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Key U.S. Senators Reach Deal on Funding Children’s Health Program

Reuters Staff  |  September 13, 2017

WASHINGTON (Reuters)—Leaders of the U.S. Senate Finance Committee said on Tuesday they reached an agreement to finance a federal insurance program for millions of lower-income children and pregnant women that was due to expire at the end of the month. Republican Senator Orrin Hatch, chairman of the finance committee, and the panel’s top Democrat, Senator…

Doctors Who Take Pharmaceutical Money Use Twitter to Hype Drugs

Ronnie Cohen  |  September 12, 2017

(Reuters Health)—Some cancer doctors use Twitter to promote drugs manufactured by companies that pay them, but they almost never disclose their conflicts of interest on the social media platform, a new study shows. “This is a big problem,” says senior author Dr. Vinay Prasad, a professor at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland. “Doctors…

U.S. Tribal Patent Deal Could Impact Generic Drug Market

Jan Wolfe  |  September 12, 2017

(Reuters)—A groundbreaking deal between Allergan Plc. and a Native American tribe to shield the company’s patents in administrative proceedings could also be used be to protect them from challenges in federal court, legal experts say, potentially dealing a blow to generic competition. Allergan said on Friday it had transferred patents on its blockbuster dry eye…

Ibuprofen More Likely to Raise BP than Naproxen or Celecoxib

Anne Harding  |  September 12, 2017

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Ibuprofen boosts blood pressure (BP) more than naproxen or celecoxib in patients who take non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) to treat arthritis, according to a new substudy from the PRECISION trial. “These drugs are different with regard to BP, and ibuprofen is the worst,” Dr. Frank Ruschitzka of University Hospital Zurich in Switzerland,…

Medication Adherence for Osteoporosis Prevention

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  September 12, 2017

In a new study, patients taking denosumab had greater treatment adherence over two years than patients on alendronate and other anti-osteoporosis agents…

Visit the New RISE Dashboard!

From the College  |  September 11, 2017

Current participants of the Rheumatology Informatics System for Effectiveness (RISE) Registry can now access the RISE dashboard and receive an estimated MIPS score for the 2017 performance year. (Note: This score is only an estimation and cannot guarantee the type of future payment adjustment; only CMS can determine penalties and bonuses.) If you are a current user,…

Steroids May Increase Infection Risk in Patients with IgA Nephropathy

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  September 11, 2017

Treatment with oral methylprednisolone may be associated with an increased risk of serious adverse events, specifically infection, in patients with IgA nephropathy. Despite the five-times higher risk, study results also showed a three-times lower risk of kidney failure for the treatment group…

Rheumatology & The Gender Pay Gap

Richard Quinn  |  September 8, 2017

On average, male rheumatologists earn 16.2%—or $38,493—more than female rheumatologists. Although the data seem jarring, a closer look at it is needed to truly understand the pay gap…

U.S. Senator Reveals Results of Opioid Inquiry into Insys

Nate Raymond  |  September 7, 2017

BOSTON (Reuters)—Insys Therapeutics Inc sought to manipulate insurance payment approval for an opioid cancer pain drug called Subsys even if for inappropriate uses, according to a U.S. Senate report on the opioid crisis released on Wednesday. The report, released by Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill, said those efforts led to an Insys employee making misleading statements…

High Prevalence of Kingella Kingae in Children with Joint Infections

Anne Harding  |  September 7, 2017

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Oropharyngeal carriage of Kingella kingae is strongly associated with osteoarticular infection in young children, a case-control study done from Canada and Switzerland shows. “Most of the kids who have osteoarticular infection with Kingella kingae will also have it in their throat, so if we do a throat swab, we can identify it…

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