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In this Issue

  • Catering to women’s health needs

    Sam’s Club last month hosted a health screening day specifically catering to the health needs of the women shopping the store with a “Support Her Health” screening offering. “Women often prioritize their families’ needs and work responsibilities over their own health and wellness, but it’s important to ensure regular health checkups don’t fall off the to-do list,” said Tara Raddohl, senior director of corporate communications at Sam’s Club.

  • No switch? No problem. OTC sales strong

    Sales of OTC medicines continued on a strong growth trajectory of more than 3%, growing by approximately $1.4 billion in dollar volume to $45.6 billion for the 52 weeks ended Oct. 2, according to IRI data. And that’s primarily organic growth from existing brands; there were no big Rx-to-OTC switches driving the kind of gangbuster growth as there were in each of the two years prior.

    (To view the full OTC Trend Report, click here.)

  • Manufacturers target women with latest lubricant launches

    A pair of personal lubricant suppliers in the last few months have launched new products specifically designed to appeal to women.

    (To view the full OTC Women's Health Report, click here.)

  • Digital, self-care to shape industry in 2017

    In 2017, how people shop, why people shop and what they’re shopping for will all be shaped by two overarching themes — access to digitized health information and wearables, as well as other Bluetooth-enabled, diagnostic-style self-care offerings.

    (To view the full OTC Trend Report, click here.)

  • FDA primes industry for GDUFA II fee structure changes

    In the nearly five years since the Generic Drug User Fee Agreement was enacted under the Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act of 2012, through the FDA’s Office of Generic Drug, GDUFA has generated some $1.5 billion in user fees and has seen 1,992 approvals issued.

    (To view the full Category Review, click here.)

  • Diabetic consumers spend 35% more on OTC products

    Today’s diabetes patients represent a coveted consumer base for retail pharmacy no matter how you characterize that diabetes spend. For example, consumers with diabetes spend 35% more on OTC products than the average consumer, noted Jeff Gregori, group VP consumer and shopper analytics for Nielsen, during a presentation at the 2016 National Association of Chain Drug Stores Total Store Expo.

  • Healthy juice drinks drive dollar growth

    While price, taste and convenience continue to be key influencers of food-shopping behavior, U.S. consumers are increasingly prioritizing health and wellness in their decision-making, and this is especially true when it comes to beverages.

    (To view the full Category Review, click here.)

  • Best of both worlds: ADA pairs its database to the computing power of IBM Watson Health

    What do you get when you pair the world’s largest database on diabetes metrics with a big data super computer that will mine, analyze and optimize that data?

    (To view the full Diabetes Report, click here.)

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