“The moral test of a government is how it treats those who are at the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the aged; and those who are in the shadow of life, the sick and the needy, and the handicapped.” – Hubert Humphrey
passionate pachyderms
Pharmacist Steve steve@steveariens.com 502.938.2414
If you go to the above hyperlink. it will show in detail the 399 fines CVS has paid since 2000.. 1.1 billion in fines
Last fiscal year, CVS showed a net profit of 250 billion dollars so all of these fines is just the cost of getting caught at breaking/violating our laws. It would appear that the profits generated from such illegal activities is a lot more than the fines that CVS had to pay to generate those profits and this is just WHAT THEY GOT CAUGHT AT DOING !
A major new study in one of Europe’s worst affected countries for the coronavirus finds no evidence of widespread immunity to the virus developing.
Just 5% of Spaniards were detected to have antibodies to the virus.
Fourteen percent of people who previously tested positive for antibodies tested negative just weeks later.
The study suggests people who experience mild symptoms do not have long-lasting protection.
“Immunity can be incomplete, it can be transitory, it can last for just a short time and then disappear,” Raquel Yotti, the director of Spain’s Carlos III Health Institute, said.
Another scientist involved said: “In light of these findings, any proposed approach to achieve herd immunity through natural infection is not only highly unethical, but also unachievable.”
The Walgreens store at Oakton Street and River Road in Des Plaines will be closed for the remainder of today (Wednesday) due to a death investigation.
According to Phil Caruso, senior manager of issues management for Walgreens, there was no criminal activity or security risk at the store. He said the other Des Plaines Walgreens location at Miner Street and Graceland Avenue remains open for regular hours.
As of 10:14 a.m., Des Plaines police squad cars blocked the store’s parking lot. At least two customers were denied entry into the building before Des Plaines Fire Dept. crews arrived at 10:27 a.m. A representative from the Office of the Cook County Medical Examiner was also at the scene.
Fire crews left at around 10:41 a.m. after bringing ladder equipment in and out of the building.
A police department representative at the scene said no information was available as the incident was still under investigation. Police later confirmed the death was a suicide.
Pharmacist Steve, would you please share this? I’ve seen so many complain about not getting the disability they need, so I asked people working in disability. This is what was shared with me. I don’t get disability, but I will follow this method if I ever needed it. I’ve heard people say they’ve been waiting for years to be approved.
If injured, get in touch with the personal injury lawyers in Fairhope. But before that, get all your medical records yourself, copy them all (save copies for yourself), put them all in chronological order with the newest stuff on top – each thing together, so from one doctor, all of those records in chronicle order from the newest on the top, the oldest on the bottom then do each doctor like that, and then all your MRI reports in chronological order, x-ray reports, and so on, etc. Go to the social security blue book ( https://www.ssa.gov/disability/professionals/bluebook/AdultListings.htm ) and find your disabling conditions, fing what keywords that they need to see, and ONLY those key words then highlight them in your copied medical files. That way, when they go through hundreds of people’s files and scan everything, they don’t have to rely on spotting those words in their quick scans. You already pointed them out. Get all your records together and deliver them to the social security administration. Some people get a phone interview. Others only get a letter. Using this method many people get disability in 10 to 30 days. The average approval letter is in 14 days using this method. Try to remember, the approval committee is scanning over a hundred charts a day looking for those keywords. (And lets be serious, when you’re going that fast you’re bound to miss stuff.) This method doesn’t waste their time. Show them what they need to know and no more. I pray this helps all that need it.
Sen. Scott Jensen, R-Chaska, seen at a news conference in April, said in a video released Sunday, July 5, that he is under investigation by the Minnesota State Board of Medical Practice for public statements he’s made about COVID-19.
State Sen. Scott Jensen, a physician and Republican from Chaska, said Sunday that he is being investigated by the Minnesota State Board of Medical Practice for public statements he’s made about COVID-19.
Jensen criticized the state Department of Health in April for following federal guidance stipulating when doctors should characterize deaths as due to COVID-19. He said he feared that the death toll might be inflated if each state’s allocation of federal funds depended on the number of COVID-19 deaths.
His comments, made in a series of interviews with TV personalities from North Dakota to Fox News in New York, went viral. Some charged they fueled conspiracy theories and disinformation about the coronavirus. He told the Star Tribune in April that he felt his words were taken out of context.
