Category Archives: TCM/A in the News

Access to discounted cell phone plans through TELUS Mobility

AST1048_BSM_FlowerBoxDigitalAd_v1a (1)

What’s New?

Getting connected and staying connected anytime, anywhere helps you be as efficient as possible in your practice.

TELUS Health offers CMAAC members:

  • Preferred member pricing for the latest mobility devices running on Canada’s largest 4G LTE network.  Plans include:
    • TELUS Smartphone plan with 500 minutes and 1GB data for $50/month
    • TELUS Premium Smartphone plan with unlimited nationwide calling and 3GB shareable data for $70/month

Special limited time offer of $300 off* any smartphone when you subscribe to the TELUS Premium Smartphone plan or $400 off* when you register for eClaims and subscribe to TELUS Premium Smartphone Plan.

How do I sign up my mobility smartphone with rate plan?

STEP 1: Register for eClaims to receive $400 off your mobile device

Register for eClaims now and receive $400 off any device when you subscribe to the Premium Smartphone Plan.   TELUS Health eClaims allows CMAAC members to remit claims electronically on behalf of your patients. It is free to register & free to use. Claims can be remitted with payment to you the provider, or to the patient.     A 4 digit reference number will be provided to you upon completion of your online registration. Enter that reference number on the mobile device order form. For existing eClaims users, please enter your eClaims portal user name.

STEP 2: Choose your mobile device

Select your mobile phone from our selection of smartphones.  

STEP 3:  Choose your plan

TELUS is pleased to offer CMAAC members the following rate plans:

Smartphone Plan Premium Smartphone plan
Term 24 months 24 months
Price $50 / month2,6 $70 / month2,6
Air Time 500 local minutes4 Unlimited Nationwide4
Data 1 GB3, 4 3 GB3, 4,5 (data can shared with a tablet or other device)
Features Unlimited Domestic SMS/MMS4, Call waiting, Voice Mail 25, Call Display, Conference Calling, Unlimited Evenings  & Weekends beginning at 6pm, TELUS to TELUS Calling Unlimited Domestic SMS/MMS4, Call waiting, Voice Mail 25, Call Display, Conference Calling, Unlimited Evenings  & Weekends beginning at 6pm, TELUS to TELUS Calling
Long Distance Nationwide  daytime calling: $0.08/minute Canada to US Calling:  15¢/min Canada to US Calling:  15¢/min
Bonus Hardware Credit N/A $100 device subsidy when you register for TELUS Health eClaims

Sign up now for the CMAAC preferred TELUS Mobility rates.  Enter the password cmaac2015 (case sensitive).

*Offer valid until November 25, 2015 and subject to change without notice.1 Must be in good standing with CMAAC to register. 2 Smartphone hardware is not included in the monthly price and is charged separately. Taxes, additional airtime, long distance. roaming and pay-per-use charges are extra. 3 Additional data rate: $5/MB. Additional per minute rate: 10¢.   4 Data, voice and text messaging used while roaming in the US are charged at the following rates: 75¢/minute, $5/MB, and 60¢/SMS. These charges apply to any usage in excess of what is included in your plan. Data, voice and text messaging used while roaming outside of Canada and the US may vary by zone. US roaming is also rounded to the closest KB when billed. 5 Data can be shared across smartphones, tablets, mobile Internet devices (not including Smart Hubs) on SharePlus Plans. Minutes on unlimited voice plans are not shareable. Additional data is charged by MB or GB and is rounded to the closest KB (1 GB = 1,024 MB, 1 MB = 1,024 KB).  SharePlus tablet and mobile Internet plans are access-only plans which use available data on SharePlus voice and data plans.  6 Rates and offers are subject to change without notice. Available for Business (BusinessRegular and Business Personal) only. Not available for Consumer accounts.

 

 

 

 

 

(New) Telus Health’s eClaims for CMAAC members

2015 telus

 

As a member of the Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture Association of Canada, you can now submit claims using the eClaims solution.

