ay Taylor Swift à Toronto: la manne en novembre By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 19:00:00 EST On prévoit des retombées économiques de 282 millions de dollars pour la ville. Full Article
ay Sueurs froides pour deux Swifties québécoises: leurs billets volés... puis retrouvés à temps pour le concert de Taylor Swift vendredi à Toronto By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:50:00 EST Florence et Marianne seront finalement au concert de leur idole, vendredi, à Toronto, mais elles ont eu toute une frousse. Full Article
ay «Le Journal» à Toronto: aimer Taylor Swift n’a pas de prix By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 19:00:00 EST Des Swifties ont dépensé des centaines de dollars à la boutique de souvenirs de la vedette, à son ouverture, mardi. Full Article
ay Several bread and bun brands recalled due to pieces of metal, says Canada's food safety agency By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 09:33:19 EST The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has issued a recall for several brands of bread and buns due to pieces of metal in the products. Full Article News/Business
ay Cineplex says it will make online purchase fee more obvious following penalty By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 16:52:38 EST Cineplex Inc. says it will continue adding a fee to some online ticket purchases after being penalized earlier this fall for alleged deceptive marketing, but it will adjust how the charge is communicated to moviegoers. Full Article News/Business
ay Emissions from oilsands forecast to continue rising as oil production increases, says report By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 13:48:42 EST Total greenhouse gas emissions from Alberta's oilsands have remained relatively flat for the last few years but could climb yet again in 2024 as the industry ratchets up oil production, according to a new report released Thursday. Full Article News/Canada/Calgary
ay Port of Montreal employer threatens lockout Sunday unless union agrees to 'final' offer By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 15:50:41 EST The employers' association is threatening to lock out workers at 9 p.m. Sunday if a deal isn't reached. Full Article News/Canada/Montreal
ay Talks break off in B.C. port dispute as bid to end multi-day lockout fails By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 00:08:19 EST Contract negotiations in a labour dispute that has paralyzed container cargo shipping at British Columbia's ports since Monday have been called off. It comes as more than 100 organizations representing industries from automotive and fertilizer to retail and mining urged the government to do whatever it takes to end the work stoppage. Full Article News/Canada/British Columbia
ay Lockout at Port of Montreal could be 'catastrophic' for economy, port authority says By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:48:11 EST A lockout at the Port of Montreal began Sunday night. The CEO of the Montreal Port Authority says if the dispute between dockworkers and the Maritime Employers Association drags on, it will have disastrous consequences for the economy. Full Article News/Canada/Montreal
ay Freeland says Canada's borders are 'safe and secure' following Trump's election win By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 04:00:00 EST Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland is reassuring Canadians as officials worry president-elect Donald Trump’s promise to deport millions of undocumented immigrants could send them northward. Full Article News/Politics
ay Ahead of Remembrance Day, poll suggests most Canadians don't know much about their history By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 04:00:12 EST As people gather to remember those who fought and died to protect this country in past wars, a new poll suggests many Canadians know little about their country's history. Full Article News/Politics
ay Former U.S. commerce secretary says he 'can't imagine' Trump would tax Canadian energy By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 15:26:01 EST Donald Trump's former commerce secretary says he 'can't imagine' the U.S. president-elect would want to tax Canadian energy, despite campaign promises about imposing a global tariff when he takes office in January. Full Article News/Politics
ay 'Keep trying. Dream': The life and message of Murray Sinclair honoured at memorial service By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 13:13:23 EST The family of the late Murray Sinclair remember his life as they are joined by members of the public, the Canadian Governor General and prime minister during a commemorative service at Winnipeg's Canada Life Centre to honour his legacy Sunday afternoon. Full Article News/Canada/Manitoba