Jensen could not be reached for comment Sunday.
In the video, he said the board is focused on two allegations: spreading misinformation about the death toll and providing “reckless advice” by comparing COVID-19 with the flu.
“When I got this letter, I was ticked,” Jensen said in the video, which had been viewed nearly 110,000 times by Sunday evening.
Jensen said he will cooperate fully with the investigation, adding that he didn’t know who filed the complaint and that he felt “targeted.”
“If this could happen to me because of my views, it could happen to anybody,” he said.
Jensen has expressed other controversial views on public health. He opposes state-mandated vaccinations for children, believing it to be an issue of parents’ rights. He also has defended President Donald Trump for talking about the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine as a possible treatment for COVID-19, though it has yet to be medically approved for the coronavirus.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued a warning about potentially toxic hand sanitizers.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued a warning for hand sanitizers containing a toxic ingredient that can potentially lead to poisoning or death if ingested.
Methanol, or wood alcohol, is a chemical found in antifreeze and fuel, which has been found in several hand sanitizers that the FDA has tested. When used as an active ingredient and absorbed through the skin or ingested, the substance can be toxic or life-threatening.
The FDA reports that products labeled to contain ethanol (ethyl alcohol) are increasingly testing positive for methanol contamination. The agency has also received rising reports of adverse events related to methanol-contaminated hand sanitizer ingestion, which include hospitalizations, blindness and death.
“All Americans should practice good hand hygiene, which includes using alcohol-based hand sanitizer if soap and water are not readily available. Unfortunately, there are some companies taking advantage of the increased usage of hand sanitizer during the coronavirus pandemic and putting lives at risk by selling products with dangerous and unacceptable ingredients. Consumers and health care providers should not use methanol-containing hand sanitizers,” says Stephen M. Hahn, M.D., commissioner of the FDA.
The FDA has issued a recall for these contaminated products and urges consumers and healthcare professionals to be aware of the ingredients in their hand sanitizers. If you think your hand sanitizer is contaminated, the agency recommends halting use and disposing of it in a hazardous waste container or as instructed by your local recycling and waste management center.
Methanol poisoning can lead to blurred vision, headache, nausea, vomiting, permanent blindness, seizures, permanent nervous system damage and death, according to a press release from the agency.
“The FDA remains committed to working with manufacturers, compounders, state boards of pharmacy and the public to increase the safe supply of alcohol-based hand sanitizers. This includes staying vigilant and continuing to take action when quality issues with hand sanitizers arise,” says Dr. Hahn.
More information and a full list of hand sanitizers recalled by the FDA can be found here.
From the day they introduced it to the day it passed the Minnesota Legislature, backers of a bill to provide insulin to diabetics who can’t afford the hormone said it wouldn’t draw a lawsuit from drug makers.
Citing assurances from unnamed industry executives, those proponents of the bill, which relies on the companies’ existing patient assistance program charities instead of substantial fees on drug companies, was less of a lawsuit magnet. In April, the DFL-controlled Minnesota House approved the bill by 111-22. The Senate responded with a vote of 67-0.
They were wrong.
On Tuesday night, just hours before the Alex Smith Insulin Affordability Act was to take effect, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America — the industry trade group better known as PhRMA — filed suit to get the new law declared unconstitutional. “A state cannot simply commandeer private property to achieve its public policy goals,” states the suit, which names the Minnesota Board of Pharmacy and MNsure as defendants. “Because the Act takes private property for public use without paying just compensation, it is unconstitutional and should be enjoined.”
Walz’s reaction: ‘What the hell?’
Minnesota’s plan, brokered by Republicans in the state Senate, relies on existing patient assistance programs run by pharmaceutical companies like Eli Lilly, Sanofi and Novo-Nordisk. Only if the companies refused to participate in the program do they face fees or fines: $200,000 per month for six months, and increasing to $400,000 per month for the next six. After a year of non-participation, fines go to $600,000 a month.
The suit does not ask for a temporary injunction against the act taking effect, and Gov. Tim Walz and Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan stressed at a press conference on Wednesday that the program was still available for those who need it. A 90-day supply can be received either through a pharmacy or directly from the manufacturer’s patient assistance program. No more than a $50 copay can be charged for that three month supply. Those same diabetics can then apply for longer-term supplies by verifying income eligibility through MNsure.
