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    Connecting Physicians and Improving
    Healthcare in DuPage County

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    Connecting Physicians and Improving
    Healthcare in DuPage County.

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Advancing quality healthcare delivery, promoting Physician education and professional collaboration, and enhancing public health.


  • Also known as MAT (medication assisted treatment) or MAR (medication assisted recovery), using medication therapy to assist jailed individuals who need treatment for opioid use disorder detainees makes sense. Jails are on the front lines of the opioid epidemic and also are in a unique position to initiate treatment in a controlled, safe environment. Treatment using MAT for justice-involved persons, particularly when coupled with evidence-based behavioral therapy, improves medical and mental health outcomes and reduces relapses and recidivism.

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  • April 8, DuPage County officials, along with health and community partners and first responders, broke ground on the DuPage Crisis Recovery Center (CRC). The facility is intended to be a single service entry point for individuals experiencing a mental health or substance use crisis.

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  • AMA Secures Win on Prior Authorization

    American Medical Association president, Jesse M. Ehrenfeld, MD, MPH, offered the following statement on medicine's victory with the new prior authorization process

    Reform of the prior authorization process under the newly issued final rule by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will reduce patient care delays as well as the administrative burdens long shouldered by physicians, while saving practices an estimated $15 billion over the next decade.
  • The persistence of anti-science aggression remains a disheartening reality that appears to be worsening even as the COVID-19 public health emergency has come to an end. Peter Hotez, MD, PhD—co-inventor of the patent-free, low-cost COVID-19 vaccine technology that led to Corbevax in India and IndoVac in Indonesia—has been at the forefront of this battle for two decades, tirelessly defending the safety of vaccines on TV and social media against an onslaught of skepticism and hostility.

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  • Academic detailing is a one-on-one program that provides accurate, non-commercial, and current pharmacotherapy information. It is a unique interactive program tailored for each prescriber through customized and focused discussions. Illinois ADVANCE also offers online AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™ continuing education programs for Medicaid prescribers. Programs are available that physicians may complete to meet their Illinois DEA license renewal requirement.

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  • This list summarizes the key functionality of the various telemedicine products as reported by the vendors on their own websites. These companies have not been reviewed or vetted by the DuPage County Medical Society (DCMS); this compiled information is provided strictly as a reference for physicians seeking to implement telemedicine into their practice. The list is not exhaustive.

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  • Thank you DCMS members for speaking up on Prior Authorization.

    "This legislation advances a key belief of mine that I know is shared by millions of residents across Illinois: health care is a right, not a privilege," Governor Pritzker said. "For too long, the misuse of prior authorization led to delays and additional worry for Illinois families in need of care. Through this legislation, we are taking bold action to overhaul this process and ensure Illinoisans have faster access to the quality care they deserve."

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  • Food Safety

    A useful guide for keeping your family safe and your refrigerator fresh.
  • FDA and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are working closely with state and local health officials to investigate incidents of severe respiratory illnesses associated with the use of vaping products as quickly as possible. While the investigation is ongoing, FDA has created a Consumer Update to provide information for consumers to help protect themselves, as well as a new Lung Illnesses Associated with Use of Vaping Products webpage to provide an overview of these incidents and FDA’s actions to date, as well as recommendations for consumers, healthcare providers, and state health departments.

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  • DCMS and MEDIQUS are a winning combination.
    Use your DCMS membership to your advantage with a MEDQIUS Asset Advisors check up of your financial health.

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  • The COVID-19 pandemic put difficult stresses on the healthcare workforce in the US. Burnout was an issue even before the pandemic. Doctors and nurses are leaving the field creating a shortage of healthcare workers.

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  • The removal of information from federal health websites during the Trump administration has led to unreliable or unavailable medical guidance. Clinicians can still access archived information through sites like The Wayback Machine and the End of Term web archive. It is recommended that they refer to established clinical guidelines from professional organizations for reliable information.

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  • Make a difference on May 10 as DCMS physicians, their families, and friends come together to spend the morning volunteering at the Northern Illinois Food Bank. Our work will help ensure that our hungry neighbors will have access to food in their time of need.

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Information on the Zika Virus

Updated August 17, 2016

Attention physicians:

The AMA and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently held a webinar to provide an update for physicians and other clinicians on the status of the Zika virus outbreak and the latest clinical guidance to help them diagnose and manage patients and prevent further transmission.

“As the Zika virus outbreak continues to evolve and more Americans become impacted by the virus,” said AMA President Andrew W. Gurman, MD,” we must ensure that our nation’s physicians, and all clinicians, are prepared to handle possible cases of the virus and are equipped with the most up-to-date information to answer patients’ questions.”

The webinar, “Preparing for Zika transmission in the United States,” is available online at the AMA’s Zika Virus Resource Center. Experts provided details of the latest epidemiological and clinical aspects of the current Zika outbreak, implications for pregnant women and the CDC’s most up-to-date clinical guidance to support health care professionals in combatting and preventing complications.


All pregnant women in the U.S. should be assessed for possible Zika exposure during every prenatal visit, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday.

The advice from the CDC came as federal health officials also urged women who are pregnant or are considering becoming pregnant to avoid a Miami neighborhood that is the site of a Zika outbreak.   CDC is closely coordinating with Florida officials who are leading the ongoing investigations, and at the state’s request, sent a CDC medical epidemiologist to provide additional assistance.

The Florida Department of Health has identified an area in one neighborhood of Miami where Zika is being spread by mosquitoes. This guidance is for people who live in or traveled to this area any time after June 15 (based on the earliest time symptoms can start and the maximum 2-week incubation period for Zika virus).


