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#pharmacy

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#StrongRoomAI, the #Melbourne #pharmacy #software #startup valued at almost $70 million (AUD) this month, has been placed into administration a week after one of its biggest investors accused it of misrepresenting its finances.
Filings with the corporate regulator show #HLBMannJudd, a consulting and accounting practice with a specialised #insolvency division, was appointed as administrator on Friday night.”

#AI <archive.md/7h9t7> / <afr.com/technology/pharmacy-so>

Replied in thread

@Alice

I'm 55+, and I rarely encounter commercials.

I do know that I need a doctor to prescribe the #HPV vax for people my age. Which is annoying af, because anyone can contract HPV, and I only recently heard that men are advised to get if if they are sexually active (I'm not, currently, though I anticipate sexing with someone in the future).

Meanwhile, my #pharmacy is pestering me to get the #RSV vax. Which, I'm not certain I'm particularly at risk of either catching it or transmitting it. The #university I applied to doesn't have a checkbox on the application for "not in the demographic that is required to get a #meningitis vax."

I'm on #marketplace insurance. I don't object to #vaccinations , but any that require me to pay for them may be delayed.

The street corner of Svaneapoteket (The Swan Pharmacy) in #Bergen in the 50s.

Founded in 1595, it was the oldest #pharmacy in #Norway until its closing in 2024. The original building burned down in the city fire of 1916, but was rebuilt. The swan was a symbol of intelligence and purity and was widely used symbols by medieval apothecaries in Finland and Denmark

Photo by Atelier K. Knudsen, via University of Bergen Library: https://marcus.uib.no/instance/photograph/ubb-kk-pk-5186.html
#Bergen #Norge #NorskPix #Historical #BlackAndWhitePhotography

"The trends for Walgreens aren’t good - it has closed a thousand stores since 2018, and plans to shut 1,200 more this year. And if you look at the gross operating income of the U.S. retail segment, it is collapsing.

I put these charts together based on data in Walgreen’s annual reports.
What’s going on? Well that’s simple. Margins are falling apart.

Galloway and Elson went back and forth on why Walgreens is flailing. The company hasn’t modernized in the age of Amazon. It has too many stores. Bad management. A dumb acquisition of VillageMD in 2021. Etc. And these would seem like reasonable causes, since lots of other retailers are dying in the face of low price competition.

But the real reason Walgreens, and the pharmacy business in general, is dying, is because of a failure to enforce antitrust laws against unfair business methods and illegal mergers. Elson touched on it when he mentioned lower reimbursement rates, but I don’t think people appreciate the full scope of what happened to Walgreens, and to the full pharmacy business in general. This is not a case of bad management, it’s a case of desperate management."

thebignewsletter.com/p/the-rea

#Florida Seeks Drug #Prescription Data With Names of #Patients and #Doctors

Federal #privacy law allows #pharmacy benefit managers to hand over limited data about individual patients in certain circumstances, but Florida’s demand for extensive information on patients and doctors could violate that law, according to experts.
#hipaa

nytimes.com/2025/03/05/health/

Federal privacy law allows pharmacy benefit managers to hand over limited data about individual patients in certain circumstances, but Florida’s demand for extensive information on patients and doctors could violate that law, according to experts.
The New York Times · Florida Seeks Drug Prescription Data With Names of Patients and DoctorsBy Reed Abelson
Continued thread

Medication is never without side effects. You don’t want to take more than needed.

Now im in my known, looking for a #pharmacy that will do customs.

Until then, I just pray overdosing for 6 months isn't harming me.

The classic, "Sorry we don't have Zumenon (Estradiol hemihydrate) in stock", followed by the "It doesn't work like that", when I ask if they have Progynova (Estradiol Valerate) in stock, since I can have either on my script.

Then after consistent pushing, they reluctantly check if they can do it, and then ask if I've had Progynova before. Of course the answer is yes. I know what I'm doing, and my doctor has told me I can have both. I've had this conversation more than once before...

#hrt#trans#pharmacy
Continued thread

She published “Benzoylations in Ether Solution,” in the prestigious J Am Chem Soc with her #pharmacy instructor. She was offered many scholarships & opted to return to Hawaii to pursue her chemistry MSc investigating the active principle of Piper methysticum. She was both 1st woman & 1st Black graduate with a master’s degree from U Hawai’i. She became the 1st Black chemistry prof at the school.⁠

Dr. Harry T. Hollmann of Kalihi Hospital in Hawai’i & acting director of Kalihi leprosy clinic, 🧵2/

Giving my kid #pedialyte and laughing re: an incident from over 20 years ago.
I'd walked to a #pharmacy one morning that was surprisingly closed. A small crowd was waiting, a staff came up and said it would be a while.
A man who looked like a pro wrestler shouted; "What the hell, man! I need pedialyte!" in a scary baritone. I piped up with:
"I'd give the man his pedialyte"
As a parent now, I realize he was likely up all night with a sick kid and at the end of his patience.😂

After a recent surgery, a family member was prescribed powerful painkillers. The #pharmacy gave us packets of "DisposeRX" to get rid of extras, but the site is cagey about what this stuff actually is

disposerx.com/drug-disposal-pa

As a #science experiment, I put a couple boring OTC pills into a pill bottle and "used as directed". It's formed an odorless, sticky goo.

