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Search results for: opioids

Makers of Fast-Acting Opioids Will Have to Pay for Training—FDA

Michael Erman  |  September 29, 2017

NEW YORK (Reuters)—Makers of fast-acting opioids will have to fund voluntary training for healthcare professionals who prescribe the drugs, including education on safe prescribing practices and non-opioid alternatives, the course  said on Thursday. The FDA sent letters to 74 manufacturers of immediate-release opioids, notifying them that they will have to fund the development of courses…

Filed under:Drug UpdatesEducation & Training Tagged with:course fundingfast-acting opioidsopioid drug companiesU.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

DEA Proposes Cutting Production of Come Opioids

Reuters Staff  |  August 7, 2017

(Reuters)—The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) on Friday proposed a 20% reduction in the manufacture of certain commonly prescribed opioid painkillers, as well as other controlled substances for next year. The proposal comes as U.S. regulators and lawmakers take steps to limit the supply of opioids—a class of drugs that include prescription painkillers and heroin—to…

Filed under:AnalgesicsDrug Updates Tagged with:Opioid abuseopioid crisisOpioids

Oversupply of Opioids after Surgery Helps Fuel Opioid Epidemic

Ronnie Cohen  |  August 3, 2017

(Reuters Health)—More than two-thirds of surgery patients in a recent study had prescription opioids left over after they recovered from their operations, and the vast majority failed to safely store or dispose of the often misused and abused pills, researchers say. “Unused opioids that have been prescribed for pain after surgery serve as an important…

Filed under:Drug Updates Tagged with:opioid crisisopioid epidemicoverprescribingunused opioids

More Than a Third of U.S. Adults Prescribed Opioids in 2015

Andrew M. Seaman  |  August 2, 2017

(Reuters Health)—The U.S. needs to curb excessive opioid prescribing and improve access to pain management techniques, suggests a new government study. Researchers found that more than one third of U.S. adults were prescribed the medications in 2015 and many also misused the drugs. “A very large proportion and large number of adults use these medications…

Filed under:AnalgesicsDrug Updates Tagged with:Drug Safetydrug useOpioid abuseopioid crisisOpioids

U.S. State, Local Government Lawsuits Over Opioids Face Uphill Battle

Nate Raymond  |  June 5, 2017

BOSTON (Reuters)—A growing number of U.S. states, counties and cities are filing lawsuits accusing drug companies of deceptively marketing opioid painkillers to downplay their addictiveness, but some lawyers say the industry’s highly regulated nature could pose a hurdle to their success. Ohio on Wednesday became the latest, and largest, state or local government to bring…

Filed under:AnalgesicsDrug Updates Tagged with:Legal

FDA Update: New Boxed Warnings for Opioids & Benzodiazepines; Plus New Drug Safety Labeling Changes Database

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  October 5, 2016

Due to serious side effects from the combined use of opioids and benzodiazepines, the FDA has issued boxed warnings for both types of medication…

Filed under:AnalgesicsDrug Updates Tagged with:benzodiazepinesDrug SafetyDrug Safety Labeling Changes (SLC) databaseFDAFood and Drug AdministrationOpioidssafety warning

U.S. Justice Department to Push Prosecutors on Opioids

Reuters Staff  |  September 18, 2016

WASHINGTON (Reuters)—The U.S. Justice Department will enlist federal prosecutors to help fight the nation’s opioid crisis by sharing information on overprescribing doctors and coordinating with public health officials to address addiction, USA Today reported on Friday. “You can’t just have an enforcement strategy alone,” Attorney General Loretta Lynch told the newspaper in an interview. She…

Filed under:AnalgesicsDrug Updates Tagged with:Department of JusticeOpioidsOverdosePain

Most Seniors Won’t Abuse Opioids After Surgery

Andrew M. Seaman  |  August 13, 2016

(Reuters Health)—Seniors who receive prescriptions for opioid drugs to control pain after major surgery don’t usually end up addicted to them, research from Canada shows. One year after having major surgery, less than 1% of patients over age 66 were still taking opioids, according to a report in JAMA Surgery. Recent research has suggested the…

Filed under:AnalgesicsDrug Updates Tagged with:AddictionelderlyOpioidsPainPain Managementseniorsurgery

U.S. Republicans Reject Democratic Funding Proposals for Opioids

Reuters Staff  |  July 7, 2016

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republican lawmakers in U.S. Congress on Wednesday rejected two Democratic amendments to provide nearly $1 billion in funding for bipartisan legislation intended to combat America’s opioid epidemic, aides said. The rejection, which came during a meeting of U.S. House of Representatives and Senate negotiators on the measure, could undermine Democratic support for…

Filed under:Legislation & AdvocacyProfessional Topics

Lilly Says New Type of Pain Drug Could Reduce Need for Opioids

Ransdell Pierson  |  May 28, 2016

(Reuters)—Eli Lilly and Co. on Tuesday said it and partner Pfizer Inc. aim to seek approval by 2018 for a new type of pain drug that could be an alternative to opioids for osteoarthritis, chronic back pain and cancer pain. The Indianapolis drugmaker said tanezumab, given by injection every eight weeks, could be a far…

Filed under:AnalgesicsConditionsDrug UpdatesPain Syndromes Tagged with:Chronic painOpioidsosteoarthritis (OA)PainPain Managementtanezumab

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