Walz called Wednesday “one of the most enjoyable days” as governor because the new law resulted from the advocacy of diabetics and their families. The law is named for Alec Smith, who died three years ago after rationing his insulin after aging off his parent’s health insurance. Walz declared Wednesday “Alec Smith Day” in Minnesota. His parents, Nicole Smith-Holt and James Holt, Jr., accepted the proclamation from Walz.
But the lawsuit put something of a damper on the celebration. The plan had been sold as a compromise with the industry, and advocates had to swallow hard to accept it, making the news of the suit galling to some. Flanagan found out about the suit Tuesday night via social media and told Walz about it the same night. His reaction: “What the hell?”
On Wednesday, Flanagan said of the drug industry: “They may continue fighting, but so will we. And we have the advantage of being right.”
James Holt said his family is outraged by the lawsuit, but said he thinks it was filed because other states were looking at Minnesota as a potential model for similar programs. “They’re scared,” Holt said.
Sen. Matt Little, DFL-Lakeville, said the industry has only itself to blame for the law since they are the ones who continued to impose large increases in the price of insulin, which created the unaffordability problem. He also had a message for the industry in their fight against advocates like Alec Smith’s parents and Concordia University student Alexis Stanley, all of whom were instrumental in getting the legislation passed. “I do not like your odds.”And Attorney General Keith Ellison said he will fight the lawsuit. “Today — the very day that our state finally put Minnesotans’ lives ahead of drug companies’ profits — Big Pharma is telling Minnesotans that their obscene profits come before your lives,” he said. “My office and I will defend it with every resource we have.”
The lawsuit challenges the law under both the takings clause and the commerce clauses of the U.S. Constitution. “If Minnesota believes that, despite the insulin manufacturers’ affordability programs, there is a need for further action to help some Minnesota residents obtain insulin, it could have created a state‐run program in which it purchases insulin from PhRMA’s members and distributes it to residents in need,” the suit states. “But instead of using public funds to address a matter of public concern, Minnesota chose to enact a law that effects per se takings of the manufacturers’ property without compensation, so that the state can achieve its policy objectives at no expense to its taxpayers.
“In addition to being forced to give away their insulin for free according to the state’s terms, manufacturers will also incur significant expenses in developing and administering the Continuing Safety Net Program and Urgent Need Program.”
The suit also blames health plans and pharmacy benefit managers for cost increases of insulin and other drugs and seeks to have the industry’s legal costs covered by the state.
Both Democrats and Republicans criticized the industry’s decision to file suit. “PhRMA is missing the mark by wasting time and money on this lawsuit. Minnesotans would be far better off if the pharmaceutical industry would focus on fairness in pricing,” said Sen. Michelle Benson, R-Ham Lake, the chair of the Senate’s Health and Human Services Finance and Policy Committee. “You shouldn’t have to be a powerful government or a special interest group to have access to fair prices. All Minnesotans want to be treated fairly.”
Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka also said he was disappointed with the suit. “Senate Republicans remain committed to providing emergency insulin for those in crisis no matter what happens with this poorly timed lawsuit,” the East Gull Lake Republican said.
And Little took issue with one of suit’s key arguments: “The cost of producing insulin is so low that to say this is taking is gonna be really tough for them,” he said.
Did PhRMA mislead lawmakers?
DFL Rep. Mike Howard of Richfield dubbed the industry “soulless” for filing suit and said he thinks PhRMA misled the Senate GOP backers of the compromise that eventually became the law. “Everything about this process has shown that there is ill intent by the pharmaceutical industry,” he said. “They have not been honest; they have not been clear; they have not been straightforward; they have not been willing to come before a committee to show their face. The reason that things are confusing is by design.”
Yet the industry did raise constitutional issues with the program when it testified on the program in March. “The majority of our concerns would be around clarifying any constitutional issues we have,” Sharon Lamberton, deputy vice president for PhRMA, said at the time. “We are concerned with how manufacturers would be compensated for the insulin product, which would be a takings clause of the 5th amendment concern.”
Before that meeting, Sen. Scott Jensen, R-Chaska, said he was comfortable that the industry would let the proposal become law without challenge, largely because it didn’t impose huge licensing fees — around $38 million per year — to fund it, as the version of the program proposed by House DFLers did. “The pharmaceutical manufacturers don’t like the bill, they may even today be opposing the bill,” Jensen said before the first hearing on the compromise bill. “But they will come along and they are saying yes to this. This is not something where we’ll have to say, ‘Oh my stars it’ll end up in court.’”