It seems like something between Elmer's glue and Jell-O. Is that basically it?

In the case of potentially-harmful painkillers, could I not just stir the goo up and dollop it out to consume it?

The instructions want you to throw out the goo-bottle, but I don't see how that's significantly different than throwing out a non-goo bottle. Unless the water is activating the active ingredients this rendering them harmless...?

That's probably it. I bet I could teally just add water to the bottle to make this idea work. The gel makes it stick to the pills and non-spill.

DisposeRx, Inc.Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) - DisposeRx, Inc.Frequently Asked Questions​ What is DisposeRx? DisposeRx’s patented medication disposal packets contain a blend of solidifying materials that provide a safe solution for the disposal […]

Man with #epilepsy died in a fall after his #pharmacy gave him an IOU for his #medication when it ran out of anti-epileptic drug

44-year-old man in Leeds, died after a fall downstairs

Coroner’s death report found epilepsy was a factor, Prescribed #Tegretol but left without it as #pharmacy couldn't supply it

Was 2nd time without the drug after pharmacy couldn't supply it

1st time without medication for 10 days when he had his 1st fall

theguardian.com/society/2025/j

The Guardian · Man with epilepsy in Leeds died in fall after pharmacy ran out of drugBy Tobi Thomas

CVS Caremark is a pharmacy benefits management company hired by health insurance companies to "manage" prescription benefits. In practice, this means funneling coverage of vaccines to their own CVS pharmacies and requiring doctors to re-justify life-saving medications each and every year.

Attachment: CVS Caremark Logo

Symbol: A flat-sided blood diamond cut into the shape of a heart.

Meaning: Hard and impervious to love.

Health insurance companies are notorious for exploiting prior authorization schemes to avoid paying for care and have denied claims at alarming rates in recent years.

However, corporate consolidation of industry “middlemen” that experts say are partially to blame for the prescription drug affordability crisis has received less scrutiny from the general public,
despite efforts by lawmakers and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to shine light on the notoriously opaque and confusing corporate bureaucracy that determines the cost of medicine.

We often hear about Big Pharma selling drugs at high prices
and insurance companies dragging their feet when it comes time to pay the bill,
but the prices patients pay out of pocket for pharmaceuticals is largely shaped by the connective tissue between insurers and drug manufacturers: #pharmacy #benefit #managers, or PBMs.

PBMs have been around for decades, but the largest PBMs have merged with major insurance companies to form conglomerates,
including UnitedHealth Group’s #OptumRx.

In theory, PBMs negotiate discounts and rebates paid by drug makers that are passed onto insurance companies and their patients,
but the lack of transparency in that process has long frustrated lawmakers and regulators attempting to contain the skyrocketing cost of medicine.

The PBMs say their secret negotiations with drug companies make prescriptions more affordable for consumers,
but this system has not shown to protect patients from sticker shock at the pharmacy counter.

Nearly 30 percent of Americans say they haven’t taken prescribed medication due to cost,
and an estimated 1.1 million Medicare patients alone could die over the next decade because they cannot afford the drugs prescribed by their doctors,
according to the American Hospital Association.

The FTC reports that in 2023, the U.S. spent more than $722 billion on prescription drugs,
💥nearly as much as the rest of the world combined.

Clearly the system is not working for patients or public health,
and policy makers in both parties have increasingly focused on the PBMs
and their recent mergers with major insurance companies.

According to a two-year FTC investigation on health care conglomerates released in July,
PBMs are “powerful middlemen inflating drug costs and squeezing Main Street pharmacies.”

“We’ve heard accounts of how the business practices of PBMs may deprive patients of access to the most affordable medicines
and how doctors find themselves having to subordinate their independent medical judgment to PBMs’ decision-making at the expense of patient health,”
FTC Chair Lina Khan said in a statement at the time.
truthout.org/articles/its-not-

Truthout · It’s Not Just Denied Claims. Insurance Firms Are Hiring Middlemen to Deny Meds.Lawmakers are looking to break up massive health care conglomerates that manage nearly 80 percent of prescriptions.