State officials have responded rapidly with mosquito control measures and a community-wide search for additional Zika cases.

Information on the Zika virus is being updated continually. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as well as other health organizations are studying the virus. While we know much more about it than was first reported, there is still no vaccine or cure for Zika.




Symptoms and Outcomes

Zika virus symptoms are relatively mild. Many people infected with Zika virus won’t have symptoms at all. The most common symptoms of Zika are:

  • Fever
  • Rash
  • Joint pain
  • Conjunctivitis (red eyes)
Other symptoms include:

  • Muscle pain
  • Headache
How long symptoms last

Zika is usually mild with symptoms lasting for several days to a week. People usually don’t get sick enough to go to the hospital, and they very rarely die of Zika. For this reason, many people might not realize they have been infected. Symptoms of Zika are similar to other viruses spread through mosquito bites, like dengue and chikungunya.



Zika may result in severe birth defects such as microcephaly or poor pregnancy outcomes. There have also been reports of Guillain-Barré syndrome as an outcome of Zika. New studies suggest that the Zika virus hones in on brain cells and kills them. No one yet knows the long term effects of Zika.





Testing for Zika

Should you be tested for Zika? Travel history is important. New guidance suggests testing asymptomatic pregnant women within 2-12 weeks after they have returned from affected areas. Federal health officials are recommending that people suspected of having Zika infections get tested for evidence of the virus in their urine in addition to undergoing blood tests.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention “is urging pregnant women who may have been exposed to the Zika virus to be tested for up to 14 days after their symptoms begin — a longer period than the agency had previously recommended.” The guidance “also applies to pregnant women who have no symptoms.” The revision is based on “new research showing the virus can stay in the blood of pregnant women for longer than the previously recommended seven-day window for testing after symptoms begin.”



Margaret Honein, who chairs the CDC’s birth defects branch and was a co-author for the guidance, says that increased testing among pregnant women “will improve our ability to give definitive diagnoses of the Zika infection to those women who are at the highest risk.”



Commercial tests for Zika are not yet available. The CDC does the testing for this virus and results can take up to 2 weeks.




Zika Transmission


Both men and women can be infected by the Zika virus. It is transmitted mainly by the bite of an infected mosquito. However, it is now confirmed that the virus can also be transmitted through sexual intercourse.

The CDC also warns that Zika “can be transmitted through unprotected sex with an infected female partner.” As a result, the CDC’s revised warnings “on sexual exposure to Zika now caution against sex without a condom or other barrier method of protection with any person, male or female, who has traveled to or lives in an area with Zika, including female to female transmission with a pregnant partner.”





Mosquito Bite Prevention
The Zika virus is transmitted mostly by the mosquito
Aedes aegytpi. This type of mosquito is not typically found in Illinois. At present, the DuPage County Health Department considers the possibility of a Zika virus outbreak in Illinois to be low.

However, mosquito bites from other mosquito species can transmit a variety of illnesses. Regularly taking precautions against mosquito bites is a good idea whether traveling or staying in Illinois.

Cover up. Wear long pants and long sleeves. Use mosquito repellent with DEET. For children, use a repellent with a compound called picardin. It lasts for 10 hours and is less toxic than DEET. Or use a repellent with 20 to 30 percent DEET.


Zika and Children

It has been established that the Zika virus can have serious outcomes with pregnant women being the highest risk group. But, what about your child?

So far, it appears that children infected with the Zika virus have similar outcomes as adults. There's a rash, fever, joint pain or red eyes, which go away within a week. And while many people don't get symptoms at all, some are at risk for Guillain-Barre syndrome.

For more information, visit the AMA’s Zika Virus Resource Center.
Our Foundation

Providing Student Scholarships

Fifty years ago the DuPage County Medical Society led efforts to immunize our community against Polio – protecting thousands while prompting the creation of the DuPage Medical Society Foundation, a 501(c)(3) public charity. As our Foundation celebrates its Golden Anniversary, the $365,000 it has awarded in scholarships to area students in medicine and allied health professions remains tangible evidence of DCMS support for quality healthcare in our community, now and into the future.

Learn More About Our Foundation



Upcoming Events at DCMS



  • May 14, DCMS Monthly  Executive and Governmental Affairs Committee Meetings

    May 14, DCMS Monthly Executive and Governmental Affairs Committee Meetings

    Monthly meetings of the Executive and Governmental Affairs Committees will be held online via Zoom. Executive Committee 4 pm Governmental Affairs at 5 pm.
    May 10, Northern Illinois Food Bank Volunteer Event

    May 10, Northern Illinois Food Bank Volunteer Event

    Make a difference on May 10 as DCMS physicians, their families, and friends come together to spend the morning volunteering at the Northern Illinois Food Bank. Our work will help ensure that our hungry neighbors will have access to food in their time of need.

    We’ll gather at the Northern Illinois Food Bank in Geneva by 9 am that day. Three fulfilling hours later we can celebrate our important work and see the amazing amount of food we were able to sort and pack for distribution! Children age 8 and above are welcome to participate. Make it a learning experience and shared family fun!

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  • June 11, DCMS Executive Committee Meeting

    June 11, DCMS Executive Committee Meeting

    Monthly meetings of the Executive and Governmental Affairs Committees will be held online via Zoom. Invitations to follow. Executive Committee 4 pm.
  • July 9, DCMS Monthly Executive and Governmental Affairs Committee Meetings

    July 9, DCMS Monthly Executive and Governmental Affairs Committee Meetings

    Monthly meetings of the Executive and Governmental Affairs Committees will be held online via Zoom. Invitations to follow. Executive Committee 4 pm, Governmental Affairs Committee 5 pm.