What is eClaims?

Accessible through a web portal, TELUS Health’s eClaims is an online solution enabling you to submit claims on behalf of your patients at the point of care. It offers value-added service by lowering patients’ out-of-pocket expenses and by doing away with paper claims.

11 Insurers on 1 Portal.

eClaims works with nearly all Canadian benefit plan providers to cover 85% of privately insured lives. Insurers include: Chambers of Commerce Group Insurance Plan, Cowan Insurance Group, Desjardins Insurance, Great-West Life, Industrial Alliance, Johnson Inc., Manulife Financial, Maximum Benefit or Johnston Group, Standard Life Assurance Company of Canada and Sun Life Financial.

Reduce fees and gain visibility.

On top of providing an extra service for your patients, eClaims can help your business reduce credit card fees and makes it easy for new patients to find you through TELUS Health’s provider search page. It’s also completely free, fast and secure.

CLICK HERE TO GET STARTED

WFAS TORONTO 2015 ANOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR ABSTRACTS

WFAS ANNOUNCEMENT

WFAS Toronto 2015:

Connect, Collaborate, Innovate

September 25th to 27th, 2015

Plaza International Hotel and Conference Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

CALL FOR ABSTRACT

Deadline – June 30, 2015

To encourage more students and new graduates to submit their abstract, the submission deadline has been extended to JUNE 30, 2015. Financial awards given to the top three papers.

Submit on-line at wfastoronto2015.com or  https://www.conferenceabstracts.com/cfp2/login.asp?EventKey=XMDGNYGX

The World Federation of Acupuncture-Moxibustion Society (WFAS) academic committee invites informed subject experts to speak or present a poster at the 2015 conference.

Presenting at WFAS meeting provides you with an excellent opportunity to share your knowledge and learning experiences, increase your exposure, and network with other experts in this field.

Please find attached the “CALL FOR ABSTRACT” poster to post in your area or please feel free to distribute to your colleagues.

We look forward to seeing you all in Toronto, Ontario in September 2015.

WFAS 2015 ACADEMIC COMMITTEE


Download PDF of WFAS TORONTO 2015 ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR ABSTRACTS:

WFAS TORONTO 2015-Announcement and Call of Abstracts

WFAS 2015 Call for Abstracts (ENGLISH)
WFAS 2015 Call for Abstracts (CHINESE)

WFAS Toronto 2015: CALL FOR ABSTRACT SUBMISSION DATE EXTENDED TO JUNE 30

wfascallforabstractjune30

WFAS Toronto 2015:

Connect, Collaborate, Innovate

September 25th to 27th, 2015

Plaza International Hotel and Conference Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

CALL FOR ABSTRACT

Deadline – June 30, 2015

To encourage more students and new graduates to submit their abstract, the submission deadline has been extended to JUNE 30, 2015. Financial awards given to the top three papers. 

Submit on-line at wfastoronto2015.com or  https://www.conferenceabstracts.com/cfp2/login.asp?EventKey=XMDGNYGX

The World Federation of Acupuncture-Moxibustion Society (WFAS) academic committee invites informed subject experts to speak or present a poster at the 2015 conference.

Presenting at WFAS meeting provides you with an excellent opportunity to share your knowledge and learning experiences, increase your exposure, and network with other experts in this field.

Please find attached the “CALL FOR ABSTRACT” poster to post in your area or please feel free to distribute to your colleagues.

We look forward to seeing you all in Toronto, Ontario in September 2015.

WFAS 2015 ACADEMIC COMMITTEE

Download PDF of CALL FOR ABSTRACT:

WFAS 2015 Call for Abstracts (ENGLISH)
WFAS 2015 Call for Abstracts (CHINESE)

[WFAS Toronto 2015] CALL FOR ABSTRACTS -SUBMIT ONLINE

cmaacwfasenglish cmaacwfas2014

WFAS Toronto 2015:

Connect, Collaborate, Innovate

September 25th to 27th, 2015

Plaza International Hotel and Conference Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

CALL FOR ABSTRACT

Deadline – April 30, 2015

Professionals and students are welcome to submit. Papers will be peer-reviewed. Submit on-line at wfastoronto2015.com or  https://www.conferenceabstracts.com/cfp2/login.asp?EventKey=XMDGNYGX

The World Federation of Acupuncture-Moxibustion Society (WFAS) academic committee invites informed subject experts to speak or present a poster at the 2015 conference.

