Unsafe Ozempic knockoffs are flooding the market

  • 📰 BNNBloomberg
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 63 sec. here
  • 17 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 78%
  • Publisher: 50%

Business ニュース

Consumer Goods,Retail,Consumer Staples

The first dose of a copycat weight-loss drug Lindsay Posey took from a new pharmacy worked well. The second didn’t quite suppress her appetite. It was the third dose that she thinks caused her trouble.

Share of Eli Lilly surged on their latest Q1 2024 earnings results. Damien Conover, director of healthcare equity research at Morningstar, joins BNN Bloomberg to explain why he still has a sell rating on the stock.

Her doctor suggested it might have been a problem with the medicine itself. “That’s not really something you want to hear,” Posey said. It’s nearly impossible to know who’s taking these drugs. Compounded medications are generally not paid for by insurance, putting them out of view of systems that normally track prescriptions. The FDA doesn’t monitor how many prescriptions are filled for compounded drugs and at least 20 state boards of pharmacy told Bloomberg they’re not keeping a record either.

Stephen Peacock, chief medical officer of Henry Meds, said patients might prefer their offerings because they’re afraid of needles. When asked what data Henry Meds has to show their dissolving drugs are as effective as the shots, he didn’t provide any. Discussing the caliber of the company’s products, he said “I’m very confident in the safety and efficacy of our medications.”

Compounders started to work on a bigger scale in the 1990s and early 2000s, raising concerns. But lawmakers’ attempts to reform the system were successfully fought by pharmacies, resulting in scatter-shot regulation. That came to a head in 2012, when at least 64 people died and over 700 got sick from contaminated compounded drugs made by one pharmacy.

このニュースをすぐに読めるように要約しました。ニュースに興味がある場合は、ここで全文を読むことができます。 続きを読む:

 /  🏆 83. in JP
 

コメントありがとうございます。コメントは審査後に公開されます。

日本 最新ニュース, 日本 見出し