ay Thousands gather in Ottawa for Remembrance Day tribute to Canada's veterans By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:00:00 EST Thousands of veterans, military personnel and their supporters gathered at Canada's National War Memorial in Ottawa to remember those who have fought and died to protect this country and its freedoms. Full Article News/Politics
ay National chief says ICC should probe disappearances of children from residential schools By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 04:00:00 EST The national chief of the Assembly of First Nations says the International Criminal Court should investigate the disappearance of Indigenous children from Canadian residential schools. Full Article News/Politics
ay Trudeau says Canada and the U.S. will 'do good things together' with Trump in the White House By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 14:31:01 EST Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sounded an upbeat note Tuesday on the prospect of working with U.S. president-elect Donald Trump, saying Canada has dealt with his trade threats before and can do so again. Full Article News/Politics
ay The ultimate takeaways By www.theaustralian.com.au Published On :: Fri, 16 Dec 2016 13:00:00 GMT Must-have gadgets and accessories for savvy travellers. Full Article
ay Why I hated being on Baywatch By www.news.com.au Published On :: Tue, 21 Jun 2016 05:24:00 GMT SURFING legend Kelly Slater has revealed how miserable he was starring alongside Pamela Anderson on Baywatch. Full Article
ay Découvrez l’étrange rituel du chanteur de Coldplay By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 08:04:53 EST Chris Martin a intrigué les badauds lundi en embrassant le tarmac de l’aéroport de Sydney. Full Article
ay «Le Journal» à Toronto: la Ville Reine prête pour Taylor Swift By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 19:00:00 EST Les signes de l’arrivée imminente de la vedette et sa tournée «Eras» sont nombreux dans la métropole canadienne. Full Article
ay Guylaine Tanguay tiendra la vedette de la mouture québécoise de la comédie musicale «Ménopause»: «J’ai besoin de me mettre en danger» By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 05:00:00 EST Elle tiendra la vedette de l’adaptation québécoise du succès mondial Ménopause aux côtés de Claudine Mercier, Catherine Sénart et Geneviève Charest. Full Article
ay Holiday in Greenland? New airports aim to entice tourists By www.bbc.com Published On :: Sun, 20 Oct 2024 23:27:58 GMT The Arctic territory hopes that three new airports will pave the way for direct flights from the US and Europe. Full Article
ay Nerves frayed in Canada and Mexico over US trade relations By www.bbc.com Published On :: Mon, 21 Oct 2024 23:02:56 GMT As Americans prepare to vote in the presidential election, Canadians and Mexicans mull the likely impact. Full Article
ay Bolt drivers win right to holiday and minimum wage By www.bbc.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 15:13:19 GMT Thousands of drivers on ride-hailing and food delivery app Bolt have won a legal claim to be classed as workers. Full Article
ay Homeworkers get 24 more minutes of sleep a day By www.bbc.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 16:33:35 GMT Office for National Statistics data suggests homeworkers get more sleep and exercise on average. Full Article
ay Unemployment rises as pay growth slows again By www.bbc.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 10:29:28 GMT The rate of unemployment stood at 4.3% in the three months to September, up from 4% the previous quarter. Full Article
ay Flagged carers out on full pay By www.theaustralian.com.au Published On :: Wed, 11 Jan 2017 13:00:00 GMT Four workers red-flagged in a 2014 review of SA’s troubled child protection agency remain suspended on full pay. Full Article
ay Union Ayush secretary to inaugurate 61st Ayurveda Seminar at Kottakkal Aryavaidyasala in Kerala on November 10 By www.pharmabiz.com Published On :: Thursday, November 7, 2024 08:00 IST The secretary of the Union Ayush Ministry, Dr Rajesh Kotecha, will inaugurate the 61st Ayurveda Seminar organized by the Kottakkal Aryavaidyasala (Kottakkal AVS) on November 10 at Kottakkal in Full Article
ay Karnataka Ayush sector upbeat on recent amendment to renew manufacturing & loan licenses to perpetuity By www.pharmabiz.com Published On :: Monday, November 11, 2024 08:00 IST The recent amendments brought by the Union Ministry of Ayush to the Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, 1945 are significant, as they introduce new regulatory requirements for the manufacturing and sale of traditional Full Article
ay Ayush and herbal products exports grow over 10 per cent in H1 FY25 By www.pharmabiz.com Published On :: Monday, November 11, 2024 08:00 IST Exports of Ayush and herbal products for the first six months of the current fiscal has reported a 10.34 per cent growth, as compared to an almost stagnant exports reported in the same period of previous fiscal Full Article
