Patients with mono are needed!

Do you currently have Mono? If you do we need you to donate plasma to help others… Plasma is a crucial component in the manufacturing of the very test kit(s) that were used to diagnose you. Without donors like you these kits may not be available when physicians, hospitals and laboratories need them to diagnose someone else.

Plasma is very similar to donating whole blood but you can do it more frequently (2x in a 7 day period) because you are getting your red blood cells back thru the process.  Participants who qualify will earn $200 per donation and any/all travel related expenses to get you to/from a donation center are pre-paid by us and you still earn your compensation.  Most donors have temporary relief of symptoms since we are taking the plasma part of the red blood cells which house the antibodies lessening the amount of antibodies for mono from your system.

To learn more please visit us at http://www.accessclinical.com or call 800-510-4003 to speak to an agent today.

Basic Qualifications:-

  1. Must have or have access to your mono test results
  2. Diagnosis made in the last 7-10 days (or sooner)
  3. Must be 18-65 years in age and weigh at least 110 pounds or more
  4. Must be HIV/HCV & HBV Negativeshutterstock_742158034

Do you currently have Mono?

Do you currently have Mono? If you do we need you to donate plasma to help others… Plasma is a crucial component in the manufacturing of the very test kit(s) that were used to diagnose you. Without donors like you these kits may not be available when physicians, hospitals and laboratories need them to diagnose someone else.

Plasma is very similar to donating whole blood but you can do it more frequently (2x in a 7 day period) because you are getting your red blood cells back thru the process.  Participants who qualify will earn $200 per donation and any/all travel related expenses to get you to/from a donation center are pre-paid by us and you still earn your compensation.  Most donors have temporary relief of symptoms since we are taking the plasma part of the red blood cells which house the antibodies lessening the amount of antibodies for mono from your system.

To learn more please visit us at http://www.accessclinical.com or call 800-510-4003 to speak to an agent today.

Basic Qualifications:-

  1. Must have or have access to your mono test results
  2. Diagnosis made in the last 7-10 days (or sooner)
  3. Must be 18-65 years in age and weigh at least 110 pounds or more
  4. Must be HIV/HCV & HBV Negativeshutterstock_742158034

Diagnosed with Zika or WNV?

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Have you or someone you know been recently diagnosed with Zika or WNV?  If so we need participants to donate plasma to help research.  Your plasma is needed to help the Research and Diagnostic community better understand and to research the newest strain of both WNV and Zika.  Plasma is a crucial component in the making of the very test kits that were used to diagnose you with having this virus.

Without plasma donors such as yourself, these very kits that are being used today risk going on back order status so when physician’s, laboratories and or hospitals need to test to properly diagnose these kits may not be available.  Since donating plasma is considered such a safe procedure the FDA/Food and Drug Administration allows you to donate more frequently.  As with whole blood you can only do this every 56 days (8 weeks), whereas plasma is reproduced by your body within a 24-48 hour period allowing you to donate 2x in a 7 day period.

Participants in this program can earn up to $500 per donation (up to $1000 per week) for donating plasma all while helping others and research.  If we don’t have a participating plasma center in your area, we will travel you to the closest center who can do this program at no cost to you, we pre-pay all travel expenses to get you there and back, and you still earn your compensation for your participation.

To learn more please visit us http://www.accessclinical.com or call 800-510-4003.

Basic Qualifications:-

  1. Must have or have access to your blood test results for either Zika or WNV/West Nile Virus
  2. Must be HIV, HCV and HBV negative
  3. Must be 18-65 years in age and weigh at least 110 pounds or more.

Do you suffer with RA (Rheumatoid Arthritis)

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Do you have, or do you know someone who has RA/Rheumatoid Arthritis?  We are currently looking for participants who have RA to participate in a plasma donation program to help others.  Your plasma is need for the research and diagnostic communities to further research the disease as well as to manufacture the positive controls for the very test kit(s) that we used in your diagnosis.

Without antibody rich plasma these very kits run a risk of going on back order and not be available when healthcare professionals need them to make a timely diagnosis of other patients.  Plasma is a crucial component in the test kits to make the diagnosis possible of other patients.  Plasmapheresis is the process of separating the plasma (the yellowish colored liquid) from the red blood cells which house the antibodies for your diagnosis.  During the process your red cells are returned to you allowing you to not only donate more frequently but also not running the risk of causing temporary anemia.  Whole blood donors are only allowed to donate every 56 days (8 weeks) as it takes this long for your body to replace the blood cells that were donated, however with plasma you get these cells back allowing you to donate plasma twice within a 7 day period.

