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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Aug 11 2022

Full Issue

Federal Judge Finds Walgreens Likely Worsened San Francisco Opioid Crisis

Hundreds of thousands of "suspicious orders" of prescription drugs were responsible, the judge ruled. Other reports cover the rise of "tranq," or xylazine, making street drugs more dangerous; an American vitamin D "problem;" liver cancer links to forever chemicals; and more.

A federal judge ruled Wednesday that pharmacy giant Walgreens could be held liable for fueling the opioid epidemic in San Francisco by shipping and dispensing hundreds of thousands of 鈥渟uspicious orders鈥 of prescription drugs, the latest legal reckoning over America鈥檚 prescription drug crisis. (Lin, 8/10)

More on the opioid crisis 鈥

KHN: They Call It 鈥楾ranq鈥 鈥 And It鈥檚 Making Street Drugs Even More Dangerous聽

Approaching a van that distributes supplies for safer drug use in Greenfield, Massachusetts, a man named Kyle noticed an alert about xylazine. 鈥淴ylazine?鈥 he asked, sounding out the unfamiliar word. 鈥淭ell me more.鈥 A street-outreach team from Tapestry Health Systems delivered what鈥檚 becoming a routine warning. Xylazine is an animal tranquilizer. It鈥檚 not approved for humans but is showing up in about half the drug samples that Tapestry Health tests in the rolling hills of western Massachusetts. It鈥檚 appearing mostly in the illegal fentanyl supply but also in cocaine. (Bebinger, 8/11)

In other pharmaceutical and technology news 鈥

As a supplement, vitamin D has been a common staple on drugstore shelves for years 鈥 and its popularity is only growing. (Albert-Deitch, 8/10)

In the trial, all 18 patients had complete resolution of their early rectal cancer, were cancer-free for up to two years and did not need to have standard treatments of radiation chemotherapy or surgery. "We truly weren't expecting this type of response where every single patient, the tumor's gone and how quickly they responded," Dr. Andrea Cercek, who led the trial treatment, told LaPook.聽(Powell, 8/10)

A new study suggests that individuals with regular exposure to synthetic chemicals found in everyday household products have a greater likelihood of developing liver cancer.聽Researchers from the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California determined that individuals have 350% greater odds of developing the disease if they are exposed to man-made "forever" chemicals. The study, which was published in JHEP Reports earlier this week, is the first to confirm the correlation using human samples. (Nieto, 8/10)

The Food and Drug Administration, looking to accelerate access to innovative devices, has now labeled nearly 700 products as breakthroughs while they鈥檙e under development. But until recently, relatively few have reached the market. (Palmer, 8/11)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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