Over the years, shareholders at the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR) have repeatedly voiced concerns on a variety of subjects to top pharma companies. Now, as 2023 comes to a close, the group is taking pharma giants to task over their patenting strategies and potential human rights shortfalls. In proposals to AbbVie, Eli Lilly, Gilead, Johnson & Johnson, Merck and Pfizer, the group is pushing the companies to review how add-on patents for medicines can affect patient access. Additionally, Bristol Myers Squibb, Pfizer and Eli Lilly face calls to review and update their human rights policies. While ICCR has voiced pharma-related complaints plenty of times in the past, its proposals haven’t been met with much enthusiasm by the companies’ larger pools of shareholders. In 2019, for instance, investors at several large pharma companies rejected the group’s proposals to study the potential link between CEO pay and drug prices. In ...
Insurers and PBMs are increasingly implementing white-bagging policies, which require oncology practices to obtain physician-administered infusions and other medications from designated specialty pharmacies often owned by or affiliated with insurers and their PBMs. By DR. JAMAL MISLEH Earlier this year, a young man in his mid-thirties with non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma came to my oncology clinic for a chemotherapy infusion while waiting on the development of his CAR-T treatment. Under normal circumstances, our practice can move quickly when scheduling patients for their treatments since our in-office infusion clinic maintains an inventory of necessary medications that we prepare ourselves onsite. But, unbeknownst to me, my patient’s health insurance plan included a policy called “white bagging,”- a policy which we soon discovered when they denied one of the chemotherapy drugs I prescribed. Our clinical team repeatedly appealed the denial; however, the plan refused to cover the drug unless it was fulfilled through an unspecified ...
Earlier this year, a young man in his mid-thirties with non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma came to my oncology clinic for a chemotherapy infusion while waiting on the development of his CAR-T treatment. Under normal circumstances, our practice can move quickly when scheduling patients for their treatments since our in-office infusion clinic maintains an inventory of necessary medications that we prepare ourselves onsite. But, unbeknownst to me, my patient’s health insurance plan included a policy called “white bagging,”- a policy which we soon discovered when they denied one of the chemotherapy drugs I prescribed. Our clinical team repeatedly appealed the denial; however, the plan refused to cover the drug unless it was fulfilled through an unspecified designated specialty pharmacy associated with the patient’s pharmacy benefit manager. Eventually, we were able to negotiate coverage through our practice’s internal inventory, but by the time the patient was able to receive the drug four weeks had ...
The International Federation on Ageing (IFA) is proud to release findings from a recent study entitled Driving the Agenda of Pneumococcal Pneumonia Vaccination in At-risk Populations in Community and Long-term Care. The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the brutal nature and impact of respiratory infections on people of all ages and particularly amongst those at-risk of serious complications, such as older adults in long-term care (LTC) settings. Though several respiratory infections and other vaccine-preventable diseases (VPDs) can be prevented, or their severe symptoms reduced through receiving vaccines, current vaccination uptake rates for pneumococcal disease among older adults in LTC are below national targets. This study conducted by the IFA looked at the status of existing public health policies and campaigns on pneumococcal disease in Canadian LTC settings and investigated the policy gaps that have resulted in poor vaccine uptake. One of the main findings from this study is that within LTC ...
In a potential threat to foreign drugmakers profiting on innovative drugs, the Chinese government on Tuesday issued a new policy package—including tax breaks—to promote generics.
WHO and the Population Division of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs have launched a new, open-access database of laws, policies and health standards on abortion in countries worldwide. The database aims to promote greater transparency of abortion laws and policies, as well as to improve countries’ accountability for the protection of women and girls’ health and human rights.
Dive Brief Cardinal Health marketed convenience kits that include piston syringes not authorized by the Food and Drug Administration, the agency said in an April 24 warning letter. The agency found the violations during an inspection of Cardinal’s facility in Waukegan, Illinois. Cardinal distributed syringes made by Jiangsu Shenli Medical Production with “substantially different technological characteristics” than those cleared by the FDA, according to the letter. Cardinal has come under scrutiny after the company recalled some of its disposable syringes last year because their dimensions had changed, making them incompatible with certain infusion pumps. The FDA has also taken steps to block plastic syringes made by Jiangsu Shenli from being imported. Dive Insight The warning letter focuses on Cardinal’s Monoject luer-lock tip syringes, which are intended to inject fluids into the body or withdraw fluids, and Monoject enteral feeding syringes, which deliver fluid, food or medications to ...
Drugdu.com expert’s response: The process for medical device registration typically involves the following steps: 1.Document Preparation: Gather all necessary documents and information, including product technical data, manufacturing processes, and quality management system documents. Requirements may vary by country or region. 2.Application Form Completion: Fill out the medical device registration application form, providing basic product information, technical characteristics, and manufacturing details. 3.Technical Evaluation: Submit the product’s technical documentation for evaluation by relevant authorities, assessing safety, efficacy, and performance indicators. 4.Clinical Trials (if required): Some medical devices require clinical trials to validate their safety and effectiveness. Applicants must conduct trials as per regulations and submit trial reports. 5.Quality Management System Review: Submit quality management system documents for review. Upon successful audit, obtain quality management system certification. 6.Submission of Registration Application: Submit the completed application form and relevant documents to the competent authority or agency. 7.Review and Approval: The competent authority or agency ...
SHANGHAI, March 26, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — BioDuro-Sundia’s partner, DigmBio, a South Korean biotechnology company, announced its selective PARP1 inhibitor for the treatment of triple-negative breast cancer has been approved by Korea Food and Drug Administration (MFDS) for Investigational New Drug (IND) application. Founded in April 2020, DigmBio is a pioneering biotech company discovering and developing novel therapies to treat oncology, neurodegeneration, and fibrosis. The lead program DM5167 is the 2nd generation PARP1 selective inhibitor. According to preclinical study results, DM5167, a novel selective PARP1 inhibitor, exhibits superior in vivo safety, particularly in terms of hematotoxicity and demonstrates enhanced selectivity in enzyme assays, and possesses a more efficient DNA trapping capability. Notably, DM5167 showcases excellent brain permeability, rendering it suitable for treating brain metastasis and brain cancer. DigmBio CEO Kim Jung-min stated, “We are pleased to receive official approval from the Food and Drug Safety Department without the need for any ...
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