Participants who qualify can earn up to $500 per donation, or up to $1000 per week simply by donating plasma and helping others.  If we don’t have a center near you we pay all travel related expenses to get you to/from the nearest center and you still earn your compensation for the donation.

What we look at to qualify you is your Rheumatoid Factor levels which is called your “titer” and we need that value/number to be at or above 3000/iu ml on your test results.

To learn more please visit http://www.accessclinical.com or call 800-510-4003 to discuss it with an agent.

Do you suffer with Chronic Hepatitis B?

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Do you currently have “acute” or “Chronic” hepatitis B?  If so we have a specialty research program designed to help you as well as the research and diagnostic communities.  Your plasma is a crucial component for invitro-diagnostic companies in the manufacturing and creation of the test kits used to diagnose patients with this virus as well as further research into the virus.

Participants who qualify and participate can earn up to $500 per visit and you can safely donate 2x in a 7 day period based on the FDA guidelines for donor safety.  Plasma is the yellow, watery substance in the red blood cells which house various proteins as well as the antibodies for your diagnosis.  The plasma is separated via a procedure called plasmapheresis and your red blood cells are returned to you which is why you can donate 2x in a 7 day period.  Donating plasma is a very safe and simple procedure and it is performed in licensed, FDA regulated plasma facilities under the direction of the centers medical director.

To learn more and to see if you may qualify please visit us at http://www.accessclinical.com, or you may reach us at 800-510-4003 to discuss the program further.

Do you currently have Mono? want to help others?

shutterstock_742158034

Do you currently have Mono? If you do we need you to donate plasma to help others… Plasma is a crucial component in the manufacturing of the very test kit(s) that were used to diagnose you. Without donors like you these kits may not be available when physicians, hospitals and laboratories need them to diagnose someone else.

Plasma is very similar to donating whole blood but you can do it more frequently (2x in a 7 day period) because you are getting your red blood cells back thru the process.  Participants who qualify will earn $200 per donation and any/all travel related expenses to get you to/from a donation center are pre-paid by us and you still earn your compensation.  Most donors have temporary relief of symptoms since we are taking the plasma part of the red blood cells which house the antibodies lessening the amount of antibodies for mono from your system.

To learn more please visit us at http://www.accessclinical.com or call 800-510-4003 to speak to an agent today.

Basic Qualifications:-

  1. Must have or have access to your mono test results
  2. Diagnosis made in the last 7-10 days (or sooner)
  3. Must be 18-65 years in age and weigh at least 110 pounds or more
  4. Must be HIV/HCV & HBV Negative

Lyme disease reaches ‘new normal’ in Finger Lakes

The number of new Lyme disease cases in the Finger Lakes has leveled off — at least for now.

After shooting up more than 1,800% in the last decade, new cases have settled around a number that disease experts called a “new normal.”

In 2008, 20 new cases of Lyme disease were documented in the Finger Lakes. In the most recent data, from 2018, 385 cases were reported. A spokesperson for the state health department said last year’s data is still provisional, but it’s not expected to change significantly when the numbers are finalized later this month.

Lyme disease used to be concentrated downstate, researchers said, but climate change is helping the ticks that carry it to expand their range northwestward.

Brian Backenson, the deputy director of communicable disease control at the state health department, said that expansion is leading to new research in New York, aimed at reducing the tick population.

“One of the areas of research that’s relatively hot right now is figuring out how to do areawide tick control,” Backenson said.

Most tick control currently is done at the level of individual homes. Unlike mosquitos, which can be reached with airborne insecticides, “ticks don’t fly,” Backenson said, “so you have to find a way to get your material way down into the vegetation. It takes a lot of pressure.”

Despite a widespread understanding that climate change is at least partially responsible for the spread of tick habitats, Backenson said more research is needed to figure out exactly how tightly the two are linked.

One of the people studying that issue is Emil Lesho, Rochester Regional Health’s hospital epidemiologist. The spread of Lyme disease is a sign of bigger problems to come, he said.

“Climate change contributes to a huge crisis in infectious disease, and that crisis is antibiotic resistance,” said Lesho.

When people get sick and are prescribed antibiotics, some bacteria develop a resistance to the medication, Lesho said.

That resistance makes it much harder to treat future illnesses. Lesho said climate change is expanding the range of many diseases, and it’s accelerating the development of antibiotic-resistant strains.

He said he expects Lyme disease to continue moving west, toward counties like Niagara and Orleans, where annual cases are still in the single digits.

Preventing Lyme disease infection is the first step to stopping its spread, Backenson said, explaining that the researchers in his lab practice what they preach: They wear long pants to keep ticks off their skin and light-colored clothes to make ticks easier to spot.

“I’ve collected probably hundreds of thousands of ticks in my career,” Backenson said. “No tick-borne diseases.”