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Rosiglitazone is an anti-diabetic drug (thiazolidinedione-type also called "glitazones") used with a proper diet and exercise program to control high blood sugar in patients with type 2 diabetes (non-insulin-dependent diabetes). Rosiglitazone works by helping to restore your body's proper response to insulin thereby lowering your blood sugar. Effectively controlling high blood sugar helps prevent heart disease strokes kidney disease blindness and circulation problems as well as sexual function problems (impotence).Rosiglitazone is best used only when other medications (metformin) cannot be taken.How to use Rosiglitazone OralRead the Medication Guide and the Patient Information Leaflet available from your pharmacist before you start taking this medication and each time you get a refill. If you have any questions consult your doctor or pharmacist.Take this medication by mouth with or without food usually once or twice daily or as directed by your doctor. Dosage is based on your medical condition response to therapy and if you are taking other anti-diabetic drugs.Use this medication regularly in order to get the most benefit from it. Remember to use it at the same time(s) each day. Monitor blood glucose levels on a regular basis.It may take up to 2 to 3 months before the full benefit of this drug takes effect.Take all other medications for diabetes as directed by your doctor.
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About REZULT Avandia:
Product Type: Prescription Drugs 14
REZULT ( Avandia Generic Rosiglitazone )
REZULT (Avandia Generic Rosiglitazone)
Avandia Generic Rosiglitazone
4mg
Avandia Generic Rosiglitazone REZULT

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Education on antibiotic prescribing in Quebec worked. Guidelines for Quebec doctors on proper antibiotic use led to a decline in these prescriptions in the province, while prescribing rose in other provinces, a new study suggests.
The guidelines were published and disseminated to Quebec doctors and pharmacists in January 2005 due to worries about the overuse of antibiotics and partly as a response to an outbreak of Clostridium difficile infections.
Antibiotic consumption per capita was already 23.3 per cent higher in Canada generally than in Quebec in 2004, the study showed.
But in the year that followed publication of the guidelines, the number of outpatient antibiotic prescriptions in Quebec decreased 4.2 per cent, the study said, while increasing 6.5 per cent in other Canadian provinces. The trend persisted three years later.


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