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Not Tonight, Honey

Filed under: Generic Viagra, Viagra — November 15, 2007 @ 8:52 am

By Sarah Mahoney

Good Housekeeping Magazine Logo
Youve Said It. Youve Heard It. How To Put That Excuse To
BedAnd Get Back In The Mood

Be honest. How many times have you turned down sex this month? Even the best
marriages have sexual cold fronts and everyday problemslike a crushing work
deadline, a sick parent, or an acting-out teenthat can put the chill on
romance. But when sex evasion turns into a daily habit, marriage can become an
arctic zone. After all, there’s room for only so many nights of “Do we have
to? I’ve got a bad headache” before serious problems set in.

“It helps many couples to think of sex as a bank account,” says Lana
Holstein, M.D., author of Your Long Erotic Weekend . “If you just
got back from a vacation where you had lots of time alone, then saying I’m too
wiped out tonight’ isn’t a problem. But if you haven’t had much sex in the last
six months, then it took your husband some courage to ask. If you say no, that
can be damaging.”

And both partners, not just the avoider, are harmed. “The spouse with
more desire feels rejected, and the spouse with less desire feels coerced,”
says Barry McCarthy, Ph.D., author of Rekindling Desire: A
Program to Help Low-Sex and No-Sex Marriages
.

If you’re the avoider, try putting yourself in your husband’s shoes. Says
Dr. Holstein, who coaches clients at Miraval Resort in Tucson, AZ: “When a
wife turns down sex, what does she want her husband to do instead? Should he go
masturbate? My clients usually say, No, I don’t want him to do that!’ Nor do
they want him to spend an hour on a pornography Web site.”

Another reason to say yes when your husband makes a move: It’s good for your
health. “Sex, and the cuddling that comes with it, releases all kinds of
chemicals women need,” says Dr. Holstein, “including mood-boosting
hormones like dopamine, norepinephrine, and oxytocin.” What’s more, a study
from Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, PA, found that couples who had sex
regularly had higher levels of antibodies than those who
didn’t.

So it’s time to outsmart your excuse-making self (don’t listen to hershe’s
probably just grouchy from wearing sweatpants too often). Here, six common
cop-outs, and what to say insteadto your husband and yourself:

“Didn’t we just do it last week?”

Mismatched desire is one of the most common complaints marriage counselors
hearbut experts say that the excuse is pure baloney. “Two different people
will never have exactly the same desire, drive, and timing,” says Rick
Warren, the founding pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, CA, and author
of the best-selling book The Purpose Driven Life . “Sometimes you
have to make love for the benefit of the other person, even though you may not
need it yourself at the moment.”

“There’s no such thing as the right level of desire. Normal is usually
whatever the desired frequency is for that couple,” adds Gerald R. Weeks,
Ph.D., chairman of the marriage and family therapy department at the University
of Nevada, Las Vegas. (In case you’re curious about what other couples consider
normal, here are stats from University of Chicago researchers: About 38 percent
of married women have sex a few times a week; 47 percent a few times a month;
and 15 percent a few times a year.)

What to say to yourself:

Remember your wedding day? When you said “I do,” you said “I
do” to sex too. “Even though you may not have promised to love, honor,
and have sex once a week,’ when you made a commitment to your , it
was understood that sex would be part of the bargain,” say Patricia Love
and Steven Stosny, authors of How to Improve Your Marriage Without Talking
About It
. And, yes, sometimes you have to be the instigator. When it
comes to different levels of desire, “the ball is in the court of the
person who wants it less,” says Pepper Schwartz, Ph.D., author of the
forthcoming Prime: Advice and Adventures from a Sexologist on Life and Love
in the Sensuous Years
.

Read source on

News - Spammers turn to classic prose

Filed under: Generic Viagra, Viagra — November 14, 2007 @ 6:31 am
Source:
Poetry is probably not top of the list of things you expect to see in the spam and junk mail messages landing in your inbox everyday.


But lots of people are starting to find literary value hidden among the porn, penis patches, generic Viagra deals and mortgage offers.


Some have composed poems using the subject lines of the spam they receive; others are creating verse using the strings of strange words that are often found inside spam messages.


