Thursday, December 31, 2015

Zicam is in the news....

It is releasing a new form of its nasal swabs because of buyer requests.  The CEO says it "is clinically proven...to shorten colds." Mass market retailer claims it "lessens congestion, watery eyes, runny nose, and sneezing"

Will allegations of reduced smelling follow? Time will tell.

While some may want to up their Vitamin C content, the dentist will tell you please brush your teeth afterwards as lemons are acidic...



Thursday, December 3, 2015

Same day service at Walgreens?

"Customers ordering prescriptions or refills through Walgreens’ mobile app, online, or at the pharmacy can use the delivery service." More at drugtopics.com

Picture by Ryan McGuire

Monday, November 30, 2015


A coalition of healthcare organizations held a training event in Providence, RI on June 6, 2015, on Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT).

I will be returning to posting on a monthly basis next month. Happy Shopping for post-Thanksgiving deals.
Picture by Ryan McGuire

Friday, November 27, 2015

From newsmax, anonymous took down an isis re ad and put up a viagra and prozac ads in its place. Quoted text below:

"Enhance your calm," the message read "Too many people are into this ISIS-stuff. Please gaze upon this lovely ad so we can upgrade our infrastructure to give you ISIS content you all so desperately crave." 


Picture by Ryan McGuire

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

From the Houston chronicle: the A.M.A. hates drug advertising, and as a physician association they want the world to know it. Here's the breakdown on spending of the  advertising dollars and indications of the top 10 drugs.
tv 3.2 B
magazine 1.2 B
paper 127 M
billboard 4 m
Indication of the top 10 advertised drugs include: ED, arthritis, mental illness, and stroke, fibroylagia and diabetic peripheral neuropathy

Picture by Ryan McGuire

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

In marvel team up 63 [Spiderman]: After being punched Spiderman thought, "I'm a walking talking excedrin headache.'.

Picture by Ryan McGuire

Monday, November 23, 2015

From the  New York Times

"Allergan agree to $150 billion merger

Pfizer and Allergan have reached a $150 million merger deal in one of the largest ever acquisitions in the health care industry. The boards of the two companies reportedly approved the deal on Sunday. The deal will likely be announced on Monday, according to sources. People briefed on the deal say that although Pfizer is much larger, with a market value of about $199 billion compared with Allergan's $123 billion, Allergan would be the technical buyer. Allergan's headquarters are in Dublin—though most of its operations are in Parsippany, NJ—the planned merger would avoid new Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service rules on corporate inversions. The new rules, which apply to American companies that acquire foreign firms, are meant to further crack down on the billions of dollars in corporate tax revenue lost from such deals. In adopting Ireland as its home base, Pfizer—whose tax rate last year was about 26.5%—would see significant savings. Pfizer would lead the merged company in most cases, and its CEO, Ian Read, will take the helm of the combined firm, according to sources."

Picture by Ryan McGuire

Sunday, November 22, 2015

From modern medicine:
EHRs have been on the market for about 20 years now, and in the last four years their manufacturers have received more than $30 billion in indirect government subsidies through the meaningful use program. Yet in the 2015Medical Economics Physician EHR Survey, doctors’ mean ratings of their EHRs was only 5.3 out of a possible 10.

This is how physicians must feel about them:

Picture by Ryan McGuire

Friday, November 20, 2015

Who do you beleive: magazine or dental office staff? One says red wine stays teeth avoid. Another says it's ok....

Thursday, November 19, 2015

the baltimore sun

http://www.baltimoresun.com/health/bs-md-hogan-cancer-20151003-story.html 

He's hosted pediatric and adult cancer patients for Ravens and Redskins games in the government-owned skyboxes. He's chatted in the Orioles dugout with manager Buck Showalter, and star outfielder Adam Jones lent the governor a batting glove so Hogan could shake 500 hands without completely compromising his immune system. It was the first time Hogan shook hands in two months. Afterward, he ached for days.




Wednesday, November 18, 2015

From breaking news.....

"Los Angeles Times

A San Francisco judge ruled today that frozen embryos that a woman wants to use over ex-husband’s objections must be “thawed and discarded.”

Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo, in an 83-page decision, upheld a consent form the couple signed shortly after their marriage in which they agreed to destroy the five frozen embryos in the event of a divorce."

