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In this Issue

  • Seniors tend to ‘get the point’

    I know this older guy at my gym — I call him “The Professor,” mostly because he used to teach journalism, but also because it’s more fun to say and easier to remember than his actual name. He’s 85 now, and he says if he doesn’t get to the club to swim laps and sit in the steam room at least three times a week, he feels like he’s doing something wrong. He says he feels the same way about flu shots and all vaccinations for that matter.


  • Branded generics offer new ways to reformulate drugs

    In the classic “Arabian Nights” tale of Aladdin and his magic lamp, the evil sorcerer who made Aladdin retrieve the lamp containing the genie attempts to get it back by tricking Aladdin’s wife into giving it to him by roaming through the streets offering to trade “new lamps for old.”


  • Q&A: Upping standards

    Drug Store News spoke with Category Management Association managing partner and director of best practices Gordon Wade.

    DSN: What is the Category Management Association? What is its mission?


  • CCA roundtable focuses on role of 
retail clinics in changing health care

    PHILADELPHIA — No matter the shape healthcare reform takes in the United States, the retail clinic industry will be a crucial cog. Today, healthcare reform means 33 million additional Americans with coverage, most likely split between Medicaid and low-cost providers. That will create a significant demand for cost-efficient solutions like retail clinics. 


  • Q&A: Prez perspective

    In September, the Generic Pharmaceutical Association announced the appointment of Ralph Neas — former president and CEO of the National Coalition on Health Care — as its new president and CEO, replacing Kathleen Jaeger, who stepped down as president and CEO of the organization in May 2010. Drug Store News recently spoke with Neas about his plans and vision for the organization and the industry as a whole.


  • Changing Channels — Water filtration pitchers, single-cup packaged coffee and nickel-sized lights

    Bubble Bobble
    The 2-liter Bobble jug is designed to replace water filtration pitchers that requently take up way too much space in the refrigerator.
    Price: $29.99
    WaterBobble.com

     

  • Suppliers target growing adult acne segment

    
With more than half of women in the United States between the ages of 25 and 58 years battling some form of acne and the average age for acne patients on the rise, according to the American Academy of Dermatology, it is no surprise that sales of acne treatments have experienced an uptick at food, drug and mass. The sales trend is likely to continue as manufacturers continue to develop formulas to battle adult acne.


  • New drugs to alter HCV treatment, outcomes

    A phrase like “silent killer” sounds creepy enough on its own, but it’s an often-used one for a virus that, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, infects 1.3% to 1.9% of people in the United States.


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