A lucky few have even found excerpts of novels buried in spam.

Text message

Blogger and journalist Clive Thompson found an excerpt from Chapter 20 of The Master Key by Wizard of Oz author L Frank Baum in a message that had as its subject line “the big unit” (no prizes for guessing what the rest of it was hawking).


This is happening because of the success of spam filters, the best of which can catch 99% of junk mail.

NUMBER 1, BY KRISTIN THOMAS


Quality ink up to 80% off.
Answers Now on the Distortion of Evidence;
Clean your colon.
Improve sense of well being.

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Check it out, man -
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What is an MBA really worth?
Ask yourself - could your penis be bigger?
For Target guests,
Its safe, now.

These filters work by scanning the words in e-mail messages to identify which ones spammers prefer and which ones are favoured by your friends and colleagues.


For a while now spammers have tried to defeat these filters by breaking up offending words with full stops to produce subject lines like e.hance your attra.ctiveness.


for the spammer, this just makes spam even easier to spot.


Some spammers have taken to inserting decidedly non-spammy words in e-mail to try to convince the filters they are not junk mail.


As a result spam is starting to appear with phrases such as “bernadine rustle lappet” and “arboretum severe acerbity henri” inside them.


A few words are unlikely to make a lot of difference to the filters so some spammers load their junk mail with huge amounts of random words. One recent message had 780 words of nonsense in it.


By including random text the spammers hope to fool the filters into thinking that a human, not a spammer, wrote the message.

Cut-up class

But as Clive Thompson points out, automatically generating text that reads like it was written by a human hand is difficult. This is perhaps why some spammers are turning to out-of-copyright novels for their text. It is an ideal source of real writing.


It remains to be seen whether the filters are fooled by classic .


The inclusion of rare words and literary works has spurred some people to create poetry from the spam that lands in their inbox.


Blogger Kristin Thomas has composed a series of poems using only subject lines from spam.

Rock god David Bowie, AP

Bowie used random compositions to write songs

Grant specialises in three-line subject line spam poems but others, such as Paulette Adell who contributes to the Nonfamous blog, are happy to use words from inside the message too.


Of course finding art in random collisions of words is a craft with a long history.

Beat poets such as Bryon Gysin and William Burroughs were pioneers of the cut-up method in which they chopped up other texts and then arranged the words randomly to try and unleash its hidden , says a spokesman for the Poetry Society.


Gysin used the cut-up method on Rimbaud’s poems to create new works in his own words and many parts of Burroughs’ novels were created using the cut-up method.


The method has reportedly also served pop maestro David Bowie well - the song Moonage Daydream was apparently created using this cut-up method.

“There is a certain amount of composition that goes into this method,” said the spokesman, “it is not completely random.”


Perhaps this will be one of the redeeming virtues of spam, that buried in the filth and lucre are some gems of ingenuity and creativity. But don’t count on it.

Viagra Rival Levitra Approved

Filed under: Generic Viagra, Viagra — November 13, 2007 @ 5:42 am

Source article

Aug. 20, 2003 — Levitra has just won FDA approval — a move toward challenging the groundbreaking erectile dysfunction drug Viagra. But what does Levitra have to offer that the little blue pill doesn’t?

The news will hopefully bring more men to their doctors, opening up more about this still-secret subject, says Natan Bar-Chama, MD, urologist and director of male reproductive surgery at Mt. Sinai Medical Center in New York City.

“We’ll hopefully encourage more patients, and also physicians, to be more proactive in addressing this problem,” he tells WebMD. Bar-Chama, who was not associated with the studies, agreed to comment on the announcement.

The Drugs

Viagra, the first pill for erectile dysfunction, was developed by Pfizer, Inc. and put on the market in 1998.

Levitra, co-developed by Bayer and GlaxoSmithKline, takes effect a bit quicker than Viagra — in less than 20 minutes for some men. Also, it keeps acting for about five hours, compared with Viagra’s four hours, the company says. GlaxoSmithKline is a WebMD sponsor. Bayer and Glaxo say Levitra will be available in September.

