- Pharma shells out $3B to doctors and hospitals—with Roche, Sanofi leading: CMS (fiercepharma.com)The Facts About Open Payments Data (openpaymentsdata.cms.gov)
Drug and device makers shelled out $3 billion to doctors and teaching hospitals in 2018, a 3.5% increase from the previous year, according to the Open Payments database published...by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services...Those payments include everything from royalties paid to teaching hospitals to physician speaking and consulting fees to free food and travel. The industry paid out an additional $4.93 billion for research and development...READ MORE
- This Week in Managed Care: July 5, 2019 (ajmc.com)
Laura Joszt, Managing Editor at The American Journal of Managed Care. Welcome to This Week in Managed Care from the Managed Markets News Network
- Former FDA head Gottlieb joins Pfizer board (biopharmadive.com)Warren blasts Gottlieb's jump to Pfizer, but ex-FDA chief says he's 'proud' (fiercepharma.com)
Pharma giant Pfizer...named former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb to its board of directors, less than three months after he left his post at the agency...Since departing the FDA, Gottlieb has also rejoined the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington, D.C. think tank, and New Enterprise Associates, a venture capital firm, both organizations he worked at before becoming FDA chief...Former commissioners frequently join industry boards following their tenure at the FDA. Robert Califf, Gottlieb's immediate predecessor, serves on the board of Cytokinetics, a small biotech developing drugs for neuromuscular and heart diseases...READ MORE
- CSN paramedic students 1st in state to train on portable ultrasound (reviewjournal.com)
College of Southern Nevada paramedic students are the first in the state to begin training on portable ultrasound machines that can help diagnose traumatic bleeding long before a patient arrives at an emergency room...Students in uniform practiced with the handheld devices for the first time...The devices, which will help first responders determine how to care for patients and where to send them, can also communicate patient information to emergency room doctors during transport, expediting the arrival process...“If we have a decision to make in the field, one hospital may not have the trauma surgery capabilities that are needed,” said Braiden Green, CSN’S program director of emergency medical services. “This allows us to decrease the amount of times…that a patient is moved, to get the patient to definitive care faster and improve patient outcomes.”...In rural Nevada, an on-the-spot diagnosis could determine whether a helicopter is needed, Green said, one big reason that CSN decided to pursue this technology...READ MORE
- This Week in Managed Care: July 12, 2019 (ajmc.com)
Laura Joszt, Managing Editor at The American Journal of Managed Care. Welcome to This Week in Managed Care from the Managed Markets News Network
- July 5 Pharmacy Week in Review: Vitamin D Deficiency Linked to Elevated Blood Pressure in Children, Chronic Pain is the Most Common Long-Term Effect of Cancer Treatment (pharmacytimes.com)
Nicole Grassano, PTNN, Pharmacy Week in Review, this weekly video program provides our readers with an in-depth review of the latest news, product approvals, FDA rulings and more.
- WBA’s Boots banner to close roughly 200 stores (drugstorenews.com)
Walgreens Boots Alliance is downsizing its U.K. retail footprint...The company is closing some 200 of its more than 2,500 Boots stores in the U.K., consolidating them with other Boots locations. The shutterings are part of Walgreens’ “global cost management transformation program,” which is expected to provide a good part of the funding required for its technology upgrades and development investments...In a statement, Boots UK managing director Sebastian James said the stores to be shuttered were local pharmacy stores in locations where the company has a large number of stores within close proximity...READ MORE
- July 12 Pharmacy Week in Review: Rate of Americans with History of Cancer Projected to increase; New Epinephrine Injections Available in Retail Pharmacies (pharmacytimes.com)
Nicole Grassano, PTNN, Pharmacy Week in Review, this weekly video program provides our readers with an in-depth review of the latest news, product approvals, FDA rulings and more.
- Albertsons pharmacy technicians first in Idaho trained to prescribe naloxone (drugstorenews.com)
As a new Idaho law allowing pharmacy technicians to prescribe naloxone takes effect, Albertsons announced that its Boise-area pharmacy technicians are the first in the state who have been trained to do so...The law, signed in February, makes Idaho the first state in the nation to add pharmacy technicians to the ranks of pharmacists, physicians and nurse practitioners in being able to prescribe the opioid overdose reversal drug. Idaho Gov. Brad Little also issued an executive order creating an advisory group in the state to guide healthcare decisions and strategies related to opioid misuse...“Idaho is leading other states in the steps we are taking to expand access to this critical medication and in our efforts to address the opioid crisis,” Little said. “Training pharmacy technicians and all health professionals to prescribe naloxone further reaches our underserved and rural communities. Albertsons has been a key partner in increasing the scope of practice for both pharmacists and technicians to continue improving access to beneficial and lifesaving medications.”...READ MORE
- How medication management tech helps one hospital better identify interventions (healthcareitnews.com)
CGH Medical Center pharmacists say the system’s Med Card gives patients a better way to keep track of their medications – and say using the software has helped increase clinical knowledge...At CGH Medical Center in Sterling, Illinois, preventable readmissions represent a huge financial and clinical uncertainty...
- THE PROBLEM
- PROPOSAL
- MARKETPLACE
- MEETING THE CHALLENGE
- RESULTS
Pharmacists counseled more than 650 patients in the first eight months of the program at the 97-bed facility. They identified medication interventions in nearly half of all discharges. Depending on the intervention made, these changes had a major impact on patient safety and the cost of their medications...“While we haven’t been able to measure it yet, we are looking into how this program will impact our overall readmission rates and penalties, as well as HCAHPS scores,” said Tim Dunphy, director of pharmacy at CGH Medical Center...READ MORE