ay UK HealthTech on full display at ABHI UK pavilion For MEDICA 2024 By www.medicalplasticsnews.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 14:30:00 -0000 The Association of British HealthTech Industries (ABHI) is excited to unveil a diverse delegation of UK HealthTech innovators at MEDICA 2024, one of the world's largest and most influential medical trade fairs. Full Article
ay Informa Connect's Copay, Reimbursement and Access Congress By feeds.feedblitz.com Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 04:30:00 +0000 Informa Connect's Copay, Reimbursement and Access Congress November 18-20, 2024 | Hilton Penn’s Landing in Philadelphia, PA Drug Channels readers save 10% with code USAVE24* The access and affordability landscape is undergoing a seismic shift. Evolving legislation, disruptive market forces and the ever-growing complexities of cost sharing programs threaten patient adherence and commercialization strategies. Are you ready? A program driven by marketplace insights and led by industry trailblazers, Copay, Reimbursement and Access Congress is back November 18-20 and will deliver up-to-date insights necessary to enhance patient affordability, ensure program sustainability and navigate the regulatory landscape. In a time where remaining compliant has never been more complex and program innovation has never been more important, be sure to join your industry counterparts to drive adherence, access and commercialization forward. Why attend the Copay, Reimbursement and Access Congress? Keeping up with shifting market dynamics in the midst of maximizing access, while also meeting business objectives is a challenging task and brings about many questions for access professionals. Is your program sustainable and innovative to better support patients? Accumulators, maximizers, AFPs – What are your next steps to ensure effective reimbursement strategies? In an election year, what is the future of health policy? Experts will tackle these questions and more as the industry comes together to benchmark best practices to accelerate access and commercialization. Do not miss your chance to join seasoned leaders, your peers and leading solution providers as they navigate marketplace trends and dive into the impact coupons, benefit design, accumulators, maximizers, alternative funding programs and drug pricing legislation have on patient affordability and out-of-pocket costs. This is your chance to gain critical insights on industry standards, forward-thinking strategies to optimize your copay and cost sharing programs and so much more. Content highlights: Over 20 hours of content, including 7+ dedicated sessions to help decipher copay legislation Crucial perspectives from Pfizer, Sanofi, Janssen, Teva, Ascendis Pharma, Melinta Therapeutics, GSK, HIV + Hepatitis Policy Institute and more Insights direct from enforcement agents on the top trends and actions within the copay and patient services space Illuminating case study, Navigating the Patient Journey in a Shifting Copay Landscape from Spark Therapeutics 465 minutes of valuable in-person networking with colleagues and counterparts to expand your network and establish powerful partnerships Additional content access through Streamly, a platform that gives you 12-month access to all of the available conference content** to review at your leisure And more! Download the agenda and register today—Be sure to use your exclusive promo USAVE24 to save 10% off* of your registration See you there! *Cannot be combined with other offers, promotions or applied to an existing registration. Other restrictions may apply. **Pending speaker permissions The content of Sponsored Posts does not necessarily reflect the views of HMP Omnimedia, LLC, Drug Channels Institute, its parent company, or any of its employees. To find out how you can promote an event on Drug Channels, please contact Paula Fein (paula@DrugChannels.net). Full Article Sponsored Post
