Quote from: unvaso on April 01, 2015, 07:51:46 AMHello everyone! I am a social worker in Ohio, and I was wondering if you could help me with a bulletin board/ educational topic. Our doctors tend to stick with the same binders (Renvela, Phoslo, Tums) for everyone, and every month we talk about how few of our patients have phosphorus levels within range, what to do to encourage compliance and improve lab results, etc. My assumption is that the more patients know about their binder options, the more likely they would be willing to try something different that might work better for them. We can educate to the end of time, but if someone doesn't want to swallow 5 large pills during every meal, we probably won't ever change that! But they might have no problem with chewing one wafer or taking a shot of a liquid binder. I'm going to post pictures and descriptions of the different binders I know about, pros and cons of each, and if that binder has a patient assistance program to assist with cost. I have limited knowledge of binders except the ones my patients already take, so hope to get some additional information from you. For instance, specific side effects (or lack of), taste, expense, ease of use, and if the binder helped keep your phosphorus levels within range. If you have had experience using Velphoro, Foslyria, Fosrenol, Auryxia, or Renagum, could you post your thoughts? I have a couple of patients on the first two, but would like some more opinions. Since almost all of my information is coming from the manufacturer's website, I would like to be able to add patient experiences in addition to the ad copy... Thanks for your help!I've been taking Fosrenol for 9 years with excellent results. It's a chewable, but there isn't much of a chalky taste - well to me. As I'm about to eat, I bite off about 250mg.-333mg. (.25 to .33 of a 1000mg. tab) depending on how much and what my meal consists of. My monthly phos blood level runs 3.2-4.0. My prescribed treatment time is 6.0 hours x3 weekly which also helps to clear phos - a medium size molecule not easily cleared in standard 3-4 hour treatment - from the blood system.Since being on a Medicare Part D drug plan, I have found Costco Pharmacy to have the lowest cash price on Fosrenol which helps to lower the copay and stretches out the time before hitting the doughnut hole. I end up paying $57 for 4 bottles of 10-1000mg tabs which lasts a month (according to my pharmacist, the 1000mg tabs are a better deal than getting the 500mg, but it is a bit less convenient). One does not need to have a Costco card to use pharmacy services.
Hello everyone! I am a social worker in Ohio, and I was wondering if you could help me with a bulletin board/ educational topic. Our doctors tend to stick with the same binders (Renvela, Phoslo, Tums) for everyone, and every month we talk about how few of our patients have phosphorus levels within range, what to do to encourage compliance and improve lab results, etc. My assumption is that the more patients know about their binder options, the more likely they would be willing to try something different that might work better for them. We can educate to the end of time, but if someone doesn't want to swallow 5 large pills during every meal, we probably won't ever change that! But they might have no problem with chewing one wafer or taking a shot of a liquid binder. I'm going to post pictures and descriptions of the different binders I know about, pros and cons of each, and if that binder has a patient assistance program to assist with cost. I have limited knowledge of binders except the ones my patients already take, so hope to get some additional information from you. For instance, specific side effects (or lack of), taste, expense, ease of use, and if the binder helped keep your phosphorus levels within range. If you have had experience using Velphoro, Foslyria, Fosrenol, Auryxia, or Renagum, could you post your thoughts? I have a couple of patients on the first two, but would like some more opinions. Since almost all of my information is coming from the manufacturer's website, I would like to be able to add patient experiences in addition to the ad copy... Thanks for your help!
Please continue to give me suggestions/opinions if you have any. I hope to have this done by next week and will let you know how it goes. com
If I may, I would like to ask a question about binders: When exactly do doctors prescribe binders and why ?I am asking because I have not been prescribed binders and apart from my BP-medication and diureticsI don't take any further medication, except the Epo etc. I am given at my dialysis-centre ...Thanks from Kristina.
Kristina, congrats on avoiding binders so far. Most patients I work with need binders at some point to control phosphorus levels, but there are some who are never prescribed binders- either because they monitor their diet really well and avoid high phosphorus foods, or they are really lucky and their kidneys still manage to get the excess phosphorus out of their system. Why high phosphorus is bad- simply put, extra phosphorus pulls calcium out of your bones, which 1. makes your bones very weak and brittle, prone to breaks and 2. the phosphorus and calcium deposits in your soft tissues instead: skin (which is why people complain of itchy skin when their phosphorus is high), blood vessels, organs, etc. It's one of those things that might take a while to get really, really bad, but once it's bad it's next to impossible to turn it around.
Sorry for the delay, got sidetracked with work, vacation plans, baseball/t-ball games, etc. etc.... Here is my finished product, as requested. Can't say I got much response or feedback at my clinics. I posted this on the bulletin boards in the lobby and by the scale in both of my facilities, and sent it to the dietician so she could use as handouts if she wanted. I haven't heard that anyone has found the info useful, much less used it as a tool to evaluate their binder options...oh well, maybe it will help someone on this forum!