Presenting at WFAS meeting provides you with an excellent opportunity to share your knowledge and learning experiences, increase your exposure, and network with other experts in this field.

Please find attached the “CALL FOR ABSTRACT” poster to post in your area or please feel free to distribute to your colleagues.

We look forward to seeing you all in Toronto, Ontario in September 2015.

WFAS 2015 ACADEMIC COMMITTEE

New HCAI Guideline

fsco

On November 24, 2014, the Financial Services Commission of Ontario (FSCO) published Property & Casualty – Auto Bulletin No. A-12/14, which introduces the HCAI December 2014 Guideline. FSCO has revised the HCAI Guideline to include new processes to address the implementation of Service Provider Licensing. The processes discussed in FSCO’s new Guideline were previously communicated in the Service Provider Licensing Process Change eLearning video and related process change guide. FSCO HCAI December 2014 Guideline Please refer to FSCO’s website via the links below to review the bulletin and new HCAI Guideline:

Some key items covered in FSCO’s new Guideline include:

  • OCF document submission rules for licensed and unlicensed health care facilities
  • OCF document adjudication rules OCFs submitted by licensed and unlicensed facilities
  • Facility Registry and Service Provider Licensing rules

Please share FSCO’s HCAI December 2014 Guideline and related process change learning resources (video and text) with all personnel at your health care facility that use the HCAI system.      

 Communications   HCAI

Antibiotic Resistance: Traditional Chinese Medicine Can Prevent Epidemics

Oct. 2013 Antibiotic Resistance: TCM Can Prevent Epidemics

By Martha Lucas, PhD, LAc

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are monitoring the soaring increase in what they call CREs (carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae), which is a little known class of antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

The CDC’s Director, Thomas Frieden, calls it a “catastrophic threat” because the CREs are resistant to the class of antibiotics called carbapenems, physicians’ last resort when treating infections.

 

Antibiotic resistance is nothing new; Alexander Fleming (penicillin founder) predicted it in the 1940s so physicians have used the most powerful antibiotics sparingly keeping them as a last resort. In my town, Denver at the University of Colorado Hospital there was the largest cluster of patients infected with the drug resistant Klebsiella bacteria; three patients with pneumonia and five who were asymptomatic carriers. The hospital is still trying to contact and test more than 1,700 patients who may have been exposed to that bacteria during a hospital stay. In a Brooklyn hospital 9 out of 19 patients died from an infection that was antibiotic resistant. Sometimes patients with antibiotic resistant bacteria can be given a cocktail of drugs but these are notorious for damaging the kidneys. Then the question becomes to treat or not to treat.

So what. This is just a bunch of hysterical talk, medical terrorism, a way for pharmaceutical companies to make more money by convincing us that we need to take more drugs – specifically antibiotics – every time we get some sort of infection. Many epidemiologists feel that it’s not too late to intervene (somehow) to prevent the CREs from becoming more common.

In step TCMs (Traditional Chinese medicines): what can we do to boost people’s immune function to prevent rather than treat infections? From a traditional standpoint we can do our best to protect people’ original qi beginning prenatally with treatment of the pregnant woman.