Cialis, another erectile dysfunction drug in the pipeline, is expected to get FDA approval later this year. Cialis takes effect quickly (in 30 minutes or less), and its effects last about 36 hours. Also, its effectiveness is not affected by food, which has been a problem with Viagra, says Cialis maker Eli Lilly and Company, a WebMD sponsor.

The Mechanics

Levitra has been studied in more than 50 clinical trials involving 5,700 men. In Europe, it has been available since March 2003, and has shown to be effective and safe in treating erectile dysfunction.

Like Viagra, Levitra acts by relaxing muscles and blood vessels in the penis, allowing increased blood flow into the penis, which produces an erection.

With Levitra, onset of action occurs within 16 minutes for some men, between 30 to 60 minutes for others. Viagra starts acting 45 to 90 minutes after taking the pill. “On a practical level, it doesn’t make a big difference. Both time-frames are adequate to engage in relations,” says Bar-Chama.

Also, Levitra works well when taken either before or after a low-fat meal, Bar-Chama tells WebMD, but a high-fat meal will decrease its aborption, making it less effective. High-fat meals also hinder Viagra.

For difficult-to-treat men who have diabetes and or have had prostate surgery, both Levitra and Viagra work equally well in solving erectile dysfunction, he adds. However, like Viagra, Levitra is not advised for men taking nitrate drugs (such as tablets or patches) or alpha-blockers (drugs used to treat benign prostate hyperplasia and/or high blood pressure).

Cialis takes effect in 16 to 30 minutes, and stays active in the body for about 36 hours. Also, absorption of Cialis is not affected by either high-fat or low-fat meals, according to Carole Copeland, a Lilly .

Wide-Scale Problem

More than 50% of men over age 40 will experience erectile dysfunction at some time,” says Bar-Chama.

“And yet, nine out of 10 are currently not being treated. This is a medical problem that significantly affects quality of life, and yet, for the vast majority, there is still a barrier to discussing and getting effective medical therapy. Hopefully, this news will awaken more men, get them to talk to their doctors.”

SOURCE: FDA Talk Paper. Natan Bar-Chama, MD, urologist; director of male reproductive surgery, Mt. Sinai Medical Center, New York City. Bayer Pharmaceuticals Corp. GlaxoSmithKline. Carole Copeland, spokeswoman, Eli Lilly and Company.

Buyer Beware: New Study Shows Pitfalls of Internet Pharmacies

Filed under: Generic Viagra, Viagra — November 12, 2007 @ 7:10 am

Sept. 29, 1999 (Washington) — Filling prescriptions through the Internet might seem like a convenient way to keep the family medicine cabinet stocked, but there are a number of dangers associated with buying medications through Web sites, say researchers at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

A study of 46 Web sites that sell prescription medications found that some would not reveal where they are based or where their medications are manufactured. Internet pharmacies may use physicians from outside the U.S. to provide online to people without prescriptions. And despite the common belief that the Internet can provide bargains, the researchers found the medications and physician services cost more when they are purchased online than they would if obtained the way.

The study, which was released early due to its public health implications, is scheduled to be published in the December issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine and was conducted by Bernard S. Bloom, PhD, and Ronald C. Iannacone, BS. Their search of Internet pharmacies, conducted in February and March, yielded 37 sites that required a prescription or an online physician consultation to dispense and nine — all based outside the U.S. — that did not.

For consumers, the greatest risks come from sites that don’t require a prescription or physician consultation, or that market medications that are not approved by the FDA. But even with an online consultation, there is potential for harm because the quality of the physician is generally not known, Bloom and Iannacone write.

“Let’s hope to God it is a physician. It could be your Aunt Mildred. You just don’t know,” Bloom tells WebMD. And as for those “sites that offered physician consultants, there was a disclaimer that said the physician may not be in your country.” Bloom is a research professor in the department of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

Bloom says it’s not practical to suggest that consumers stay away from ordering all prescription medications without a physician visit. “It’s remarkable how accurate people are in doctoring themselves,” he says, adding that there should be some physician involvement. “It seems to me, certainly for most prescription medications, you want to have a physician have some input, to know the patient, know something about other medications they might be taking.”