ay Why PBMs and Payers Are Embracing Insulin Biosimilars with Higher Prices—And What That Means for Humira (rerun with an FTC update) By feeds.feedblitz.com Published On :: Tue, 01 Oct 2024 10:30:00 +0000 This week, I’m rerunning some popular posts while we put the finishing touches on DCI’s new 2024-25 Economic Report on Pharmaceutical Wholesalers and Specialty Distributors. Last week, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) released the redacted version of administrative complaint against the three largest pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). The FTC rightly calls out how the gross-to-net bubble can raise patients’ out-of-pocket costs, while also acknowledging how rebates can reduce a plan's (but not the patient’s) costs. Apparently, the FTC believes that PBMs’ customers are pretty dumb, because PBMs are able to prevent plans from “appreciating” such healthcare financing dynamics. Section V.E. of the complaint (starting on page 23) focuses on the PBMs’ alleged unlawful conduct related to preferring high-list/high-rebate insulin products over versions with lower list prices. I thought it would therefore be fun to take the Wayback Machine to November 2021, when I wrote about this specific topic.Below, you can review my commentary about the warped incentives behind Viatris’ dual-pricing strategy for its interchangeable biosimilar of Lantus. Much of the FTC’s description of the drug channel aligns with my commentary. But before you fist pump too hard for Ms. Khan’s FTC, you should pause to reflect on the agency’s legal theories in light of plans’ revealed preferences. The Food & Drug Administration (FDA) recently approved the first interchangeable biosimilar insulin product: the insulin glargine-yfgn injection from Viatris. Read the FDA’s press release. Alas, I’m sad to report that the warped incentives baked into the U.S. drug channel will limit the impact of this impressive breakthrough. Viatris is being forced to launch both a high-priced and a low-priced version of the biosimilar. However, only the high-list/high-rebate, branded version will be available on Express Scripts’ largest commercial formulary. Express Scripts will block both the branded reference product and the lower-priced, unbranded—but also interchangeable—version. Meanwhile, Prime Therapeutics will place both versions on its formularies, leaving the choice up to its plan sponsor clients. Consequently, many commercial payers will adopt the more expensive product instead of the identical—but cheaper—version. As usual, patients will be the ultimate victims of our current drug pricing system. Below, I explain the weird economics behind this decision, highlight the negative impact on patients, and speculate on what this all could mean for biosimilars’ future. Until plan sponsors break their addiction to rebates, today’s U.S. drug channel problems will remain. Read more » Full Article Benefit Design Biosimilars Costs/Reimbursement Gross-to-Net Bubble PBMs
ay No More Delays: Accelerating Therapy Starts by Embedding Hub Services in Provider Workflows By feeds.feedblitz.com Published On :: Fri, 25 Oct 2024 05:00:00 +0000 Today’s guest post comes from Shabbir Ahmed, Chief Commercial Officer at CareMetx. Shabbir explains the barriers that providers face when dealing with branded portals for multiple products. He then maintains that patients can access new therapies more quickly when the manufacturer relies on a brand-agnostic hub connected to a large network of providers and integrated with the systems those providers use daily. To learn more, download CareMetx’s new 2024 Patient Services Report: Revealing Manufacturer Priorities: Patients Naturally Take Center Stage. Read on for Shabbir’s insights. Read more » Full Article Guest Post Sponsored Post
ay Drug Channels News Roundup, October 2024: Humira Price War Update, PA vs. Providers, IRA vs. Physicians, My AI Podcast, New DCI Jobs, and Dr. G on Copayments By feeds.feedblitz.com Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 10:30:00 +0000 Eeek! It's time for Drug Channels’ Halloween roundup of terrifying tales to share with your ghoulish fiends. This month’s tricks and treats: Spooky! Blue Shield of California frightens away the gross-to-net bubble with its Humira biosimilar strategy Vampiric! Prior authorization sinks its fangs into providers’ time Wicked! How the IRA will put a stake through specialty physician practices Eerie! Google’s monstrous AI podcasts leave me petrified Zoinks! Join the vampire hunters at Drug Channels Institute Plus, Dr. Glaucomflecken tells us a frightening tale of copayments. P.S. Stretch out your arms and join the ever-growing zombie horde who shamble after me on LinkedIn. You’ll find my ghostly rantings along with commentary from the undead hordes in the DCI community. Read more » Full Article Average Sales Price (ASP) Biosimilars Buy-and-Bill Gross-to-Net Bubble Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 PBMs Physicians
ay FDA Funding: Agency Mission “At Risk”, Says Alliance President By www.fdamatters.com Published On :: Thu, 28 Feb 2013 19:56:17 +0000 FDA’s mission is “at risk” because of inadequate funding. So says Alliance for a Stronger FDA President Diane Dorman, testifying before the FDA Science Board. Her remarks come 5 years after the Science Board made a similar declaration, concluding that decades of underfunding had left FDA without the resources to fulfill its mandate and make science-based decisions. Congress responded with more monies for the agency, but since then the FDA’s workload has increased even faster. The current threat to FDA comes from two sources: four major new laws to implement since 2009; and changes in the environment in which FDA operates, notably acceleration of globalization and increasing scientific complexity. Ms. Dorman’s remarks are reprinted below. If you care about FDA, FDA Matters urges you to read her testimony, go to the Alliance’s site (www.StrengthenFDA.org) and join. Full Article Drug Approval and Access FDA and Congress FDA and Industry FDA Appropriations