Chinese medicine treatment and nutritional advice will keep the mother’s digestion working well, qi and blood flowing, and emotional state in balance thereby fostering a healthy prenatal environment that will hopefully result in a full term healthy baby. For example, we could advise her to avoid really cold foods (eg., iced drinks) and foods that are cold energetically (eg. bananas). Once a child is born, encouraging healthy digestion is key. Digestion precedes the immune system in the pulses and when digestion/Earth is weak, the immune system suffers. And, when our digestion does not make good quality qi, our original qi suffers. Protect children’s original qi with acupressure, acupuncture, and nutritional advice. Other lifestyle advice may include keeping out of wind and away from air conditioning and protecting children (and adults) from excess damp conditions. These are steps toward building and protecting immune systems.

From the modern era, scientists have determined that acupuncture can enhance the body’s production of natural killer cells, our primary immune system defense mechanism. It also helps regulate white blood cell production, enhances platelet count while preventing leukocyte decrease in radiation therapy patients, and helps chemotherapy patients maintain healthy levels of T cells. Some studies have shown that TCMs perform dual roles on immunological regulation: immunological activation and immunological suppression.

A review by Ma and colleagues highlights studies that focused on “the immunomodulatory effects of TCMs describing their stimulatory effect on immune cells, immune organs, cytokine production, tumorigenesis, as well as their inhibitory function on inflammation, allergy, autoimmune disease, and graft rejection.” In their review they say that “components of both innate and adaptive immunity may be modulated by specific TCMs” and that “TCMs may have antitumor effects and may play a role in regulating apoptosis. Immunomodulatory effects of TCMs may lead to new medications to treat allergic and autoimmune diseases“.

In his article Acupuncture and Immunomodulation, Mehmet Cabioglu begins by reminding everyone that acupuncture is a well known form of medicine that is used for prevention and homeostasis. Studies on acupuncture and the immune system generally accept an increase in the release of endogen opioid peptides as a key pathway that affects the immune system after the acupuncture treatment. Cabioglu wrote his paper to look at other data that explain how acupuncture affects the immune system. He references a number of studies that show acupuncture treating immunodeficiency, increasing resistance to infection, reducing autoimmunity and hypersensitivity, and enhancing cellular immune function in patients who have malignant tumors. Further, acupuncture has demonstrated its effectiveness in treating a variety of immune related conditions including but not limited to Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, ulcerative colitis, and rheumatoid arthritis.

Most of the time when someone gets sick it’s because his or her immune system has become overwhelmed. Some bacteria, viruses, parasites invade so quickly that the immune system can’t manage the attack or the person’s immune system is somehow compromised – long term stress can do that. And we know that acupuncture can counteract the negative effects of stress and/or emotional anxiety thereby protecting the immune system. Can acupuncture prevent things like the flu or the common cold? I don’t think I’ve read any studies that suggest that. But there is enough evidence to say that acupuncture affects our immune systems in a positive way potentially make us better able to fight off infectious diseases. I know that my patients who receive regular acupuncture treatments, take herbs when recommended, and follow various lifestyle recommendations absolutely recover faster if they do catch a bug and suffer less severe and fewer symptoms than their colleagues who do not receive acupuncture. From a financial standpoint, this means fewer missed days of work. From a humanistic standpoint, it means fewer people to spread infectious diseases. Prevention.

References:

  • Cabioglu, MT, Cetin, BE. Acupuncture and Immunomodulation. The American Journal of Chinese Medicine, Vol. 36, No. 1, 25–36
  • Ma HD, Deng YR, Tian Z, Lian ZX. Traditional Chinese medicine and immune regulation, Clin Rev Allergy Immunol. 2013 Jun;44(3):229-41
  • Xia YG, Zhang D, Yang CX, et al: An approach to the effect on tumors of acupuncture in combination with radiotherapy or chemotherapy. Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine 6(1): 23-6, 1986.
  • Ye, F, Chen S, Liu W: Effects of electro-acupuncture on T cell subpopulations, NK activity, humoral immunity and leukocyte count in patients undergoing chemotherapy. Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine 27 (1): 19-21, 2007
  • “Antibiotic Resistance: The Last Resort.” July 24, 2013. Nature.com: www.nature.com/news/antibiotic-resistance-the-last-resort-1.13426