A new guide from Northeast Business Group on Health helps employers understand the challenges women face when it comes to cardiovascular disease, diabetes and obesity. It also recommends actions that employers can take to support women in their workforce. By MARISSA PLESCIA About 44% of women in the U.S. are living with a form of heart disease, and heart disease is the leading cause of death for women in the U.S. Making matters worse is the lack of knowledge about these stats: only 56% of women realize that heart disease is the number one killer for American women. Cardiovascular disease in the U.S. costs about $363 billion annually in direct and indirect costs (such as missed workdays). That’s why the Northeast Business Group on Health (NEBGH) released a free guide for employers on Thursday that is focused on cardiovascular disease, diabetes and obesity in women. New York City-based NEBGH is ...
By Tyler Patchen Pictured: Sign at Pfizer’s headquarters in New York/iStock, JHVEPhoto Pfizer on Friday said it is scrapping an investigational twice-daily oral Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist candidate after topline data from a Phase IIb trial of obese patients without type 2 diabetes showed high rates of adverse events. While the trial did reach the primary endpoint of a statistically significant change in body weight, there were high rates of adverse events. According to Pfizer, the adverse events in the obesity trial for the twice-daily dosing of GLP-1 danuglipron were mild and included gastrointestinal symptoms that were “consistent with the mechanism” of the candidate. However, the company noted high rates of these side effects. Up to 73% of patients experienced ...
The top three areas of concern for employers in 2024 include rising healthcare costs, mental health challenges and cancer care, according to a recent report from Business Group on Health. By MARISSA PLESCIA There are several challenges and trends employers should keep tabs on in 2024, with rising healthcare costs topping the list, according to a report the Business Group on Health released on Tuesday. Washington, D.C.-based Business Group on Health is a non-profit organization representing large employers on health benefits and health policy issues. Here are the three top healthcare trends for employers in 2024: 1. Rising healthcare costs: Healthcare costs are expected to continue to climb in 2024 due to inflation, provider shortages, growing mental health challenges and missed preventive screenings that led to more costly health conditions. Other major cost drivers include expensive cell and gene therapies and GLP-1s. “A confluence of factors are creating a fever ...
Don Tracy, Associate Editor JAMA study investigates whether consuming energy drinks was associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes and whether caffeine consumption affects fetal-growth restriction. Image Credit: Adobe Stock Images/Viktor Energy drinks, popular for increasing awareness and energy, have seen a 240% increase in sales since 1987, reaching $9.7 billion in US sales in 2015. Marketing for these products typically targets young adults; however, there are also safety concerns with their consumption, with associations found between energy drinks and health issues, including mental health symptoms and organ damage. There have been very few studies that have explored the link between energy drink intake before and during ...
By Tristan Manalac Pictured: Eli Lilly’s Biotechnology Center in California Eli Lilly on Tuesday signed a license and collaboration agreement with Tokyo-based biotech PRISM BioLab to discover and develop small molecule inhibitors of protein-protein interactions. Under the terms of the deal, Lilly will make an upfront payment and pledges up to $660 million in preclinical, clinical and commercial development milestones. The Japanese biotech will also be eligible for royalties on future sales of any pharmaceutical product that emerges from the partnership. In return, Lilly will gain access to PRISM’s proprietary PepMetics platform, which synthesizes small molecule drug candidates that can behave like peptides, according to the biotech’s ...
Eli Lilly is building on its small drug molecule portfolio with a partnership with Prism Biolab to develop and commercialise small molecules that modulate targets picked by Lilly. As part of the agreement, Prism will receive upfront payments and up to $660m based on preclinical, clinical, and commercial development milestone payments, along with royalty payments. This alliance will utilise Prism’s PepMetics technology platform to discover oral protein-protein interaction (PPI) targets. Lilly has made several moves in the last couple of years to develop small-drug molecules. Earlier this month, the company was one of the investors in Alto Neuroscience’s $45m Series C financing round, which will support Alto’s clinical programme of four small-molecule CNS candidates to treat psychiatric disorders including depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. Alto is expecting positive topline data from Phase II studies investigating two of the molecules, ALTO-100 and ALTO-300, in H2 2024 and H1 2025, respectively. In ...
Food-as-medicine platform Season Health has closed on its strategic asset acquisition from Wellory, which offers a network of registered dietitians, the companies announced Tuesday. Austin, Texas-based Season Health offers personalized food recipes, pre-made meals, grocery support, one-on-one meetings with a dietitian and nutrition education. It serves payers and employers. New York City-based Wellory works with payers and connects patients to dietitians for one-on-one virtual nutrition sessions. This network of dietitians provides care for 25 different specialties in 15 languages across all 50 states. “Food-as-medicine, as far as I can tell, is still excitingly emerging,” said Josh Hix, CEO and co-founder of Season Health, in an interview. “There’s not yet one definition [of food-as-medicine], and in our opinion, it needs to include dietitian services. We see patients all the time where they have, for example, uncontrolled diabetes or poorly controlled diabetes. No one’s ever told this person that it’s large volumes ...
By acquiring clinical assets from Wellory, Season Health will be able to greatly expand its provider network. The company will also gain national contracts with Aetna and Cigna. By MARISSA PLESCIA Food-as-medicine platform Season Health has closed on its strategic asset acquisition from Wellory, which offers a network of registered dietitians, the companies announced Tuesday. Austin, Texas-based Season Health offers personalized food recipes, pre-made meals, grocery support, one-on-one meetings with a dietitian and nutrition education. It serves payers and employers. New York City-based Wellory works with payers and connects patients to dietitians for one-on-one virtual nutrition sessions. This network of dietitians provides care for 25 different specialties in 15 languages across all 50 states. “Food-as-medicine, as far as I can tell, is still excitingly emerging,” said Josh Hix, CEO and co-founder of Season Health, in an interview. “There’s not yet one definition [of food-as-medicine], and in our opinion, it needs ...
Novo Nordisk has said it will be investing more than $2.3bn to expand its existing production site in France “for the current and future product portfolio within serious chronic diseases”. The investment will “significantly increase” the capacity of the Chartres manufacturing facility, Novo said, including for its GLP-1 products in the cardiometabolic disease space. The site in Chartres was first established in 1961 and currently employs around 1,600 people, with more than 500 new jobs expected to be created as a result of the expansion. Lone Charlotte Larsen, corporate vice president of Novo Nordisk Production Chartres, said: “This significant investment… confirms the importance of our French manufacturing site, one of our strategic production sites, as a cornerstone of the growth we are experiencing as a company. “By maximising the skills and infrastructure we already have on the site, we are expanding our capacity in an efficient way.” The expansion is ...
Unable to scale up its manufacturing fast enough to meet the spiraling demand for its GLP-1 weight loss products, Novo Nordisk is employing a new strategy—reducing production of diabetes drug Victoza to make more Ozempic. Novo and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) divulged (PDF) the move in a letter to healthcare professionals, warning of a growing shortage of both medicines that is set to intensify during the rest of the fourth quarter. With the shortage of Victoza expected to continue into the second quarter of next year, the EMA has instructed healthcare providers not to start new patients on the drug until then. While Victoza (liraglutide) and Ozempic (semaglutide) are both GLP-1 drugs, the former—which was originally approved in 2010—is not used for weight loss. Intermittent shortages of Ozempic are expected to persist throughout 2024, though the overall supply situation should improve in the first quarter of next year, according ...
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