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I have hyperhidrosis (a fancy term for excessive sweating).

When I was a teenager (and before all answers to everything were online), I went to multiple docs and no one was aware of a particular prescription that, once I found out about it, completely "cured" the issue (Drysol).

Looking back, it was obvious the doctors just weren't aware of a valid treatment for the issue. It'd be great if a service like this helps doctors discover treatments for less than common conditions.

Side note: I recently discovered iontophoresis for the treatment of hyperhydrosis without the use of drugs at all... discovered via a Facebook ad for the machine (don't ask me how Facebook knew to target me for such a specific product). I bought it a couple months ago, and wow - it works. I've been googling the studies around it, which date back to 1950's -- not something new, but also dumbfounded as to how I wasn't aware of this treatment sooner, and why no doctor was aware of it either (or at least didn't bother mentioning it as an option).

Best of luck to you! Lots of problems to be solved in the health space.



Exactly! Back in the day it took three decades for the info to get across that smoking was in fact, bad for us.

Now, info travels fast, but there’s so much info coming at us, we choke on it.

Totally relate to your story, I come from rural India and saw many patients misdiagnosed for this same reason. This is exactly why we’re building InpharmD.


>It'd be great if a service like this helps doctors discover treatments for less than common conditions.

Isn't that what Up To Date is?


Despite their best efforts, up to date can never truly be up to date, can they?

No shade, we love up to date; we just see ourselves as a complement.


I mentioned this to my wife (she's a research physician) and her first response was also "isn't that what Up to Date does?"

How would you characterize the difference between InpharmD and UpToDate? Different features? Better execution?


Yep, totally. But they have X credible authors so can only have X credible info on their site.

This means they focus on the most common questions.

Public data/ our data shows point of care references like UTD can only answer ~1/2 of clinical questions.

We’re building our tool for the other 1/2.


Sorry I see you answered below!


A training client of mine with hyperhidrosis was treated through surgery. To be fair he was still sweating a lot more than my other clients, but he said it used to be way worse.

I had a fever on a trip in africa where it felt like sweat was pouring out of my skin and it was incredibly uncomfortable


And people say advertising doesn't add value to the world...


Even asking a pharmacist would have gotten you the answer :P




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