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Vaccinations 'underrecognized' in decreasing antimicrobial resistance: WHO
The World Health Organization said global antibiotic use could drop by 22% annually if vaccines against 23 specific pathogens were widely developed, The Washington Post reported Oct. 26. -
Dallas pharmacy owner sentenced to 10 years for $41 million healthcare fraud scheme
Dallas pharmacy owner Ivor Jallah, 37, has been sentenced to 10 years in federal prison for a large-scale healthcare fraud scheme in which he billed insurers for medications never provided to patients. -
CVS workers in California reach tentative labor deal
Thousands of CVS workers in Southern California have reached a tentative agreement on a new contract after a weekend strike, ABC News reported Oct. 24. -
FDA sets meeting on bulk substances: 3 notes
The FDA's Pharmacy Compounding Advisory Committee is set to meet Dec. 4 to address regulatory questions on compounding practices, according to an Oct. 25 news release from the agency. -
Where Trump, Harris stand on prescription drug prices: 6 notes
The high cost of prescription drugs in the U.S. has emerged as a pressing issue for many voters this election cycle. -
Baxter's North Carolina site to restart IV fluid production
As Baxter International's manufacturing site in Marion, N.C., recovers from Hurricane Helene-related flooding, the drugmaker said Oct. 24 it expects intravenous product from the facility to enter the distribution channel in mid- to late November. -
Sutter Health, pharmacy company expand partnership
Sacramento, Calif.-based Sutter Health, has expanded its partnership with specialty pharmacy company Shields Health Solutions. -
Independent pharmacies struggle as PBM payments favor chains: 4 things to know
Independent pharmacies are fighting to stay profitable as pharmacy benefit managers favor big chains, KFF Health News reported Oct. 24. -
25% of errors with newer vaccines involve incorrect shots: ISMP
The Institute for Safe Medication Practices has raised concerns about vaccination-related errors, particularly with newer vaccines, as highlighted in its 2022-2023 Bi-Annual report. -
Number of drug shortages eases from all-time high: 5 notes
In April, the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists reported 323 ongoing drug shortages — the highest number since the organization began tracking them in 2001. The number has since fallen to 277. -
Alzheimer's drug trials raise ethical concerns over risk disclosure
A recent investigation by The New York Times revealed that two pharmaceutical companies, Eisai and Eli Lilly, withheld critical genetic risk information from volunteers during clinical trials for Alzheimer's drugs, Leqembi and Kisunla. -
FDA recalls 7,000 antidepressant bottles
More than 7,000 bottles of duloxetine, a generic version of antidepressant Cymbalta, have been recalled by the FDA due to the presence of N-nitroso-duloxetine, a chemical that is a suspected carcinogen. -
Novo Nordisk to FDA: Ozempic, Wegovy too complex to be copied
Novo Nordisk has requested that the FDA prohibit compounding pharmacies from producing unapproved versions of its popular weight loss and diabetes drugs, Wegovy and Ozempic, CNBC reported Oct. 23. -
The cost of burnout in hospital pharmacies
Occupational burnout costs a hospital with 50 pharmacists an estimated $269,580 in turnover expenses, according to the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists' burnout calculator. -
The 10 priciest 340B medications
In 2023, the top 10 drugs purchased under the 340B Drug Pricing Program accounted for roughly one-third of the program's total spending, according to a Health Resources and Services Administration news release. -
FDA approves 1st RSV vaccine for adults under 60
The FDA approved Pfizer's Abrysvo, the first and only RSV vaccine for adults aged 18 to 59 who are at increased risk of severe respiratory illness caused by RSV. -
Walmart is 1st retailer to deliver Rx, general products together
On Oct. 22, Walmart shared its plan to become the first retailer to offer combined delivery of pharmacy and general merchandise online orders. -
Inflation Reduction Act saves 1.5M enrollees $1B: HHS
In the first six months of 2024, the Inflation Reduction Act has saved 1.5 million Medicare Part D enrollees nearly $1 billion in out-of-pocket prescription drug costs, HHS said Oct. 22. -
340B purchases hit $66.3B in 2023
A total of $66.3 billion in outpatient drugs was purchased through the 340B drug pricing program in 2023, according to data from the Health Resources and Services Administration released Oct. 21. -
Workers at 7 California CVS locations go on strike
Workers at seven CVS pharmacies in Southern California have gone on strike, demanding better pay, improved healthcare and protesting what they say are bad-faith negotiations, the Los Angeles Times reported Oct. 20.
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