or log on to the Online Study System, accessible at: InReviewIM.com.

Educational Testing and Assessment Systems (ETAS), a product of SanovaWorks, produces high quality, Board-relevant exam prep study systems in multiple medical specialties, including the Internal Medicine In-Review multi-component study system.

Media Contact:Caroline Sophia Barrett Senior Marketing Associate, SanovaLearning Lead (646) 736-4330 caroline.barrett@sanovaworks.com etasonline.com sanovaworks.com

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ETAS Releases Inaugural Edition of Internal Medicine In-Review Study Guide

New Physician Joins Colorado Center for Reproductive Medicine

DENVER, Feb. 21, 2013 /PRNewswire/ --The Colorado Center for Reproductive Medicine (CCRM) recently expanded their medical team with the addition of board eligible reproductive endocrinologist Jennifer Keller Brown M.D., M.B.A.

Dr. Brown completed her medical training at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in 2005 and her residency in Denver in 2009. During her residency at Exempla St. Joseph Hospital in Denver, Dr. Brown assisted in ongoing research at CCRM in the areas of fertility preservation and embryo cryopreservation. She then completed her fellowship in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at the University of Vermont in 2012.

During her fellowship, Dr. Brown was actively involved in clinical research conducted by the Reproductive Medicine Network examining treatment options for unexplained infertility and for infertility related to polycystic ovary syndrome. In addition, she initiated vascular research in an animal model of polycystic ovary syndrome. Her research is supported by an ongoing National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant and it continues today at the University of Vermont.

Dr. Brown treats patients in all aspects of infertility and reproductive endocrinology, and continues to lecture on a wide variety of fertility topics including polycystic ovary syndrome, hirsutism and rare fertility-related disorders.

"We are excited to have Dr. Brown join our team of physicians," says William Schoolcraft, M.D., medical director of CCRM. "Expanding our staff size allows us to treat even more patients more efficiently and will helps us to continue to provide exceptional level of care. Thanks to the dedicated work of our physicians and staff, CCRM has maintained one of the highest pregnancy success rates in the nation."

About the Colorado Center for Reproductive MedicineFounded in 1987 by Dr. William Schoolcraft, the Colorado Center for Reproductive Medicine is one of the nation's leading infertility treatment centers, providing a wide spectrum of infertility treatments ranging from basic infertility care to advanced in vitro fertilization (IVF) technology. Today, joined by Drs. Eric Surrey, Debra Minjarez, Robert Gustofson and Dr. Brown, Dr. Schoolcraft and his staff achieve some of the highest pregnancy rates in the country. CCRM has been ranked "The #1 Fertility Center in the U.S., with the Greatest Chance of Success" by Child.com. For more information visit http://www.ColoCRM.com

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New Physician Joins Colorado Center for Reproductive Medicine

Michael


Michael Alex | Medicine
"Maybe today just feels different" Watch in HD! I love these two more than I #39;ve ever loved any other tv-show couple and I #39;m sorry I haven #39;t vidded them in like 2 years. But the writers kinda kill my inspiration with how they continue to ruin the show.. What really made me wanna vid them again wasn #39;t the kiss, it was the fact that he was the only one who noticed that something was wrong with her and that she wasn #39;t acting like herself. It really reminded me of how they used to be in s1 before the writers forgot that this relationship actually is a important part of the show. (not speaking from a shippers point of view here, just someone who values continuity).

By: xTheHardestPaart

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Michael