-
20 votes
-
Melatonin use soars among US children, with unknown risks
29 votes -
Health insurers have been breaking US state laws for years
24 votes -
US court orders Balance of Nature to stop sales of supplements after Food and Drug Administration lawsuits
7 votes -
US lawsuit on behalf of deceased patients alleges United Health denies care based on AI model with ninety percent error rate
52 votes -
Patients don’t know how to navigate the US health system — and it’s costing them
50 votes -
Verdict reached in Maya Kowalski civil suit against John Hopkins All Childrens' Hospital
6 votes -
You have a right to know why a health insurer denied your claim. Some US insurers still won’t tell you.
25 votes -
Infants are born with syphilis in growing numbers, a sign of a wider US epidemic
18 votes -
Second person to receive experimental pig heart transplant dies
37 votes -
An Idaho woman and her son have been charged with kidnapping after prosecutors say they took the son’s minor girlfriend to Oregon to get an abortion
31 votes -
Why Amarillo, Texas hit pause on proposed abortion travel ban adopted elsewhere in Texas
15 votes -
Please be dying, but not too quickly: a clinical trial story
21 votes -
Kidney stone breakthrough procedure at UW called 'game changer' for patients
36 votes -
Meta accused by US states of using features to lure children to Instagram and Facebook
18 votes -
What a striking new study of death in America misses
15 votes -
US Senator calls for Department of Justice action against Philips for keeping CPAP machine complaints secret
20 votes -
Over 75,000 workers poised for largest healthcare strike in US history
36 votes -
US police blame some deaths on ‘excited delirium.’ Emergency physicians consider formally disavowing the diagnosis
19 votes -
California workers who cut countertops are dying of an incurable disease
51 votes -
Nebraska woman gets two years in prison for helping teen daughter have an abortion
17 votes -
Experts fear rural Americans are on their own during Medicaid unwinding
10 votes -
US surgeons perform the second ever pig-to-human heart transplant
21 votes -
Multiple rats in Atlanta test positive for dangerous parasite that can infect human brains - from Asia, has been found in Australia, Hawaii, Spain
24 votes -
US mother sentenced to two years in prison by Nebraska for giving daughter abortion pills
55 votes -
The long, hard fight over the first cosmetic penis implant
17 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission sues private equity firm for price fixing anesthesia services in Texas
8 votes -
There's hope for the US opioid crisis — but politics stands in the way
8 votes -
The hidden system of legal kickbacks shaping the US prescription drug market
10 votes -
Phenylephrine, a common decongestant in medicines is no better than a placebo when taken orally, says a US FDA advisory panel
by Wes Davis A key cold medicine ingredient is basically worthless The FDA’s 16-member advisory panel unanimously voted yesterday that oral phenylephrine, a common active ingredient in cold...
by Wes Davis
A key cold medicine ingredient is basically worthless
The FDA’s 16-member advisory panel unanimously voted yesterday that oral phenylephrine, a common active ingredient in cold medications, is no better than a placebo for treating congestion.
Link to the article
The call by the panel sets up potential FDA action that could force the removal of certain over-the-counter medications containing the ingredient — including certain formulations of Mucinex, Sudafed, Tylenol, and NyQuil — from store shelves.
But FDA may hold off for many months, pending contested findings by drug makers and other considerations.Data
Newer data from studies the panel says are more consistent with modern clinical trial standards showed phenylephrine simply “was not significantly different from placebo” in the recommended dosage, including trials from 2007 that the FDA had reviewed when considering the drug after a citizen petition prompted it to do so.
Bioavailability
The panel cited the drug’s low bioavailability, a term referring to qualities that allow the drug to be absorbed by the human body, as the main reason the drug should be removed from the market.
Jennifer Schwartzott said the drug “should have been removed from the market a long time ago,” while Dr. Stephen Clement said that although the drug itself isn’t dangerous, its usage by patients should be considered unsafe because it potentially delays actual treatment of disease symptoms.
Alternative
The panel cited pseudoephedrine as an effective alternative though while it’s technically available without a prescription, you must talk to a pharmacist to get it because, in large quantities, it can be used to make methamphetamines.
50 votes -
Menopause as a case in point; funding for research on women’s health is still a fraction of that available for men’s health
20 votes -
This Obamacare disaster had a surprising turnaround
16 votes -
Oregon launches legal psilocybin access amid high demand and hopes for improved mental health care
33 votes -
Women who were denied emergency abortions file lawsuits in three states: Lawsuits want to clarify abortion ban exceptions for ‘medical emergencies’ in Idaho, Oklahoma and Tennessee
36 votes -
Ozempic cuts alcohol cravings. Liquor companies aren’t ready.
30 votes -
NarxCare score may influence who can get or prescribe pain medication
16 votes -
Thousands donate to save Florida abortion clinic amid crippling state fines
25 votes -
King County to surpass record fentanyl death toll — with four months left in 2023
15 votes -
A sesame allergy law in the US has made it harder to avoid the seed. Here's why.
28 votes -
Anti-abortion activists, including one who kept fetuses, convicted of illegally blocking a reproductive clinic in Washington, DC
37 votes -
Centene to sell GP clinics and hospitals in exit from UK market
14 votes -
Risk of death related to pregnancy and childbirth more than doubled between 1999 and 2019 in the US, new study finds
58 votes -
Maryland reports first locally acquired malaria case in forty years
16 votes -
A single reform that could save 100,000 lives across the USA immediately
24 votes -
The hidden fee costing US doctors millions every year
22 votes -
Provisional suicide deaths in the United States, 2022
12 votes -
How one doctor in the USA keeps practicing, despite a long string of sanctions, fines, and lawsuits
30 votes -
Why haven’t we made it safer to breathe in US classrooms?
9 votes -
The impact of vaccines and behavior on US cumulative deaths from COVID-19
9 votes -
Private equity firms in US health insurance - the private-equity backed health insurer Friday Health Plans shut down under order by Colorado state regulators in July
27 votes