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GLHP now offers affordable, easy-to-use healthy living benefits!


Great Lakes Health Plan (GLHP) has teamed up with Weight Watchers® to offer our members a program that more physicians have recommended to their patients than any other weight loss plan. With nearly 1,000 meetings held throughout the franchise area, you will be able to find a meeting that is convenient for you. GLHP members can purchase a 12 week Weight Watchers PASS at $138 (a 25% savings off the published price) by just showing your GLHP Plan Member ID card at participating meeting locations. This program is available now to GLHP members residing in the following counties: Huron, Livingston, Macomb, Oakland, Saginaw, Sanilac, St. Clair, Tuscola and Wayne. GLHP will be reviewing this pilot program and may look to expand into our remaining service area counties in the future.

With Weight Watchers, there are no contracts to sign, no special foods or supplements to buy and no appoinments to make. For more information or to find a meeting place call 1.888.3Florine or visit www.888-3-florine.com for more information.



Keeping yourself fit is an important part of keeping yourself healthy. GLHP wants to help you in every way we can. That's why we've arranged for you to have special membership benefits through GlobalFit's network of health clubs. To find out how GlobalFit can help you or to find the GlobalFit health club closest to you, visit www.globalfit.com/GLHP or call GlobalFit at 1.800.294.1500. Let them know you are a GLHP member (use your GLHP ID number) and get started today! If you have any questions about GLHP or the GlobalFit benefit, call our Customer Service department at 1.800.903.5253.

GlobalFit's network of over 10,000 fitness clubs includes well-known national chains and local facilities. Through GlobalFit, you can join at the lowest rates with the most flexible membership options.
Page Last Updated on 2/7/2008 2:20:51 PM
MedTerms
Word of the Day

Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome: An autoimmune disease characterized by weakness and fatigue of the proximal muscles (those near the trunk), particularly the muscles of the pelvic girdle (the pelvis and hips) and the thighs, with relative sparing of eye and respiratory muscles. Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS) is associated in 40% of cases with cancer, most often with small cell cancer of the lung and less often with other tumors. The neuromuscular defect in LEMS is due to insufficient release of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine by nerve cells.

LEMS has been treated with pyridostigmine bromide (Mestinon) to increase the transmission of acetylcholine across the neuromuscular junction, a drug called diaminopyridine (DAP) and immunosuppressants (the steroid prednisone, azathioprine, cyclosporine). Plasma exchange provides improvement in some patients with LEMS, as may intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg). Patients over 50 with a history of long-term smoking are most likely to have an associated tumor. If the tumor is cured, the LEMS may vanish.

LEMS is a "myasthenic syndrome" because the muscle weakness in LEMS is reminiscent of that in myasthenia gravis. Unlike myasthenia gravis, as muscle contractions continue, strength increases in LEMS. The disease is named for Lambert and Eaton who (together with Rooke) described it in 1966. The disease had actually been reported by Anderson and coworkers in 1953 in a man with oat cell cancer of the lung.



MedTerms (TM) is the Medical Dictionary of MedicineNet.com.
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