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The Barter Clinic has Closed

It is with deep regret that the staff of The Barter Clinic must notify every one of the passing of Susan P. Osborne D.O.
As of 10-14-2023 The Barter Clinic will be permanently closed. Please contact us for a transcription of your records and we will be happy to send them to your new physician. You can reach us via:
Phone: 540-745-6034
Fax: 540-745-6033
Email: Existing active patients please contact us through the Patient Portal for any personal information. For any general inquiries or communications you can use our unsecured email: barterclinic2018@outlook.com or at barterclinicnurse@outlook.com

Thank you to all the residents of Floyd County and surrounding areas for allowing us to serve you these many years. We wish you all the health and happiness in the years to come.

Featured

About Us

The Barter Clinic

Practicing the art and science of natural health care

  • Low-cost, accessible health care
  • Encouraging self-healing techniques
  • Breastfeeding support and advocacy
  • Promoting environmental conscious lifestyles
  • Enhancing creativity and community service to aid the healing process

Wellness concepts, exercise teaching, nutrition and a conservative approach to medication form the core of the practice.

Minor surgery, dermatology, pediatrics, prenatal care, and geriatrics are included, for a cradle-to-grave concept.

Charges for Services

We accept Medicare, Medicaid, many forms of private insurance.
Barter for goods and services, and allow community service to pay medical bills.
We offer a 20% discount to patients paying cash on the day of their visit.
We allow reduced fees and Free Clinic patients on a case-by-case basis.

Guidelines of the Office

Patients are seen by appointment only. Nights and weekends are covered by answer call. There is an extra charge for walk-ins and after-hours services.

If you must cancel, please call as soon as possible. A no-show charge may be added for less than 8 hours notification.

Everything you thought you knew about tetanus is wrong | Popular Science

via Everything you thought you knew about tetanus is wrong | Popular Science

What’s rust got to do with it? Very little.
Rusty nails aren’t the only threat.Rusty Nail Photo
The conversation in which your parents tell you to keep an eye out for rusty nails is basically a rite of passage. They tell you about the dangers of rust; explain the see something, say something protocol for things that look like they could puncture you; and foreshadow the harsh punishment for disobeying—lockjaw. This advice certainly comes from a good place. But it’s also fundamentally wrong.

This is not to say that tetanus isn’t as bad as parents promise. In North America, the Cleveland Clinic estimates, 10 percent of cases are fatal. In countries with inadequate or inaccessible medical care, the number is believed to be much higher.

Even survival takes its toll. On Friday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a new installment in its “Notes from the Field” series about an unvaccinated 6-year-old boy in Oregon who contracted tetanus after he got a cut in his forehead. The bacteria incubated inside his little body for a few days, then suddenly manifested in horrible jaw clenching and muscle spasms, heart rate, blood pressure, and body temperature irregularities. He lived, but only after 57 days in the hospital and more than $800,000 in medical bills.

But counter to what rusty nail warnings might have you believe, the disease has nothing to do with iron oxide, the chemical compound more commonly known as rust. Rather, tetanus is a product of the bacteria Clostridium tetani, which is in dirt, dust, and feces—in other words, everywhere. It can enter your body through puncture wounds, yes, but also through superficial cuts, bug bites, surgical procedures, and any other rupture to your skin.

It can come from stepping on a rusty nail, or tending the soil in your garden. That’s why it’s so essential to track your booster shots: You need one every decade, not just when you rip your palm open on a rusty chain link fence. Waiting for a classic tetanus injury won’t work when anything could, in theory, be a tetanus injury.

If the bacteria enters your body and you aren’t up-to-date on your vaccinations, the tiny invaders begin to multiply rapidly. This incubation period, which lasts between three and 21 days, according to the CDC, is symptom free. But as the bacteria begin to die inside you, they form a neurotoxin, that attacks the nervous system.

Specifically, it inhibits the chemical GABA, which regulates muscle contractions. The result is a body-wide state of tension, from lockjaw in your face to uncontrollable arching spasms in your back to permanently-curled toes.

How rusty nails came to be so closely associated with tetanus isn’t clear. Iron oxide is basically harmless to the human body; millions of people drink water transported by rusty iron pipes with no health effects. (Bridges aren’t so lucky—rusting has buckled many an iron span.)

Perhaps it’s some classic American folklore. Or, as Esther Inglis-Arkell argued on the site i09, it has something to do with the anaerobic environment in which the tetanus-causing Clostridium tetani bacteria thrives. As iron oxidizes, it eats up atmospheric oxygen, creating a low-oxygen environment for the bacteria to grow. While rust doesn’t cause tetanus, the two may have a symbiotic (and symbolic) relationship.

For thousands of years, tetanus plagued humankind. Hippocrates, the ancient Greek physician, mentioned the disease in his works. But in 1884, researchers discovered how the disease worked, and just 40 years later, scientists had developed a vaccine. Today, three shots and a booster every 10 years is basically 100 percent effective at preventing tetanus, whether it’s contracted from a seemingly-clean kitchen knife, a diaper change, or a rusted-up nail. The best part? It’s not too late to get yours. Make sure your booster shots are up to date!

We’ve Moved!

Here is a picture of our new offices located at 121 Parkview Rd in Floyd VA. We’re in the same plaza as Family Dollar and Mickey G’s, between the Health Department and Floyd Fitness. We’re here Monday through Thursday 9-5 and still by appointment in emergencies on Fridays, weekends and holidays.