ay NPRA Malaysia trials new timelines for variation applications By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:13:55 +0000 <p>In May 2024, Malaysia’s National Pharmaceutical Regulatory Agency (NPRA) announced that it will trial new timelines for variation applications of registered pharmaceutical products and natural health supplements (TMHS).</p> Full Article
ay Risk of mortality drops in COVID-19 patients given anticoagulation within a day of hospital admission, research finds By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Fri, 12 Feb 2021 13:58 GMT Starting COVID-19 patients on prophylactic anticoagulation within 24 hours of being admitted to hospital has been linked to a reduced risk of mortality. Full Article
ay Overseas candidates will be allowed to sit registration assessment remotely, regulator says By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Tue, 16 Feb 2021 12:05 GMT The General Pharmaceutical Council has said most candidates living in countries with a two-hour or more time difference from the UK will be able to apply to sit the registration assessment at home. Full Article
ay Health boards say around half of pharmacies have expressed interest in providing COVID-19 vaccines By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Tue, 16 Feb 2021 15:19 GMT Around half of Wales’ community pharmacies have expressed interest to health boards in providing COVID-19 vaccinations as part of the national programme. Full Article
ay RPS pays tribute to pharmacy law and ethics pioneer Joy Wingfield By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Fri, 19 Feb 2021 16:10 GMT The Royal Pharmaceutical Society has expressed its sadness at the death of Joy Wingfield, honorary professor of Pharmacy Law and Ethics at the University of Nottingham. Full Article
ay Every Unhappy PREA Study is Unhappy in its Own Way By www.placebocontrol.com Published On :: Wed, 04 Sep 2013 04:59:00 +0000 “Children are not small adults.” We invoke this saying, in a vague and hand-wavy manner, whenever we talk about the need to study drugs in pediatric populations. It’s an interesting idea, but it really cries out for further elaboration. If they’re not small adults, what are they? Are pediatric efficacy and safety totally uncorrelated with adult efficacy and safety? Or are children actually kind of like small adults in certain important ways? Pediatric post-marketing studies have been completed for over 200 compounds in the years since BPCA (2002, offering a reward of 6 months extra market exclusivity/patent life to any drug conducting requested pediatric studies) and PREA (2007, giving FDA power to require pediatric studies) were enacted. I think it is fair to say that at this point, it would be nice to have some sort of comprehensive idea of how FDA views the risks associated with treating children with medications tested only on adults. Are they in general less efficacious? More? Is PK in children predictable from adult studies a reasonable percentage of the time, or does it need to be recharacterized with every drug? Essentially, my point is that BPCA/PREA is a pretty crude tool: it is both too broad in setting what is basically a single standard for all new adult medications, and too vague as to what exactly that standard is. In fact, a 2008 published review from FDA staffers and a 2012 Institute of Medicine report both show one clear trend: in a significant majority of cases, pediatric studies resulted in validating the adult medication in children, mostly with predictable dose and formulation adjustments (77 of 108 compounds (71%) in the FDA review, and 27 of 45 (60%) in the IOM review, had label changes that simply reflected that use of the drug was acceptable in younger patients). So, it seems, most of the time, children are in fact not terribly unlike small adults. But it’s also true that the percentages of studies that show lack of efficacy, or bring to light a new safety issue with the drug’s use in children, is well above zero. There is some extremely important information here. To paraphrase John Wanamaker: we know that half our PREA studies are a waste of time; we just don’t know which half. This would seem to me to be the highest regulatory priority – to be able to predict which new drugs will work as expected in children, and which may truly require further study. After a couple hundred compounds have gone through this process, we really ought to be better positioned to understand how certain pharmacological properties might increase or decrease the risks of drugs behaving differently than expected in children. Unfortunately, neither the FDA nor the IOM papers venture any hypotheses about this – both end up providing long lists of examples of certain points, but not providing any explanatory mechanisms that might enable us to engage in some predictive risk assessment. While FDASIA did not advance PREA in terms of more rigorously defining the scope of pediatric requirements (or, better yet, requiring FDA to do so), it did address one lingering concern by requiring that FDA publish non-compliance letters for sponsors that do not meet their commitments. (PREA, like FDAAA, is a bit plagued by lingering suspicions that it’s widely ignored by industry.) The first batch of letters and responses has been published, and it offers some early insights into the problems engendered by the nebulous nature of PREA and its implementation. These examples, unfortunately, are still a bit opaque – we will need to wait on the FDA responses to the sponsors to see if some of the counter-claims are deemed credible. In addition, there are a few references to prior deferral requests, but the details of the request (and rationales for the subsequent FDA denials) do not appear to be publicly available. You can read FDA’s take on the new postings on their blog, or in the predictably excellent coverage from Alec Gaffney at RAPS. Looking through the first 4 drugs publicly identified for noncompliance, the clear trend is that there is no trend. All these PREA requirements have been missed for dramatically different reasons. Here’s a quick rundown of the drugs at issue – and, more interestingly, the sponsor responses: 1. Renvela - Genzyme (full response) Genzyme appears to be laying responsibility for the delay firmly at FDA’s feet here, basically claiming that FDA continued to pile on new requirements over time: Genzyme’s correspondence with the FDA regarding pediatric plans and design of this study began in 2006 and included a face to face meeting with FDA in May 2009. Genzyme submitted 8 revisions of the pediatric study design based on feedback from FDA including that received in 4 General Advice Letters. The Advice Letter dated February 17, 2011 contained further recommendations on the study design, yet still required the final clinical study report by December 31, 2011. This highlights one of PREA’s real problems: the requirements as specified in most drug approval letters are not specific enough to fully dictate the study protocol. Instead, there is a lot of back and forth between the sponsor and FDA, and it seems that FDA does not always fully account for their own contribution to delays in getting studies started. 2. Hectorol - Genzyme (full response) In this one, Genzyme blames the FDA not for too much feedback, but for none at all: On December 22, 2010, Genzyme submitted a revised pediatric development plan (Serial No. 212) which was intended to address FDA feedback and concerns that had been received to date. This submission included proposed protocol HECT05310. [...] At this time, Genzyme has not received feedback from the FDA on the protocol included in the December 22, 2010 submission. If this is true, it appears extremely embarrassing for FDA. Have they really not provided feedback in over 2.5 years, and yet still sending noncompliance letters to the sponsor? It will be very interesting to see an FDA response to this. 3. Cleviprex – The Medicines Company (full response) This is the only case where the pharma company appears to be clearly trying to game the system a bit. According to their response: Recognizing that, due to circumstances beyond the company’s control, the pediatric assessment could not be completed by the due date, The Medicines Company notified FDA in September 2010, and sought an extension. At that time, it was FDA’s view that no extensions were available. Following the passage of FDASIA, which specifically authorizes deferral extensions, the company again sought a deferral extension in December 2012. So, after hearing that they had to move forward in 2010, the company promptly waited 2 years to ask for another extension. During that time, the letter seems to imply that they did not try to move the study forward at all, preferring to roll the dice and wait for changing laws to help them get out from under the obligation. 4. Twinject/Adrenaclick – Amedra (full response) The details of this one are heavily redacted, but it may also be a bit of gamesmanship from the sponsor. After purchasing the injectors, Amedra asked for a deferral. When the deferral was denied, they simply asked for the requirements to be waived altogether. That seems backwards, but perhaps there's a good reason for that. --- Clearly, 4 drugs is not a sufficient sample to say anything definitive, especially when we don't have FDA's take on the sponsor responses. However, it is interesting that these 4 cases seem to reflect an overall pattern with BCPA and PREA - results are scattershot and anecdotal. We could all clearly benefit from a more systematic assessment of why these trials work and why some of them don't, with a goal of someday soon abandoning one-size-fits-all regulation and focusing resources where they will do the most good. Full Article BCPA FDA FDAAA FDASIA IOM pediatric trials PREA transparency
ay Menjelajahi Dunia Keajaiban Slot Online Pragmatic Play By biosimilarnews.com Published On :: Fri, 16 Feb 2024 09:20:08 +0000 Dunia perjudian daring telah menyaksikan kemunculan penyedia perangkat lunak yang menghebohkan, dan di antara mereka, Pragmatic Play telah berhasil menarik perhatian para pemain dengan berbagai slot online unggulan. Dalam artikel… The post Menjelajahi Dunia Keajaiban Slot Online Pragmatic Play appeared first on Biosimilarnews. Full Article News Review Tips & Trik
ay Link Daftar Situs Slot Gacor Gampang Menang Maxwin Terpercaya Hari Ini By biosimilarnews.com Published On :: Sun, 02 Jun 2024 10:34:45 +0000 Keuntungan besar dan kegembiraan yang ditawarkan oleh mesin slot online membuatnya semakin populer. Namun, dalam lautan situs slot yang ada, bagaimana Anda bisa menemukan situs slot terbaik yang dapat memberikan… The post Link Daftar Situs Slot Gacor Gampang Menang Maxwin Terpercaya Hari Ini appeared first on Biosimilarnews. Full Article News Tips & Trik
ay Dean Kamen Says Inventing Is Easy, but Innovating Is Hard By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2024 13:00:04 +0000 This article is part of our special report, “Reinventing Invention: Stories from Innovation’s Edge.” Over the past 20 years, technological advances have enabled inventors to go from strength to strength. And yet, according to the legendary inventor Dean Kamen, innovation has stalled. Kamen made a name for himself with inventions including the first portable insulin pump for diabetics, an advanced wheelchair that can climb steps, and the Segway mobility device. Here, he talks about his plan for enabling innovators. How has inventing changed since you started in the 1990s? Dean Kamen: Kids all over the world can now be inventing in the world of synthetic biology the way we played with Tinkertoys and Erector Sets and Lego. I used to put pins and smelly formaldehyde in frogs in high school. Today in high school, kids will do experiments that would have won you the Nobel Prize in Medicine 40 years ago. But none of those kids are likely in any short time to be on the market with a pharmaceutical that will have global impact. Today, while invention is getting easier and easier, I think there are some aspects of innovation that have gotten much more difficult. Can you explain the difference? Kamen: Most people think those two words mean the same thing. Invention is coming up with an idea or a thing or a process that has never been done that way before. [Thanks to] more access to technology and 3D printers and simulation programs and virtual ways to make things, the threshold to be able to create something new and different has dramatically lowered. Historically, inventions were only the starting point to get to innovation. And I’ll define an innovation as something that reached a scale where it impacted a piece of the world, or transformed it: the wheel, steam, electricity, Internet. Getting an invention to the scale it needs to be to become an innovation has gotten easier—if it’s software. But if it’s sophisticated technology that requires mechanical or physical structure in a very competitive world? It’s getting harder and harder to do due to competition, due to global regulatory environments. [For example,] in proteomics [the study of proteins] and genomics and biomedical engineering, the invention part is, believe it or not, getting a little easier because we know so much, because there are development platforms now to do it. But getting a biotech product cleared by the Food and Drug Administration is getting more expensive and time consuming, and the risks involved are making the investment community much more likely to invest in the next version of Angry Birds than curing cancer. A lot of ink has been spilled about how AI is changing inventing. Why hasn’t that helped? Kamen: AI is an incredibly valuable tool. As long as the value you’re looking for is to be able to collect massive amounts of data and being able to process that data effectively. That’s very different than what a lot of people believe, which is that AI is inventing and creating from whole cloth new and different ideas. How are you using AI to help with innovation? Kamen: Every medical school has incredibly brilliant professors and grad students with petri dishes. “Look, I can make nephrons. We can grow people a new kidney. They won’t need dialysis.” But they only have petri dishes full of the stuff. And the scale they need is hundreds and hundreds of liters. I started a not-for-profit called ARMI—the Advanced Regenerative Manufacturing Institute—to help make it practical to manufacture human cells, tissues, and organs. We are using artificial intelligence to speed up our development processes and eliminate going down frustratingly long and expensive [dead-end] paths. We figure out how to bring tissue manufacturing to scale. We build the bioreactors, sensor technologies, robotics, and controls. We’re going to put them together and create an industry that can manufacture hundreds of thousands of replacement kidneys, livers, pancreases, lungs, blood, bone, you name it. So ARMI’s purpose is to help would-be innovators? Kamen: We are not going to make a product. We’re not even going to make a whole company. We’re going to create baseline core technologies that will enable all sorts of products and companies to emerge to create an entire new industry. It will be an innovation in health care that will lower costs because cures are much cheaper than chronic treatments. We have to break down the barriers so that these fantastic inventions can become global innovations. This article appears in the November 2024 print issue as “The Inventor’s Inventor.” Full Article Invention Dean kamen Startups Bioengineering Tissue engineering
ay CVS Health Exec: Payers Need to Stop Making Behavioral Health Providers Jump Through Hoops In Order to Participate in Value-Based Care By medcitynews.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 02:02:59 +0000 Value-based care contracting is especially difficult for behavioral health providers, Taft Parsons III, chief psychiatric officer at CVS Health/Aetna, pointed out during a conference this week. The post CVS Health Exec: Payers Need to Stop Making Behavioral Health Providers Jump Through Hoops In Order to Participate in Value-Based Care appeared first on MedCity News. Full Article Daily Health Tech Payers Providers behavioral health Behavioral Health Tech CVS Health Aetna Mental Health oak street health value-based care
ay There’s an Opportunity for More Providers to Partner with the 988 Lifeline, Execs Say By medcitynews.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 23:08:33 +0000 Two executives at behavioral health care companies discussed why it’s important for provider organizations to partner with the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline during a panel at the Behavioral Health Tech conference. The post There’s an Opportunity for More Providers to Partner with the 988 Lifeline, Execs Say appeared first on MedCity News. Full Article Daily Health Tech Providers 988 Behavioral Health Tech Charlie Health Nema Health suicide hotlines
ay The Trust-Building Playbook: 5 Tips Every Digital Health Marketer Needs to Know By medcitynews.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 14:16:00 +0000 Building trust while simultaneously building products, selling, recruiting, and fundraising can feel impossible. But it’s required whether you have the time or not, and it doesn’t stop no matter how big you grow. The post The Trust-Building Playbook: 5 Tips Every Digital Health Marketer Needs to Know appeared first on MedCity News. Full Article Daily MedCity Influencers Startups HLTH 2024 marketing in healthcare public relations trust
ay Day Three Notes – JP Morgan Healthcare Conference, San Francisco By www.lifescienceslawblog.com Published On :: Fri, 15 Jan 2016 18:12:24 +0000 Yesterday’s conference sessions surfaced interesting questions and approaches regarding the post-acute sector, bundled payment, emergency medicine and anesthesia. Post-Acute Focus: With more and more focus on the need to rationalize and re-organize the post-acute sector, we have seen multiple industry leaders start to evolve their strategies. I blogged yesterday about AccentCare’s interesting strategy in the...… Continue Reading Full Article Healthcare
ay Looking Forward/Looking Backward – Day 1 Notes from the JPMorgan Healthcare Conference By www.lifescienceslawblog.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Jan 2017 19:40:59 +0000 A large amount of wind, much discussion about the U.S healthcare, and the public getting soaked again – if you were thinking about Washington, DC and the new Congress, you’re 3,000 miles away from the action. This is the week of the annual JP Morgan Healthcare conference in San Francisco, with many thousands of healthcare...… Continue Reading Full Article Medicaid Medicare ASC health plan Medicare Advantage population health management Telehealth