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“The Dysphagia Mobile Imaging, Inc. Mission
is to fulfill the need for timely Dysphagia Consultations with Modified Barium Swallow Studies that are mobile to where
the patient is in residence, while providing personalized care on an assessment-to-treatment continuum by utilizing state-of-the-art
technology and highly qualified personnel."
The bullet points below are the national statistics that Congress sited when
passing the 2008 Resolution to designate the month of June as National Dysphagia Awareness Month!
- dysphagia,
or difficulty with swallowing, is a medical dysfunction that affects as many as 15,000,000 Americans;
- the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has estimated that 1,000,000 people in the United States annually
are diagnosed with dysphagia;
- the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality has estimated
that 60,000 Americans die annually from complications associated with dysphagia;
- Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention mortality data illustrate that this is more than the total number of Americans dying from
all forms of liver disease, kidney disease, and HIV/AIDS combined – and nearly as many as those dying from diabetes,
the number 6 killer of Americans;
- the most common complication arising from dysphagia is
aspiration pneumonia – caused by food or saliva entering the windpipe and into the lungs;
- one in 17 people will develop some form of dysphagia in their lifetime, including 50 to 75 percent of stroke
patients and 60 to 75 percent of patients who undergo radiation therapy for head and neck cancer;
 - as many as half of all Americans over 60 will experience dysphagia at some point;
- complications due to dysphagia increase health care costs by resultant hospital readmissions,
emergency room visits, extended hospital stays, the necessity for long-term institutional care, and the need for expensive
respiratory and nutritional support;
- the cost of managing a patient with a feeding tube, which
for many has been the primary treatment option for this condition, is reported to average over $31,000 per patient per year;
- the total annual cost to Medicare just for enteral feeding supplies for outpatients
was more than $670,000,000 in 2003, nearly 6 percent of the total Medicare budget for that year;
- including
the monies spent in hospitals, the total cost of dysphagia to the health care system is well over $1,000,000,000 annually;
- the condition of dysphagia is a vastly underreported condition and not widely understood
by the general public; and
- that observing June 2008 as National Dysphagia Awareness Month would
raise public awareness about dysphagia and the need for early detection and treatment.
Over the next
20+ years this medical condition will increase as the US population over 65 is expected to double by 2030. Within that time
one out of five Americans, some 72 million people, will be 65 years or older. Those 85 and older are already the fastest growing
segment of the US population making the dysphagia market in the US upwards of 12 million people.
 As expressed above dysphagia is "difficulty in swallowing" (Greek root dys meaning “difficulty”
and phagia meaning "to eat") and the transference of solids or liquids from the mouth into the stomach.
It is a disorder of swallowing that may affect eating,
drinking, taking oral medications, and even swallowing saliva. Some common swallowing complaints are difficulty chewing food
and initiating a swallow, coughing and choking when eating or drinking, feeling that something is stuck in the throat or upper
chest, and food or liquid coming back up after you have swallowed.
 When the physician believes a patient has a problem with swallowing, s/he will refer
the patient to a speech-language pathologist (SLP) for a swallowing evaluation and treatment. The swallowing evaluation includes
review of the patient’s medical history, checking the strength and coordination of the muscles involved in swallowing,
and trying techniques to see if they make swallowing easier. Conducting a Modified Barium Swallow Study (MBSS) on the patient
remains the pre-eminent method to view the oral, pharyngeal and esophageal phases in real-time in order to diagnose the underlying
cause(s) of the symptoms of aspiration and penetration. The MBSS allows for the visualization of the swallowing process and
compensatory strategies are tested for their ability to increase swallowing safety and efficiency. Currently, no other technology
has this versatility.
On the following pages, you will learn more about the enhanced quality of service provided
to our patients via the DMI mobile dysphagia imaging clinic.
We are looking forward
to providing you with timely, accurate, diligently performed, as well as affordable dysphagia consultations. Please feel free
to visit our guestbook below or call and we will have a contract forwarded to you immediately.
Sincerely,
We are Launching this Service in July 2008. Hours we will
be available for scheduling.
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Monday, Tuesday, Thursday & Friday 8:30 AM to 6 PM
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Saturday we are available for Special Scheduling, but Sunday we go to Church!
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