In our new location 121 Parkview Rd in Floyd VA.

What’s the Latest with the Flu?

Courtesy of Red Book Online Special Alerts

Flu activity has decreased in some areas, but overall remains elevated in the United States. Flu activity is likely to continue in parts of the country for several more weeks. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Health Alert Network (HAN) notice and AAP Newsarticle offer current recommendations on how to prevent and manage the flu.

 

To date, 86 pediatric deaths have been reported this season. Among children 6 months and older, 80 to 85 percent of flu-related pediatric deaths occur in children who have not been vaccinated. Vaccination remains the most important step in protecting against influenza.

 

Antiviral medications are a valuable second line of defense for children, but should not be a substitute for influenza immunization. The AAP endorsed a CDC letter to clinicians recommending prompt antiviral treatment when flu is suspected. Clinicians should never delay antiviral treatment while waiting for a definitive influenza test result. Early therapy provides the best outcomes, as the benefit of antiviral treatment is greatest when initiated within 48 hours of symptom onset. Antiviral treatment should be offered for:

  • Any child hospitalized with presumed influenza or with severe, complicated, or progressive illness attributable to influenza, regardless of influenza status or whether the onset of influenza occurred more than 48 hours before admission.
  • Influenza infection of any severity in children at high risk of complications from the disease.

Also see the Neuraminidase Inhibitors for Critically Ill Children With Influenza study showing prompt treatment with antivirals may improve survival of children critically ill with flu.

 

It is important to inquire about influenza vaccination when monitoring people with potential Ebola virus exposure. The CDC has released ” Interim Recommendations for Influenza Vaccination and Post-exposure Chemoprophylaxis to Prevent Influenza Virus Infection in People Being Actively Monitored for Potential Ebola Virus Exposure.” Patients who have not received their flu vaccine this season should be offered it.

 

Please plan to participate in an AAP/CDC Clinician Outreach and Communication Activity (COCA) webinar titled “Protecting Children: Influenza Updates for Clinicians,” on Thursday, February 26, 2015, at 2:00pm ET/1:00pm CT. During this webinar, clinicians will learn about the current state of flu activity among children, the importance of continued vaccination despite the mismatch and low vaccine effectiveness, strategies for using antiviral therapy early to prevent and treat influenza, and an update from the upcoming ACIP meeting this month. For more information on this webinar, including a transcript and archived version of the webinar, see http://emergency.cdc.gov/coca/calls/2015/callinfo_022615.asp. Advanced registration is not required.

 

Be sure to check out the AAP Flu Courses “Influenza Office Testing and Vaccinating Egg-Allergic Children” and “Prevention and Control of Influenza: 2014-2015.” These online courses deliver valuable information for clinicians to help keep children healthy during flu season. Each online course brings the learner up to date in less than an hour and qualifies for American Medical Association (AMA) Physician’s Recognition Award (PRA) Category 1 Credit(s)TM.

 

Of note, the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee will meet in March 2015, to select the flu vaccine composition for the 2015-2016 season.

 

For more detailed influenza information, see the AAP Red Book OnlineInfluenza Resource page or the CDC FluView. All What’s the Latest with the Flu messages are archived.

 

On Food borne Illness

Partners Develop New Method for Attributing Foodborne Illness

IFSAC logo

CDC, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) have developed an improved method for analyzing outbreak data to determine which foods are responsible for illnesses related to four major foodborne bacteria.

Today, the Interagency Food Safety Analytics Collaboration (IFSAC), a partnership among the three agencies, released a report entitled “Foodborne Illness Source Attribution Estimates for Salmonella, Escherichia coli O157 (E. coli O157), Listeria monocytogenes (Lm), and Campylobacter using Outbreak Surveillance Data”.

CDC estimates that, together, these four pathogens causes an estimated 1.9 million cases of foodborne illness in the United States each year.

IFSAC analyzed data from nearly 1,000 outbreaks that occurred from 1998 to 2012 to assess which categories of foods were most responsible for making people sick with Salmonella, E. coli O157, Listeria, and Campylobacter. IFSAC experts divided food into 17 categories for the analysis. The pathogens were chosen because of the frequency or severity of the illnesses they cause, and because targeted interventions can have a significant impact in reducing them.

4 pathogens

The report presents the methods behind the results and provides details about the amount of uncertainty around the estimates.  Some of the findings include:

  • More than 80 percent of E. coli O157 illnesses were attributed to beef and vegetable row crops, such as leafy vegetables.
  • Salmonella illnesses were broadly attributed across food commodities, with 77 percent of illnesses related to seeded vegetables (such as tomatoes), eggs, fruits, chicken, beef, sprouts and pork.
  • Nearly 75 percent of Campylobacter illnesses were attributed to dairy (66 percent) and chicken (8 percent). Most of the dairy outbreaks used in the analysis were related to raw milk or cheese produced from raw milk, such as unpasteurized queso fresco.
  • More than 80 percent of Listeria illnesses were attributed to fruit (50 percent) and dairy (31 percent). Data were sparse for Listeria, and the estimate for fruit reflects the impact of a single large outbreak linked to cantaloupes in 2011.

 

IFSAC food categories
Commodity tree and infographic depicting food categories with examples. Click for larger view.

Birth Defects

Did You Know?

February 27, 2015 
Provided by the
Office for State, Tribal, Local and Territorial Support
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention