- Nevada to get quick state Supreme Court reply on execution (ktvn.com)Officials warn that expiring drugs means Dozier execution must take place before November (thenevadaindependent.com)
The Nevada Supreme Court has agreed to quickly take up the question of whether a drug company can block the use of its product in an inmate's execution...Prison officials won expedited review Friday, just minutes after filing documents saying the state faces the expiration of one of three drugs it wants to use...State Attorney General Adam Laxalt's office says it needs a high court ruling by Oct. 19...That would put twice-convicted killer Scott Raymond Dozier's twice-postponed lethal injection on track for mid-November...Dozier says he wants to die, but judges have for different reasons blocked the never-tried combination of drugs the state drew up after struggling to find lethal injection supplies...Pharmaceutical firm Alvogen says Nevada improperly obtained its sedative midazolam to use in Dozier's execution.
- Unjustified medication shortened 456 lives in a UK hospital, report says (reuters.com)Gosport hospital deaths: Prescribed painkillers 'shortened 456 lives' (bbc.com)Gosport War Memorial Hospital: The Report of the Gosport Independent Panel (gosportpanel.independent.gov.uk)
More than 450 patients died prematurely in a British hospital after they were given powerful painkillers with no medical justification, in what a damning report on Wednesday found was a “disregard for human life”...Britain’s prosecution service said it would examine whether criminal charges could be brought following the deaths at Gosport War Memorial Hospital in southern England...An independent panel found that between 1989 and 2000, there was an institutionalized regime of prescribing and administering dangerous doses of opioids at the hospital which were not clinically necessary...“There was a disregard for human life and a culture of shortening the lives of a large number of patients,” the report said, adding that warnings from nurses had been ignored and there had been a failure by police and medical regulators to protect patients.
- Novartis won’t face Swiss criminal probe over payments to Trump lawyer (biopharmadive.com)
The Swiss attorney general's office will not initiate criminal proceedings against Novartis over the $1.2 million the pharma paid a company controlled by President Donald Trump's personal lawyer Michael Cohen..."Following a detailed analysis, the OAG concluded that there was insufficient suspicion to justify opening criminal proceedings," the Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland wrote in an emailed statement...Not only was Cohen unable to deliver the sought-after advice, but recent revelations of the agreement led to accusations Novartis paid money to gain favorable treatment by the U.S. government...the deal was in place while Novartis was negotiating with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on reimbursement for its CAR-T cancer therapy Kymriah...
- Supreme Court hears arguments on untested lethal injection method for inmate who’s asking to die (thenevadaindependent.com)Nevada Supreme Court overturns lower court ban on using a paralytic in Scott Dozier execution, citing procedural issues (thenevadaindependent.com)
The Nevada Supreme Court heard oral arguments...in the case of a death row inmate who wants the state to put him to death with a lethal injection method never before used in Nevada or elsewhere...Scott Raymond Dozier, 47, is a death row inmate convicted in Clark County of the 2002 killing and dismemberment of Jeremiah Miller...also...has repeatedly expressed his desire to give up his appeals and be put to death...Dozier’s lawyers are particularly concerned that the execution protocol calls for a paralytic (cisatracurium) in addition to two other drugs (fentanyl and diazepam) meant to kill the defendant...the paralytic doesn’t serve a medical purpose but is only included to mask signs of distress, potentially hiding any indicators of a painful or botched killing...The issue the court must decide is whether the state’s use of the paralytic in the execution violates Dozier’s right, under the Nevada and U.S. constitutions, to avoid any cruel and unusual punishment...
- Opioid Task Force reconvenes at state capitol (kolotv.com)Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health - Opioid abuse in Nevada (dpbh.nv.gov)
...the Governor’s Opioid State Action Accountability Task Force met in the Capitol building in Carson City, with the conference being teleconferenced to Las Vegas...The meeting provided status reports on the four tracks - prescriber education and guidelines, treatment options and third-party payers, data collection and intelligence sharing, and criminal justice investigations that were developed during the two-day Governor’s Prescription Drug Abuse Summit in 2016...meeting was the third time the opioid state action accountability task force came together, and opioid use has been steadily going down in Nevada since it peaked in 2011
- Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes indicted for alleged fraud, out as CEO (statnews.com)U.S. Files Criminal Charges Against Theranos’s Elizabeth Holmes, Ramesh Balwani (wsj.com)
A grand jury has indicted CEO Elizabeth Holmes and...Sunny Balwani for alleged fraud at Theranos, the disgraced Silicon Valley company that once promised to revolutionize blood testing in a pitch that was too good to be true...The criminal charges filed by federal prosecutors allege that Holmes and Balwani bilked investors out of hundreds of millions of dollars while also defrauding doctors and patients through years of lies that put thousands of people in personal danger...(they) are charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and nine counts of wire fraud in the indictment, which was handed down on Thursday and unsealed on Friday. They now each face a maximum of 20 years in prison and up to $2.7 million in fines, a figure that doesn’t include any cash the government might demand as restitution for the alleged fraud...Holmes and Balwani lied brazenly about their technology’s capabilities — even though they knew it was inaccurate, unreliable, slow, and limited in terms of the tests it could perform...They marketed their blood test sold in Walgreens stores to consumers in Arizona and California, the indictment says, even though they knew it could not consistently report accurate levels of calcium, chloride, and potassium, among other medical tests. They told investors that they were using their own proprietary machines to test patients’ blood, when in fact they were using commercially available analyzers they’d purchased...
- Las Vegas behavioral health group to pay $1M for Medicaid fraud (reviewjournal.com)
A Las Vegas counseling and mental health care provider has been fined more than $1 million and placed on three years of probation after fraudulently billing Medicaid...We Care Behavioral Health Agency LLC was convicted on a gross misdemeanor charge of intentional failure to maintain adequate records...(the agency) didn’t keep documentation on when or which billed services it actually provided to Medicaid recipients
- UPDATE: Judge halts tonight’s Nevada execution, but Supreme Court could hear appeal today (rgj.com)Drug maker goes to Clark County court to stop Dozier execution (reviewjournal.com)Possible execution ‘not the talk of the town’ for Ely residents (reviewjournal.com)DOC lays out protocol for Nevada’s first execution in 12 years (reviewjournal.com)Parents of victim testified at Dozier’s murder trial in Las Vegas (reviewjournal.com)
A Nevada judge effectively put the execution of a two-time killer on hold...after a pharmaceutical company objected to the use of one of its drugs to put someone to death...Clark County District Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez disallowed the use of the drug in a ruling that came down less than nine hours before Scott Raymond Dozier, 47, was to be executed with a three-chemical injection never before tried in the U.S...The Nevada Supreme Court could hear an appeal Wednesday afternoon of the judge's ruling to halt the use of a drug in the execution of a twice-convicted killer...Supreme Court spokesman Michael Sommermeyer says that some of the seven justices are in Chicago for a Nevada State Bar Association meeting, but that the court could meet by teleconference...The state of Nevada had not yet appealed by midday. The state said it would explore whether it could appeal to the Nevada Supreme Court...
- AbbVie slammed by FDA for improper handling of Humira death complaints: report (fiercepharma.com)
A number of AbbVie products coming out of its North Chicago, Illinois, manufacturing facility have been tied to death complaints, including its mammoth blockbuster Humira, and the FDA says the drugmaker has not done enough to investigate those complaints...FDA inspectors found that AbbVie had received five complaints tied to deaths after taking Humira and Venclexta. While the drugmaker reported those, it didn't go back and compile historical data about death complaints tied to drugs coming from the same lots. It turns out those lots had been tied to another 8 to 11 complaints each...an AbbVie spokeswoman countered the FDA observation, saying the company “investigates all complaints where a death has occurred during the use of our products,” and that “written complaint procedures are in place to investigate, analyze and resolve complaints.”...The FDA also found AbbVie's procedures for handling death complaints for products made at the plant “inadequate.”...no document showed that AbbVie evaluated complaints to see if there were other ones for nearby lot numbers or different strengths, or that it examined the reserve sample...the agency also warned AbbVie for not examining reserve samples at least once a year for evidence of deterioration, and for its failure to investigate drug batches manufactured close to a problematic one.
- U.S. judge blocks DEA from suspending drug distributor over opioid sales (reuters.com)
A federal judge blocked the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration from suspending a Louisiana drug distributor from selling controlled substances over allegations it failed to identify suspicious orders of opioids that were diverted for illicit uses...U.S. District Judge Elizabeth Foote in Shreveport, Louisiana, on Tuesday entered a temporary restraining order blocking the DEA from enforcing an order issued last week that immediately suspended Morris & Dickson Co’s registration...The DEA’s order marked the first time during President Donald Trump’s administration that it had moved to immediately block narcotic sales by a distributor as the agency attempts to combat a national opioid abuse epidemic...The DEA on Friday announced it was suspending the registration of privately-held Morris & Dickson, saying the distributor failed to properly identify large, suspicious orders of drugs sold to independent pharmacies.