The list of the commonly sold medications reads like a “who’s who” of the most popular and heavily advertised medications today: Viagra (sildenafil) and Propecia (finasteride), Claritin (loratadine), Celebrex (celecoxib), Valtrex (valacyclovir), and Zyban (bupropion). Many of the medications are not covered by insurance plans because they are so-called “lifestyle” drugs. Some sites existed only to sell specific medications, and little information was available about them, according to the authors.

The authors also reviewed the costs of medications and consults. “Among the 37 sites selling Viagra, the median per pill price was $4.50 (range, $4.30 to $4.65). Among the 16 Internet sites offering Propecia, the median per pill price was $1.94 (range, $1.55 to $1.95). On average the two medications were about 10% more expensive when they were obtained from a web site than from a local pharmacy,” the authors write.

Internet physician consultations ranged in price from $20.00 to $90.00, while a primary care visit reimbursed by managed care plans or Medicare in Philadelphia averages about $60.00, according to the study.

In an accompanying editorial, FDA Commissioner Jane E. Henney, MD, and three other FDA officials counsel physicians and patients to report potentially illegal sites to the agency or the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy.

They also suggest a number of steps consumers can take to reduce the risk of buying medications through the Internet. These include not buying from sites that offer to sell the drug without a physician’s examination or a valid prescription, offering to sell medications not approved by the FDA, or sites that do not include a U.S. location and address. They also recommend consumers verify that a site is duly licensed by going to the Boards of Pharmacy site at www.nabp.net.

Source article

Pfizer’s ‘Viva Viagra’ Ads Promote Party Use, Says AHF

Filed under: Generic Viagra, Viagra — November 11, 2007 @ 8:42 am

Read source of it on the site

ADVERTISEMENT

To: MEDICAL EDITORS

Contact: Ged Kenslea, AHF Communications Director, +1-323-791-5526 mobile, +1-323-860-5225 work (Los Angeles), gedk@aidshealth.org+1.323.377.4312, or Lori Yeghiayan, AHF Associate Communications Director, +1-323-377-4312 mobile, +1-323-860-5227 work (Los Angeles), lori.yeghiayan@aidshealth.org, both of AIDS Healthcare Foundation

LOS ANGELES, July 23 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The following is being
issued by the AIDS Healthcare Foundation:

AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), is hosting a media availability all day
today and Tuesday to comment upon a reckless new television advertising
campaign for the erectile dysfunction drug, Viagra, premiering tonight during
the NBC Nightly News. The campaign, titled, “Viva Viagra!” was created by
Pfizer Inc., the world’s largest pharmaceutical company for its erectile-
dysfunction drug
Viagra (sildenafil citrate). The slick ad features 40-ish
year-old men singing “Viva Viagra” to the tune of Elvis Presley’s immortal
party anthem, “Viva Las Vegas!”

Pfizer is clearly dovetailing off of the city of Las Vegas’ recent and
enormously successful ‘What Happens in Vegas, Stays in Vegas’ campaign with
its own new ‘Viva Viagra’ ad campaign,” said Michael Weinstein, AIDS
Healthcare Foundation
President. “Unfortunately, as far as Viagra is
concerned, what happens in Vegas may NOT stay in Vegas when the use of Viagra
as a party drug is encouraged with irresponsible ads like this-there is a real
possibility of increased STD and HIV exposure a result of Pfizer’s
of the reckless use of its ED drug, Viagra. I’m disappointed
that Pfizer keeps pushing the envelope, angry that the FDA would condone such
non-medical use of the drug, and saddened that FCC continues to permit Pfizer
to air such advertisements.”

A Brief History and Background of Erectile Dysfunction (ED) Drugs, and
Pfizer’s Advertising of Viagra

Viagra, the first erectile dysfunction drug on the market, was patented by
Pfizer in 1996 and subsequently was approved for use in erectile dysfunction
by the Food and Drug (FDA) on March 27, 1998, becoming the
first pill approved to treat erectile dysfunction in the United States. It was
offered for sale in the United States later that year, and quickly became a
blockbuster drug for Pfizer: annual sales of Viagra in the period 1999-2001
exceeded $1 billion. Early advertisements for Viagra included television and
print ads featuring and former Senator and Presidential
candidate, Bob Dole (R, Kansas), who, as a spokeperson for Viagra, lent
significant credibility and gravitas to Pfizer and the drug, particularly as
he was widely-known to have suffered from, and undergone surgery for, prostate
cancer.

