Thursday, July 28, 2011

Personalized Prescribing: Making the Most of Medicare Preventive Services

Many people don’t realize that personalized prescribing based on DNA testing is covered by most public and private insurers if a healthcare provider believes it is medically necessary. Be sure to ask about personalized prescribing at your next annual wellness visit.

Medicare offers a number of preventive services, including a free annual wellness visit so your doctor can identify health risk factors and recommend steps you can take to reduce those risks. Your doctor will evaluate your personal and family medical history, as well as current medications, and order tests. (See page 3 for complete description.) The goal of these visits is to prevent disease and to improve your overall health and well-being.


More and more physicians are including medication risk assessments to identify drug side-effects and interactions that may be causing problems along with the standard risk assessments for depression, heart disease, and cancer. If you’re taking four or more prescription drugs or one, such as Plavix, with a warning about genetics on the label, your doctor may order DNA Drug Sensitivity Testing to help optimize your prescriptions. Typically covered by insurance if ordered by a qualified healthcare provider, personalized prescribing helps doctors determine both “drug-to-drug” and “drug-to-DNA” interaction risk.

The comprehensive personalized prescribing program analyzes all the prescription drugs, herbal preparations, and over-the-counter medicines patients are taking for their combined interaction risk, and for their compatibility with a patient’s unique DNA profile.

With this tool, no longer is it a trial and error proposition as to what drug and dose to prescribe; we can now do it scientifically with a much better outcome for the patient.”

- J.E. Block, MD, FACP, Tulsa, Oklahoma

As the number of drugs an individual is taking goes up, so do the risks of a serious or even fatal reaction. If these drugs are being prescribed by more than one doctor, are self-prescribed, such as herbals, or purchased from more than one source, the risks go up even more.

A questionnaire is now av
ailable that allows patients to quickly calculate their risk for adverse drug reactions and treatment failures to help determine if they are a candidate for DNA Drug Sensitivity Testing and a Personalized Prescribing evaluation. Based on information compiled from NIH, the FDA, and www.medsandaging.org, you can download the questionnaire at www.HealthandDNA.com/risk.pdf or request copies for yourself or a medical office by calling 800-523-3080 now.

Sources: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Journal of the American Medical Association













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