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

typo online Sentaor Warren was identified as a Republican. I emailed the company about 20 minutes ago to correct this.


Other senators, including Democratic presidential contender Bernie Sanders, are opposing Califf's nomination, over concern about the work Califf has performed and the compensation he has received from pharmaceutical companies. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, R-Mass., asked Califf to explain whether some of his past criticisms of the FDA would lead him to lower safety standards in the agency.

From NCPA 1/5th of all pharmacies would be under the Wag-Rad ticker if Walgreens buys them.
A consumers group is concerned that with all the consolidation prices will go up. It says CVS has 8000 stores which is 4000 less than the RAD-Wag deal.  Quick based on that data how many pharmacies are in the country? :-)
The company claims it won't because RAD had a PBM and so this will make the prices go down by giving them leverage to force prices down.

Monday, November 16, 2015

From Facebook 10 tips on dealing with cancer include: crying, praying to god, having numbing cream prior to injections, and others.

https://m.facebook.com/larryhoganmd/photos/a.909053089139457.1073741828.907931509251615/1046756672035764/?type=3&source=48&__tn__=E this HTML class.






Saturday, November 14, 2015

Looking over some older news from NBC news was a reference about possible autism & smog linkage. Then there was a reference to Beijing mayor saying tourism is down 10% .

Friday, November 13, 2015

National geographic highlighted this pharmaceutics faculty member.

Croyle, Maria A., Ph.D.
Glaxo Wellcome Professor
Professor of Pharmaceutics

Thursday, November 12, 2015

While the cdc advises a yearly flu shot, some people object. FWIW, I get mine yearly.

From a website called stat:


When researchers followed 328 households during the 2010-11 flu season,they found — much to their surprise — that the only people who seemed to benefit from immunization were the ones who hadn't gotten a flu shot the year before. These "unexpected findings ... require further study," the researchers wrote in 2013.

A larger and more robust study,published last year in Clinical Infectious Diseases, added more evidence that the 2013 study was onto something important. Researchers followed more than 7,000 people for eight yearly flu seasons, and they learned that people got the strongest protection against the flu only when they were vaccinated for the current season — and at no other time during the previous five years

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

NUMBER 1 reason to update your resume from AMIA IT health professionals: to make yourself feel good.

I can see the day someone will sarcastically put on a list "so you can recall what you did."

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Don't you love those articles that on first glance seem like "objective" news, with quotes from people only to later have claims and have a postscript this is paid content. This is after reading an article in the Canadian national post. I suppose the 97 to 100% cure rate or the phrase "super lice" in the article should've given it away. However, I have not tried the product and cannot say anything bad about it. In school I learned about one product that the French ban fearing toxicity.

Its silicone solution does the job so thoroughly that there is no risk of a recurring infestation, the company says.

"Even super lice do not develop immunity to the dimeticone-based solution in NYDA."

http://www.nationalpost.com/m/search/blog.html?b=news.nationalpost.com/life/secret-to-getting-rid-of-head-lice-kill-their-eggs&q=pharmacist

 This content was produced by Postmedia Works on behalf of Pediapharm for commercial purposes. Postmedia’s editorial departments had no involvement in the creation of this content. Its silicone solution does the job so thoroughly that there is no risk of a recurring infestation, the company says.

Monday, November 9, 2015

Are your female patients taking TCAs or verapamil not wanting to take metformin for their DM? It may be the have OCT1 gene inhibition. This drug interaction theorized after a 92 sample study may explain why. Source medscape ce.

Sunday, November 8, 2015

In the world of advertising being backed up by evidence the FTC is pressuring the FDA to make homeopathic products prove they are as efficacious as other non-homeopathic items.

Speaking more about the FTC Walgreens wants to buy Rite Aid. More to come....

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/overhaul-of-rules-for-homeopathic-drugs-wanted/article/2570637
http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2015/10/08/Retired-firefighter-and-son-sentenced-in-pharmacy-robberies.html

"A retired Westerville firefighter and his son were sentenced to prison on Thursday for robbing three pharmacies to get prescription pills."

Meanwhile in CT 

http://www.sfgate.com/news/crime/article/Wallingford-pharmacy-robbed-of-1-000-oxycodone-6567917.php

"After being given the pills, police say he ran from the store toward a nearby Dunkin' Donuts where police think he got into a car driven by an accomplice. The suspect is described by police as a Hispanic male with a beard, who was wearing a black hooded jacket and sunglasses."