With the introduction of two competing erectile dsyfunction drugs in 2003,
Eli Lilly & Company’s Cialis (tadalafil), and Bayer AG’s Levitra (vardenafil),
Pfizer’s marketing of Viagra changed dramatically. One subsequent campaign for
Viagra feature an attractive fortysomething year-old man sporting an impish
grin and airbrushed devil’s horns on his head. The Food & Drug Administration
sent Pfizer a warning letter saying its racy consumer ads for the male
impotence drug didn’t contain enough information about risks and side effects.
Pfizer agreed to pull the ads after the FDA’s letter was made public.

Earlier last year, AIDS Healthcare Foundation criticized Pfizer for
running a holiday-themed print ad campaign that AHF believed promoted unsafe
sex by encouraging the recreational use of Viagra on holidays such as New
Year’s Eve
and the Super Bowl. The ads, seen in The Wall Street Journal and
The L.A. Daily News, among other publications, depicted a handsome, forty-ish
male grinning knowingly at the camera with taglines, such as “What are you
doing New Year’s Eve?” and “Be this Sunday’s MVP.” Pfizer continued this
irresponsible advertising campaign despite having been forced by the FDA to
withdraw its previous ads, which inferred that men could re-capture their
youthful vigor and become a devil-horned “wild thing” by taking Viagra.

AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) is the nation’s largest oldest and
largest non-profit HIV/AIDS healthcare, research, prevention and education
provider, currently provides medical care, including lifesaving antiretroviral
treatment, and/or services to more than 50,000 individuals in 15 countries
worldwide in the US, Africa, Latin America/Caribbean and Asia.
http://www.aidshealth.org

    WHAT:     Media Availability
              AIDS Healthcare Foundation to Comment of Pfizer's Reckless
              Advertising for Viagra, Which AHF Says Encourages Recreational
              Use of the Drug and Contributes to Increased Rates of STDs,
              including HIV
    NOTE:     Viagra Ad to premiere on tonight’s NBC Nightly Newscast
    WHEN:     MONDAY July 23rd 2007 — afternoon
              TUESDAY July 24th 2007 — all day
    WHERE:    AIDS Healthcare  Headquarters
              6255 Sunset Blvd., Suite 2100, Los Angeles CA 90028
    WHO:      Michael Weinstein, AIDS Healthcare Foundation President
              Whitney Engeran, III, Director of Prevention for AIDS Healthcare
              Foundation
    HOW:      Telephone or Interview (by appointment)

SOURCE AIDS Healthcare Foundation

-0-

If Approved, New Impotence Drug Could Aid Men But Give FDA a Headache

Filed under: Generic Viagra, Viagra — November 10, 2007 @ 6:45 am

Source:

April 7, 2000 (Washington) — Talk about being between the proverbial rock
and a hard place: On April 10, an FDA advisory committee will publicly review
data for a new drug that — if approved by the agency — may help a lot of
American men with erectile dysfunction.

But it will give FDA staff a headache.

No, it’s not a Viagra copycat — Viagra works by increasing blood flow to
you-know-where. This new drug, known as Uprima, is supposed to stimulate an
erection through a mechanism in the brain. And men get the active ingredient
into their bodies by putting a tablet under their tongues before intercourse.
(That’s right. Under their tongues.)

We might make light of such drugs, especially with former Sen. Bob Dole
appearing all over TV talking about his erectile dysfunction. Dole has
succeeded, for better or worse, in bringing public attention to a problem that
men seldom discuss with anyone — even their physicians.

The approval of Uprima, whose generic name is apomorphine and whose
is TAP Holdings in Deerfield, Ill., undoubtedly will be considered
on the basis of the clinical data submitted by TAP. But if approved, everyone
at the FDA knows what will happen. It will become another one of those
so-called “lifestyle” drugs that is easily available via the Internet
from overseas e-pharmacies that are almost impossible to regulate.

Selling lifestyle drugs — those for conditions that are not really medical
diseases in the sense of the term, but nonetheless require a
doctor’s prescription — has become a booming industry. In recent years, drug
manufacturers have invested substantial sums in developing substances designed
to enhance your quality of life.

