-
+20 +1
New Pfizer antiviral and ivermectin, a pharmacodynamic analysis
-
+4 +1
Analysis: Large pharma companies do little new drug innovation
Among their top-selling drugs, 76% of Pfizer's and 89% of J&J's were developed by other companies and account for nearly 90% of revenues.
-
+17 +1
New treatment destroys head and neck cancer tumours in trial
A new cancer treatment can wipe out tumours in terminally ill head and neck cancer patients, scientists have discovered. In a landmark trial, a cocktail of immunotherapy medications harnessed patients’ immune systems to kill their own cancer cells and prompted “a positive trend in survival”, according to researchers at the Institute of Cancer Research (ICR), London, and the Royal Marsden NHS foundation trust.
-
+11 +1
Gut bacteria may reduce drug effectiveness suggests study
Common medications can accumulate in gut bacteria, a new study has found, altering bacterial function and potentially reducing the effectiveness of the drug.
-
+4 +1
Can blood from young people slow aging? Silicon Valley has bet billions it will
The Spanish firm Grifols helped set off a kerfuffle last year when it, along with other firms, offered nearly double the going price for blood donations for a COVID-19 treatment trial. Brigham Young University in Idaho had to threaten some enterprising students with suspension to keep them from intentionally trying to contract COVID-19. The trial failed, however, and now the Barcelona-based firm is hoping to extract something far more valuable from the plasma of young volunteers: a set of microscopic molecules that could reverse the process of aging itself.
-
+1 +1
Top Ways To Cut The Costs On Your Doctor Visits - AtoAllinks
If you are like the majority of Australians, you are overpaying for health care. Healthcare bills can be costly even with medical insurance. The sum of cash you pay on...
-
+15 +1
Magic shrooms: UAB studies benefits for addiction, pain
Psychedelic drugs creating hopes for breakthroughs in depression, anxiety, pain and addiction are being tested at UAB. The university is one of a handful in the nation conducting trials with psilocybin, the active ingredient in hallucinogenic mushrooms.
-
+22 +1
Anti-Vaccine Activists Use A Federal Database To Spread Fear About COVID Vaccines
The largest U.S. database for detecting events that might be vaccine side effects is being used by activists to spread disinformation about COVID-19 vaccines. Known as the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, or VAERS, the database includes hundreds of thousands of reports of health events that occurred minutes, hours or days after vaccination. Many of the reported events are coincidental — things that happen by chance, not caused by the shot. But when millions of people are vaccinated within a short period, the total number of these reported events can look big.
-
+19 +1
Amazon Wants to Eat Health Care Next
The tech giant may be opening its own pharmacies, and Google wants to mine patient data. The goal is not to fix a broken system but to exploit it. A few years ago, attending a tech conference that catered to an industry-friendly audience, I listened as a venture capitalist praised the upcoming possibilities for growth in the U.S. health care market.
-
+13 +1
Katie Porter PRESSES pharma CEO on industry's lies
Big pharma maintains drugs prices are massive because of the cost of drug R&D.
1 comments by kxh -
+15 +1
Paracetamol may be no better than a placebo in many cases
A review of paracetamol for 44 common pain conditions found no strong evidence to support its use in many instances. Paracetamol is also known as acetaminophen, Panadol, Tylenol.
-
+4 +1
Why People Don't Trust Pfizer's Covid Vaccine
Why do people believe in conspiracy theories? Michael Shermer, a famous skeptic, was forced to admit that one of the reasons is that some of them are true. In his research he found that the fact that some conspiracy theories are real feeds people’s suspicion and makes them susceptible to the belief in others that are far less credible.
-
+12 +1
Americans pay more for prescription drugs than anyone else. Can Amazon Pharmacy change that?
An Amazon Prime membership already gets you deals on retail goods, snappy deliveries and access to video-streaming content. Now, the e-commerce behemoth says it will also get you free two-day deliveries at the newly-announced Amazon Pharmacy, as well as savings on generic and brand-name medication.
-
+19 +1
Amazon launches Amazon Pharmacy for prescription medicine delivery
Amazon is making its biggest push into the healthcare industry yet with the launch today of Amazon Pharmacy: a new service offering home delivery for prescription medication.
-
+22 +1
Trump signs executive order to lower drug prices
United States President Donald Trump announced on Sunday he has signed an executive order to reduce drug prices in the US. "My Most Favored Nation order will ensure that our Country gets the same low price Big Pharma gives to other countries. The days of global freeriding at America’s expense are over and prices are coming down FAST! Also just ended all rebates to middlemen, further reducing prices," the president tweeted.
-
+16 +1
Millions of us take drugs for high blood pressure – is it worth it?
Hypertension affects one in four adults and is usually treated with medication, even though lifestyle changes can reduce blood pressure. Here's what you need to know
-
+24 +1
We're on the verge of AI developed drugs becoming a reality
There’s plenty of hype around AI and we will see some disappointments. But in the case of drug discovery, this technology has already had a significant effect.
-
+17 +1
Pharma Giant Fails To Mention (For 18 Years) That US Government Helped Fund A Key Patent Used In Drug That Has Generated $53 Billion In Sales So Far
Many drugs are eye-wateringly expensive and companies maintain it's because of development costs, but in fact, many new drugs are made possible thanks to ground-breaking early work by academics in universities or institutes, not in companies.
-
+21 +1
New drug-pricing data shows stunning hikes—one whopping 667% increase
One listed reason for raising prices was "market conditions."
-
+12 +1
When big companies fund academic research, the truth often comes last
Most medical research is funded by industry, not public sources. And industry puts pressure on researchers in many ways, from guiding the research question to suppressing unfavourable findings.
Submit a link
Start a discussion