Maybe that's why in GA the pharmacy became a diner.

"Coweta continues to embrace changes in the community, particularly in Newnan, as several memorable venues are "upcycled" to become new again. On Sep. 24, the city celebrated the grand opening of Boomers and the transformation of Hospital Discount Pharmacy into a new, hip eatery"
http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Pharmacy-turned-diner-opens-up-in-Georgia-town-6548065.php



Saturday, November 7, 2015

Eight month old California cow goliath was shown on tv news this am sitting on the family couch. The owning family claims it thinks it's a dog. Where's the veterinary anti-hallucinogenic medication for this poor dairy creature?

Friday, November 6, 2015

Just as the northeastern states in the us are dealing with heroin, pain management doctor get in trouble while mismanagement of patients leads to their deaths and a football coach is sent to retirement for health reasons.

Murder conviction: A Rowland Heights doctor was convicted of second-degree murder Friday for the overdose deaths of three patients. Dr. Hsiu-Ying "Lisa" Tseng was accused of missing red flags in patients who should not have received prescriptions. "She wrote them a prescription for the very thing they're addicted to. She shoved them over that cliff," a prosecutor said.Los Angeles Times

Cutting back: Citing health issues, USC Athletic Director Pat Haden said he has stepped down from the College Football Playoff committee. At the Oct. 17 game against Notre Dame, Haden became lightheaded and had to visit a hospital before flying back to Los Angeles. "I am reluctant to step down, but my doctors advised me to reduce my traveling," he said in a statement. Los Angeles"

Thursday, November 5, 2015

While watching, "The problem of Tolstoy," I learned that he had a fondness of gambling and sexual activities.

There is a word in Spanish ungüento which is the same as ointment. One dictionary claimed ointment was the same as unguento or oilments.

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

The October 2015 issue of Woman's Day claims that having larger breasts do not increase the cancer risk, merely make it harder for the woman to find cancerous tissue during the self exam.

In other news while watching Kelly and Michael [the replacement of Regis & Kelly, and her predecessor], there was a man who proposed not with a diamond ring, but with a wisdom tooth ring. Supposedly it was because he was a bit quirky and he wanted to do a quirky proposal. Michael stated he would not do it because he didn't have any teeth to give away.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

I read somewhere that claimed no kids were ever harmed by adulterated candy. A friend told me how in a part of Pasadena a woman tried to out sharp objects in brownies to hurt the trick or treaters.

From the Los Angeles Times...Breaking News: 30 taken to hospitals from Halloween raves in Pomona, San Bernardino



Sunday, November 1, 2015

This reminds me of the rather silly British idiom "And Bob's my Uncle."

From the Washington Post:
According to a study in 1998 1 in 8 births start out with 2 fetuses, but only 1 child is born. The result occurred recently in the case of a Caucasian Washington couple who donated some sperm, and when the wife was impregnated the child did not have the blood type of either parent. It was assumed an other person gave it. However, there was only 1 white male sperm donor that day when the sperm was given. Geneticist Barry Starr explains: there is a 50-50 genetic relationship between parent and child. There is a 25% relationship between uncle and nephew/niece. As it happened this man had a brother in utero, but the brother's dna merged with him as the 9 months of birth occurred. The man's dna is 90% his and 10% his unborn brother. The result of the sperm test was that the brothers DNA was the source. Thus the child's father is the dead uncle, and the father is an uncle.

Saturday, October 31, 2015

It's Halloween. What costume character could signify mental illness? lycanthrope when in reference to a mental impairment that one really can become a werewolf / lycanthrope.

Friday, October 30, 2015

"the case of Pfizer, it reported an effective tax rate of about 25 percent in its most recent filing. Allergan's is reported to be significantly lower, thanks in part to Ireland's 12.5 percent statutory"

"The threat of Pfizer moving its headquarters outside the U.S. would realize the fears of lawmakers such as newly installed House Speaker Paul Ryan, who has sought to reform the corporate tax code. It also has drawn the ire of Democratic lawmakers..."
Us pharmacist has an article on new drugs that came out. One involved hepatits drugs. Such drugs would've helped out actress Veronica Lake who years ago succumbed to hepatits after a bout with alcoholism that also earned her a derisive nickname per wikipedia.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

The street.com asserts that inhaled insulin isn't popular.

