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The vision of injection-free insulin therapy continued to tantalize researchers. (New York Times)
FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb suggested Walgreens’ management may be winking at cigarette sales to minors — this after the agency busted one of its stores in Miami, along with a Circle K store in South Carolina.
Retired Rep. John Dingell Jr. (D-Mich.), who served nearly 60 years in Congress and had a hand in health-related legislation from Medicare to the Affordable Care Act, died at age 92 from prostate cancer. (Politico)
FDA approvals of generic drugs increased dramatically over the past 2 years — but almost half of the drugs aren’t being sold in the United States. (Kaiser Health News, CNN)
Plaintiffs in a wrongful-death suit alleged that the chief pharmacist at an Ohio hospital knew about excessive dosing of painkillers but did nothing to stop it. (ABC News)
A man quarantined at a Philadelphia hospital because of suspected Ebola ultimately tested negative for the virus. (Reuters)
One of Apple’s newest employees is an ob/gyn noted for treating Ebola-infected women. (CNBC)
TV ads for the blockbuster oral anticoagulant rivaroxaban (Xarelto) will soon include its price, as Johnson & Johnson becomes the first drug company to take that step. (Market Watch)
An outbreak of flea-borne typhus has forced Los Angeles city officials to consider ripping the carpet from some government buildings. (USA Today)
Washington state’s measles outbreak spurred a vaccination epidemic, especially in Clark County — the epicenter of the outbreak — where vaccinations in January shot up 500% compared with 2018. (Kaiser Health News)
Meanwhile, the World Health Organization warned of a growing measles problem in Europe, tied to vaccine refusal. (Reuters)
And a measles outbreak in the Philippines has grown to more than 1,500 cases, 441 in the Manila area alone. (CNN)
Go figure: Single men kinda stink and women kinda dig it. (Frontiers in Psychology)
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Source: MedicalNewsToday.com