Thursday Jun 26 | NewburyportNews.com, Newburyport, MA
RX for Health: a cool, calm summer for you and your baby
With summer's arrival, it's a good time to revisit taking care of infants in the warmer weather.
Medical Edge: Avoiding allergens may beat effects of medicine
DEAR MAYO CLINIC: My wife bought an allergy medicine for me last spring when my allergies flared up.
Allegra Goodman: Confessions of a page counter.
As a young girl, I spent more time outside synagogues than in them. Services were long, and I always found some excuse to get away.
Albany Molecular Research (AMRI): Share price cycles in bullish 'flag' formation
The firm offers drug discovery, screening programs, libraries for screening and hit-to-lead programs, and analytical quantification of drugs and metabolites in biological samples.
AMRI officials said Wednesday that revenue should top $200 million this year for the first time in the 17-year history of the contract drug discovery and development company.
Life tends to blossom in warm weather, unless you are one of the more than 35 million hay fever or allergy suffers in the Untied States who experience mild or severe symptoms.
Allergy treatments go natural, but don't mix with traditional drugs
“Severe allergies require immediate medical attention, and those with known allergies of this sort should discuss preventative measures as well as treatments with their physicians”
Natural remedies are being seen as solutions for everything these days, even in the allergy world. via RGJ.com
The bad news is: The only free drugs I know of were available to members of Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island who have allergies. via Fool.com
“With regard to our recurring royalties from Allegra, we experienced a 15% increase in revenues, demonstrating growing product sales outside the U.S. coupled with favorable currency trends”
A bad allergy season makes some people cranky, but it helped make Albany Molecular Research rich this quarter. via Forbes.com
People often share prescription drugs
NEW YORK: In one-on-one interviews with 700 Americans, roughly 23 per cent reported loaning their prescription medications to someone else, and 27 per cent reported borrowing prescription medications. via The Times of India
What causes allergies, and what you can do about it
“And most of them will give some relief.”
Shrubs are blooming, the birds are singing, and leaves are bursting forth on the trees. via Pocono Record
Study shows many people share prescription drugs
“Allergy medicines such as Claritin or Allegra, and pain killers such as Darvoset were among the drugs most often shared. But people said they also shared antibiotics, mood medications such as Paxil or Ritalin, and even birth control pills.”
There are lots of things you can share with your friends or family members. Prescription drugs should not be on that list. via KOMOradio
Reuters
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Reuters
People often share prescription medicine: survey
“We should probably never share antibiotics -- a full course of treatment is supposed to be completed when you use them”
By Megan Rauscher
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - In one-on-one interviews with 700 Americans, roughly 23 percent reported loaning their prescription medications to someone else, and 27 percent reported borrowing prescription medications.
The medications most frequently shared (loaned or borrowed) were allergy drugs like Allegra (25 percent), followed by pain medications like Darvoset and OxyContin (22 percent); and antibiotics like amoxicillin (21 percent).
Seven percent of those interviewed said they shared mood-altering drugs like Paxil, Zoloft, Ritalin and Valium. A little more than 6 percent said they shared the prescription anti-acne drug Accutane and about 5 percent shared birth control pills. Read more
Natural Remedies Help Rub Out Allergies
Yet the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases reports that 35 million Americans endure seasonal allergies, and spring mornings are quite different for these sufferers. via ABC News
The time for allergies has come again
“All you need is the prescription and the proper paperwork from your doctor and we will administer the shot for you”
Have you ever stepped outside on a beautiful spring day, taken a nice, deep breath of that spring air and started sneezing so bad your chest hurt? Welcome to allergy season. via The Penn
BSBSRI: OTC pilot program saves patients $260K
“Because of our health-plan heritage, NextRx is able to work with our affiliated and unaffiliated health plans to review medical data with pharmacy data, to then build programs that can help members with health care costs and improve their health.”
Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island members saved $260,000 in copayments through a WellPoint NextRx pilot program that encouraged the use of over-the-counter generic drugs. via Providence Business News
Honey tickles tongue, soothes allergies
“A very small amount can be very effective”
With a single drizzle, honey can turn an ordinary wedge of Gorgonzola into a Mediterranean hors d'oeuvre, and it can make even the flakiest biscuit a breakfast work of art. via The Tennessean
Singulair and Suicidal Thoughts FDA Investigates While I Take Cymbalta
A Personal Account on Singulair and What More Can Be Done to Prevent Medication-Related Suicide Font Singulair is now under investigation by the FDA into a possible link between the allergy and asthma ... via Associated Content
New York couple blames son's suicide on popular allergy drug
“And this is what's meant for the patients”
A Queensbury, New York couple is blaming their teenage son's suicide on the allergy drug Singulair. via KSNT-TV Topeka
Sciele Expands Alliance With Sanofi-Aventis To Market Allegra...
Sciele Pharma, Inc. recently announced it has extended its alliance with sanofi-aventis by entering into a new exclusive, three-year agreement to market Allegra Orally Disintegrating Tablets and Allegra Oral ... via Pharmaceutical Online