The nascent commercial launch of Afrezza continues to resemble a train wreck. MannKind's signature product contributed only €2 million to Sanofi's sales in the third quarter. That's flat with second quarter sales despite Sanofi's upgraded efforts to convince U.S. doctors to prescribe the inhaled insulin to their diabetes patients. Through nine months of 2014, Afrezza sales have totaled €5 million, well below Sanofi's expectations.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

What is the cost of this pharmacy school that has a campus in alaska?
The cost for Alaska students (or students who are residents of other states than idaho) will be $17,561 per semester for the 2015-2016 academic year.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

It's like a bad dream. Speaking of dreams:  or relating to dreams: oneiric. That is the basis of the movie brigadoon.

While watching brigadoon there was an approximate interesting quote from a lass to Van Johnson's character about attraction, "looking at you makes tadpoles in me spine jump. " speaking of the apine, software was made to make spine procedures less costly. From Pharmacy times:

The new Cardinal Health Inventory Management Solutions OR workflow modules help hospitals maintain chain of custody documentation, identify unused inventory for returns, and avoid product expiration. The solution integrates with electronic medical records and other hospital IT systems for more accurate charge capture and interoperability. Through the use of RFID tagging and barcode, the modules provide full visibility for day-to-day management and enable long-term inventory planning

Friday, October 23, 2015

In a case of misbranding, a recall had been issued. Is it APAP 325 or 500mg?

 On October 9, 2015, Medline Industries, Inc. announced that it will initiate a voluntary nationwide recall of lot # 45810 of Acetaminophen tablets, 500mg, uncoated compressed tablets to the consumer level. The Acetaminophen 500mg, Tab 100/BT (OTC20101) has been found to be mislabeled displaying “Acetaminophen 325mg” (OTC10101) instead of “Acetaminophen 500mg”. The Acetaminophen tablets, 500mg is incorrectly labeled as 325 mg tablets. This error is not easily identifiable by the user or prescriber. If the product is taken at the maximum labeled dose, every four hours, five doses a day, or with other medications containing acetaminophen, it may lead to liver toxicity or liver failure. See the firm Press Release for further details.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

The more blood needed to be added to a patient the higher chance of death. Researchers surprised that it only st a 1:1 ratio and not steeper.
Medical vs surgical patients had slightly different outcomes based on initial sicknesses / damage to the body.
From Clinical Anesthesiology.

“As anesthesiologists in the OR [operating room], we were giving coolers and coolers of blood, and we often wondered whether the patients survived their hospital stay,” Dr. Frank said. “We didn’t know the outcomes because we only dealt with OR. We decided to see if they survived, and also looked at the relationship between blood dose and in-hospital mortality. Perhaps more importantly, we also looked at five different morbid events,” he explained. We also wondered whether there was a point at which it becomes futile to continue giving massive transfusions,” Dr. Frank added. “It turns out the answer is no. A 50% survival rate is pretty good compared to other conditions, such as pancreatic cancer surgery, where the survival rate is about 20%. We don’t see a point of futility, and our recommendation is not to give up.”

“This is an important paper,” concluded Dr. Papadakos. “It shows that you get 50% mortality after giving 50 units of blood.” He added, “I’m surprised that it’s that low.”

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Chickadee magazine claimed that carrots used to be purple. About.com lists other colors. Feel free to read it below.
Photo from about.com.

"
•Red Carrots

Red carrots don't differ in taste much from orange carrots. Their red color, though, comes from lycopene, the heralded antioxidant in tomatoes.


• White or Golden Carrots

White or golden carrots are yellow or cream colored. They have a mild flavor with hardly any of the earthiness of other colors, and they're a bit sweeter than orange, red, or purple carrots"


 - Photo © Molly Watson

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Perhaps this future chemist will become a RPH working for a manufacturer or return to academia? This is a Horatio Alger story of an immigrant's son who seems to have made good. It's always nice when the next generation has more opportunities that the last one.

http://www.rgj.com/story/news/2014/12/05/snakes-unr-chemistry-grad-venomous-research/19974027/

Boris Zhang spent part of his undergraduate career at the University of Nevada, Reno, working on a project of Ruben Dagda, assistant professor in the molecular biosciences graduate program, along with Indira Shrivastava, that looked at atom-to-atom interactions, where one protein in a snake venom was more potent than another.