On Wednesday, Jensen said: “I think we knew there was a risk. But we’d done so much stakeholder work that I thought everyone was comfortable. As they saw movement toward the Senate bill, they made it very clear this was their preference,” Jensen said. “The intensity of their concern was very mild and was popping up less and less often. I felt that at the table we’d reached a high comfort level.”Jensen now thinks the Legislature should look at changing the program to limit its takings clause implications. One idea – which he said on Saturday would be contingent on a negative outcome of the litigation – would be to use other funds for the 30-day emergency program, which now requires the industry to compensate or provide insulin to pharmacies to replace what was distributed to diabetics. Jensen proposed using the health care access fund, which is paid for via a tax on health care providers and said he is asking Senate staff to prepare language.
But such a proposal is unlikely to win support in the DFL-controlled House and Walz, given their belief that any costs should be borne by the industry that made insulin unaffordable.
Lija Greenseid, an advocate who is the mother of a diabetic daughter, said she favors imposing a fee on the industry for that portion of the program.
Greenseid said she believed Jensen and Sen. Eric Pratt, R-Prior Lake, who first proposed using the patient assistance programs as the basis for the state’s plan, when they told her they were convinced the Senate’s version would not be challenged in court. “I think Sen. Jensen needs to be held accountable, either for some miscommunication from PhRMA or that it was all about politics; they needed to sweep this away in an election year,” she said. “If that was the plan, it backfired because this looks very bad.”
Little was even more critical of the Senate GOP’s management of the issue. “I believe there’s a possibility here that we have to face that (PhRMA) told GOP members they wouldn’t sue on this because their argument — that it was unconstitutional — was actually stronger against the Senate version” of the proposal.
The license fee that House DFL members had proposed to fund the program is legal and constitutional, Little said. “They wanted to avoid a license fee because they knew they couldn’t beat that in court,” he said of insulin makers. “I think we have to face the reality that they did this on purpose.”
As Bull prepares for fatherhood, his work at TAC suffers without his top attorney, Benny, who quit in reaction to Bull’s romantic reconnection to his ex-wife and Benny’s sister, Isabella (Yara Martinez). In addition, the team faces a difficult time in court as they mount a defense for a young bartender on trial for involuntary manslaughter.
The basic story line of this episode is that on new year’s eve a bartender sold a patron too much alcohol, left the bar, drove to his ex-wife’s house and killed his ex-wife and 3 friends at the house and he either committed suicide or was kill by the police. In the interim the bar closed/went out of business and the relatives of those that died was suing the bartender for serving the person too much alcohol before he killed everyone.
The Bull legal team defended the bartender with the concept that there was no causation between being served “too much alcohol” and him killing four people… of course Bull’s law firm WON…
As I heard the legal term “causation” … my mind started connecting the dots… as causation would apply to the chronic pain community.
I have listed above the link to the bad health consequences to a pt with elevated blood pressure and a table that lists all the complications to comorbidity issues for under/untreated pain.
I can’t count the number of times that pts have told me that when their pain meds were cut/eliminated… their blood pressure goes up dramatically and into unsafe levels.
If a pt’s blood pressure had been at normal/safe levels and starts going up when their meds are cut back/discontinued… and the prescriber doesn’t attempt to treat the pain nor unable to get it back to acceptable/safe levels… You can refer to the above link as to the potential consequences to the pt for under/untreated elevated blood pressure.
It is typically considered “bad medicine” to add medications to a pt’s therapy to deal with side effects of their other medications… IMO, putting a pt on up to 5 different anti-hypertensive medications to treat their high blood pressure because their pain medication has been reduced/eliminated… should also be considered “bad medicine”
The medical records that a prescriber keeps on a pt should document this cause/effect of the pt’s pain management meds being lowered/discontinued. Likewise, those same records should document what the prescriber did – if anything – to try to lower the pt’s blood pressure.
Once again, if the prescriber’s prescribing policies and procedures are being dictated by the prescriber’s employer… then the causation could be directed at the “deep pockets” of that employer.
Could those same records be used as documentation when “going after” those people who served on the CDC opiate dosing guidelines and created those same guidelines knew or should have known that they were going to cause pt harm and a path to legal actions against those individuals and/or legal case to get those guidelines revoked ?