And they’ve been successful. In the last decade, drugs for erectile
dysfunction, baldness, and obesity — although obesity can be a serious medical
condition — have come to market. And more are on the way.

Yet these products are now creating problems for the FDA because the
aforementioned Internet sites heavily advertise such lifestyle drugs, and
Americans have been obtaining them without a prescription or by providing
minimal or no medical .

The FDA was assigned by President Clinton the impossible task of shutting
down these overseas pharmacies that service Americans, and this is now one of
the agency’s priorities.

The U.S. Customs Bureau has an equally daunting task of trying to detain
drug shipments at the borders — now detaining nearly 10,000 shipments a year
– to protect the American public from the potential dangers of using Viagra
and the baldness drug Propecia without the supervision of a doctor.

The challenge for the FDA will be to balance all these considerations as it
grapples over the next few weeks with a decision that could give it still
another headache — approving the newest erectile dysfunction drug. Stay tuned.

Longer-Lasting Erection Drug Approved

Filed under: Generic Viagra, Viagra — November 8, 2007 @ 4:49 am

Nov. 21, 2003 — Look out, America, here comes “Le Weekend.” That’s what the French are calling the newest erectile drug approved by the FDA.

It’s called Cialis — pronounced “SEE-Alice.” Like Viagra and Levitra, it doesn’t make a man’s penis erect. Instead, the drugs make it possible for a man who’s had trouble getting and keeping erections to have one when he’s sexually aroused.

Viagra starts working in about half an hour, and its effect lasts for about four hours. Levitra has about the same window of effect. Cialis gets to work a bit faster — a third of men respond in 15 minutes — but lasts for 36 to 48 hours in some men (but by no means all).

Urologist Gerald Brock, MD, associate professor at St. Joseph’s Health Center in London, Ontario, is past chairman of the Canadian Male Sexual Health Council. He’s treated many patients with Viagra and, in clinical trials, with Cialis and Levitra.

“Cialis will be an important addition to the way we treat men with erectile dysfunction,” Brock tells WebMD. “It provides an opportunity for many men to take a pill and have a window of opportunity that extends 36-48 hours where they will have a significant improvement in their sexual function.”

Cialis is by Eli Lilly and Co. and ICOS Corp. Lilly is a WebMD sponsor.

There’s another important difference between the three drugs. Viagra takes longer to work if taken after a high-fat meal. Cialis and Levitra can be taken on a full stomach regardless of what you’ve eaten.

Chad Ritenour, MD, teaches urology at Atlanta’s Emory University. He says lots of patients will want to try the new drug.

“I tell patients it is going to be like Pepsi vs. Coke — get ready for the advertising blitz,” Ritenour tells WebMD. “But I don’t think anybody can say one works better than the other. Each drug probably will work better for some patients than for others.”

How They Work

All three drugs work the same way. They block an enzyme called PDE-5, a natural chemical that’s part of the chain of chemical messages that tell a man’s erection to go away. Brock says that there’s more PDE-5 in the penis than in other areas of the body, so the drugs have a pretty specific effect.

However, Viagra and Levitra sometimes block a sister chemical — PDE-6 — that affects color vision. Some men report a slight bluish tinge to their vision; some become more sensitive to light. These effects go away in a few hours. Cialis doesn’t seem to have this effect.

Cialis has a different side effect. It blocks PDE-11, which is found in many parts of the body including the smooth muscles of the internal organs, the heart, skeletal muscles, the pituitary gland, and in the germ cells of the testes. So far, Cialis seems to have no harmful effect on these tissues. But PDE-11 may be involved in Cialis’ most troublesome side effect: Back pain. According to a for Lilly ICOS, back pain was reported by 5% of patients taking 10 mg of Cialis and 6% at the 20 mg dose. Patients taking placebo reported back pain 3% of the time.

Which one do men like best? In a recent head-to-head-to-head study of all three drugs taken at the recommended starting dose by men with erectile dysfunction:

  • 47% preferred Levitra.
  • 34% preferred Viagra.
  • 19% preferred Cialis.

Source article

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