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Are you taking pradaxa, but worried about bleeding? The FDA has a pill for you. Source: FDA press release.

"The FDA has granted accelerated approval to Praxbind (idarucizumab) for use in patients who are taking the anticoagulant Pradaxa (dabigatran) during emergency situations when there is a need to reverse Pradaxa’s blood-thinning effects."

Friday, October 16, 2015

Older news, but still from 2015.
An employee was diagnosed with a needle phobia. Then he brings in documentation of the diagnosis. He asks not to inject others as he may harm them.

Can you imagine a nurse giving you your childhood injection only to fall as she is placing it into you?
The employee is fired. Lawsuits happen, and the state says the employee's rights have been violated.

For more see below or go to Pharmacy Times' website.
-----------

Fired Pharmacist with Needle Phobia Wins $2.6 Million Verdict

Meghan Ross, Associate Editor

Published Online: Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Six days into trial, the jury determined that Rite Aid was wrong; the pharmacy chain had violated the ADA and state law.

“We’re very happy the jury put Chris back in a place he would have been had Rite Aid followed the law and worked with him and made accommodations,” Steven’s attorney, Daniel B. Berman of Hancock Estabrook Law Firm, told Law360.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

From Nabp, basically inspectors felt the conditions were not sanitary. The company said they were and has not issued a recall. Keep aprised if an injunction gets issued:

FDA Issues Alert to Discontinue Use of Sterile Drug Products Made by Chen Shwezin Inc, dba Park Compounding Pharmacy


Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Henry marsh's book, "Do no harm," has stories of NHS England and post USSR Ukraine.  The training programs residency over there are as demanding in long hours as they are in the states. I have heard of some Americans going to an Irish or English med school right after high school in hopes of  skipping her undergrad of 4 and 4 and instead spend 6 years studying overseas. However, I know of one med student who went to a different foreign medical school who said it was tougher to get a residency in the US.


In the odd world of nutrition, Mari Johnson (youtube travel channel) interviewed 2 russians who said that in their country salad had a connotation of mayo and meat along with potatoes not lettuce with other vegetables. Something to bear in mind if counseling patients.


Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Costumes and Fines

Pharmerica had to pay 9 M in fines due to allegations it promoted drug use for its nursing home patients in part because of manufacturer educational grants. This represents a settlement. Source: drug topics.

In the sillier world of dress up / costume playing / ie cosplay: a Thor was seen thanks to a Physical Therapy student which was the last one. No pharmacists were photographed at the comic convention. Most of the photos are of inanimate items with a white board which is why the writer felt the costumers were " unbelievable." For instance one was really just a trash can.
The 12 Most Unreal Comic Con Costumes, And The...




Monday, October 12, 2015

I have done other compounding. For clarification this is not me, but I thought it would be of note to know what some people are paid to create.


From imgur: "As a compounding pharmacist I get to make unique and interesting things every day. Meet the 'Rectal Rocket'."
As a compounding pharmacist I get to make unique and interesting things every day.  Meet the 'Rectal Rocket'.

Sunday, October 11, 2015

If you visited Inova or a certain virginia Costco recently, hopefully you had your MMR vaccine already.

http://wtop.com/fairfax-county/2015/10/child-who-contracted-measles-visited-several-fairfax-county-locations/

Blood, Vial, Analysis, Laboratory, Test, Medical

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Charles Lamb 1775 - 1834
"For thy sake, Tobacco, I would do anything but die." in a farewell to tobacco.

"This very night I am going to leave off tobacco! surely there must be some other world in which this unconquerable purpose shall be realized." letter to Thomas manning 1815.

"books think for me." last essay of Elia. Detached thoughts on books and reading.

How sickness enlarges the dimension of a man's self to himself.  last essay of Elia. The convalescent.

Cigarette, Nicotine, Dependency, Addiction, Habit

Friday, October 9, 2015

Also for those who have interest in the topic:

  
Opioid Use Disorder and Depression: Surprising Findings, Treatment Translations 

Tuesday, October 13 and October 27 (Case Discussion)
at 12:00 - 1:00 pm ET

Webinars sponsored by American Psychiatric Association (APA)

Doctor, Baby, Child, Young, Healthcare, Patient, Toy

From the Los Angeles Times:

Nearly two decades after Californians legalized marijuana for medical use and a year before they may also approve it for recreational purposes, Gov. Jerry Brown today approved statewide rules on the growth, trans

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Imagine a patch that permantly changes skin tone. From a top 10 list. Link below:

"10. Methylphenidate transdermal system (Daytrana patch) The FDA issued a safety alert about the ADHD medication Daytrana patch in late June over reports of permanent loss of skin color up to 8 inches in diameter.   Although it is not physically harmful, the condition is believed to be irreversible. In fact, no signs of reversibility have been seen in the 51 related chemical leukoderma cases reported to the FDA.   In most cases, the skin color loss was concentrated in the area where the patch was applied, but there have been some reports of the discoloration spreading to other parts of the body.   Health care professionals are encouraged to consider alternative treatments for patients experiencing this side effect."

See more at: http://www.pharmacytimes.com/product-news/10-fda-drug-warnings-pharmacists-should-know#sthash.AaZ42AJT.dpuf

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Want to have nationally certified warnings on your pharmacy labels? The US has you covered.

http://www.usp.org/usp-healthcare-professionals/related-topics-resources/usp-pictograms

And in other news the FDA gas to issue an injunction against a device makwe who despite warnings was trying to sell / market his device for unapproved use. The irony it was approved for hand arthritis, just not HIV.

"Although the FDA cleared two of the QLaser devices for providing temporary relief of pain associated with osteoarthritis of the hand (as diagnosed by a physician or other licensed medical professional), the FDA has not cleared or approved any of the devices to treat any other medical conditions. Further, as demonstrated by the evidence presented at trial, use of the QLaser devices according to the labeling could be dangerous to the health of the consumer."

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Today's tweets:


Novartis  @Novartis What do sweet wormwood and the#NobelPrize have in common? Learn here:nyti.ms/1M86oywView on Twitter


Johnson & Johnson   @JNJNews #JNJ congratulates #NobelPrize winners William C. Campbell, Satoshi ÅŒmura & Youyou Tu for research on #NTDs:bit.ly/1NiYNibView on Twitter


GSK US  @GSKUS Congratulations to @NobelPrize winners for efforts against roundworm parasites + malaria! #NobelPrize #fightmalariaow.ly/T2yB8View on Twitter


Pfizer Inc. @pfizer Congratulations to #NobelPrize in medicine winners William C. Campbell, of@DrewUniversity; Satoshi Omura of Japan & Youyou Tu of China





Scratching one's lips...it could happen. If they do have pain and take Nsaids one could have bleeding lips.

In clinical trials, 79% of patients who received the dermal filler showed a meaningful improvement in lip fullness 3 months after treatment, and more than 78% reported an improvement in their overall satisfaction with the look and feel of their lips at 1 year. The most common side effects of Juviderm XC injectable gels occur at the injection site and include redness, swelling, tenderness, pain, discoloration, and itching.

 Source: http://www.pharmacytimes.com/product-news/fda-approves-lasting-filler-for-lip-augmentation#sthash.WUPlff8c.dpuf

Monday, October 5, 2015

Make sure you stay hydrated unlike this lady. Image chosen because as Fed Chairmen the symbolic importance of piggy banks seemed relevant. Chairman Yellen was taken to the local Massachusetts hospital.

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/feds-yellen-appears-to-fall-ill-during-speech-fed-cites-dehydration/article/2572788


Sunday, October 4, 2015

From the Chicago Tribune from last week:
"Walgreens' pharmacy computer database went down Tuesday, forcing pharmacists at all 8,200 Walgreens stores nationwide to fill prescriptions manually.
But on Friday morning, Walgreens spokesman Jim Cohn said that the problem had been fixed at most of the suburban Chicago company's stores."

I imagine this is the face of the typical geriatric customer when they got the bad news. Luckily good news wasn't that many days later.

"
Read more here: htt

Fp://www.s

acb

e.com/news/news-services/article36561477.html#storylink=cpy
From The Lancet

"Controlling overnight glucose with dual-hormone, single-hormone, and conventional insulin pump interventions Aug 25, 2015

The dual-hormone artificial pancreas could possibly improve nocturnal glucose control

Background

Additional benefits of the dual-hormone (insulin and glucagon) artificial pancreas compared with the single-hormone (insulin alone) artificial pancreas have not been assessed in young people in outpatient unrestricted conditions. We evaluated the efficacy of three systems for nocturnal glucose control in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes.

Methods

We did a randomised, three-way, crossover trial in children aged 9–17 years with type 1 diabetes attending a diabetes camp in Canada. With use of sealed envelopes, children were randomly assigned in a 1:1:1:1:1:1 ratio with blocks of six to different sequences of the three interventions (single-hormone artificial pancreas, dual-hormone artificial pancreas, and conventional continuous subcutaneous insulin pump therapy). Each intervention was applied for 3 consecutive nights. Participants, study staff, and endpoint assessors were not masked. The primary outcome was the percentage of time spent with glucose concentrations lower than 4·0 mmol/L from 2300 h to 0700 h. Analysis was by intention to treat. A p value of less than 0·0167 was regarded as significant. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02189694.

Findings

Between June 30, 2014, and Aug 9, 2014, we enrolled 33 children of mean age 13·3 years (SD 2·3; range 9–17). The time spent at a glucose concentration lower than 4·0 mmol/L was median 0% (IQR 0·0–2·4) during nights with the dual-hormone artificial pancreas, 3·1% (0·0–6·9) during nights with the single-hormone artificial pancreas (p=0·032), and 3·4% (0–11·0) during nights with conventional pump therapy (p=0·0048 compared with dual-hormone artificial pancreas and p=0·32 compared with single-hormone artificial pancreas). 15 hypoglycaemic events (<3·1 mmol/L for 20 min measured by sensor then confirmed with capillary glucose <4·0 mmol/L) were noted during nights with conventional pump therapy compared with four events with the single-hormone system and no events with the dual-hormone system. None of the assessed outcomes varied with the order in which children and young adults were assigned interventions.

Interpretation

The dual-hormone artificial pancreas could improve nocturnal glucose control in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes. Longer and larger outpatient studies are now needed.

Haidar A, Legault L, Matteau-Pelletier L, et al. Outpatient overnight glucose control with dual-hormone artificial pancreas, single-hormone artificial pancreas, or conventional insulin pump therapy in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes: an open-label, randomised controlled trial. Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2015;3(8):595-604."

Saturday, October 3, 2015

To RPHs want to learn about new research progress for Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) Sign up at the link below.


https://www.labroots.com/ms/webinar/id/154/axion-oct7# WEBINAR: Advancing neuroscience: functional insights from in vitro microelectrode arrays


Abstract
DATE: October 7th, 2015
TIME: 9am Pacific time, 12pm Eastern time
The neuroscience field is rapidly evolving as both a burgeoning area for basic research (Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) to name just a few) and as a focus area for commercial therapeutics.  However, research and drug discovery in this field is often hindered by the low-throughput of many of the established techniques.  In addition, many of the common assays used require advanced expertise and are quite costly. 

Enter the microelectrode array (MEA) and the Maestro platform from Axion BioSystems:  a simple approach to measuring complex, functional neural responses at the throughput level you need.  Together with integrated control software, the Maestro makes acquisition and analysis of neural networks accessible, straightforward, and scalable up to 96 wells.

After a brief introduction to MEA technology, we will showcase two examples of successful implementation of the Maestro platform into neuroscience research and discovery programs. Then your patient will go from this
 to this


Friday, October 2, 2015

Breaking... for the cancer patient

FDA approves Keytruda for advanced non-small cell lung cancer10/02/2015 01:50 PM EDTThe U.S. Food and Drug Administration today granted accelerated approval for Keytruda (pembrolizumab) to treat patients with advanced (metastatic) non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) whose disease has progressed after other treatments and with tumors that express a protein called PD-L1. Keytruda is approved for use with a companion diagnostic, the PD-L1 IHC 22C3 pharmDx test, the first test designed to detect PD-L1 expression in non-small cell lung tumors.

Source: FDA.gov

From RPH On The Go

"Happy American Pharmacists Month!

This month especially, you should walk with your head held high and be proud of everything you do. Ensuring proper medication use and safety for the American public is a vital part of our healthcare system—something that shouldn't be taken for granted. And that's exactly what this month is about—celebrating pharmacists.

If you're celebrating in a big way, earning some recognition or hosting an event, let us know by tweeting us @RPhOnTheGo or by posting on our Facebook page. We'd love to hear from you"