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Tag: drugs

  • Bernie Sanders Demands Probe of Proposal To Patent Taxpayer-Funded Cancer Drug | High Times

    Bernie Sanders Demands Probe of Proposal To Patent Taxpayer-Funded Cancer Drug | High Times

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    Sen. Bernie Sanders is once again keeping drug makers in check, suggesting that people living with cancer are being preyed on by greedy interests.

    On Monday, Sanders demanded a Department of Health-led investigation into a proposal to grant a company with an exclusive patent license for cancer treatment and methods, produced with public resources and a potential conflict of interest.

    The sexually transmitted infection Human papillomavirus (HPV) can lead to six types of cancer and most cervical cancer, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) reports. It can be dormant for years or cause genital warts or worse. Last month, National Institutes of Health (NIH) proposed granting Kingston, New Jersey-based Scarlet TCR a patent for a T-cell therapy for HPV, which has undergone a Phase I trial and has a Phase II trial scheduled to conclude in 2025.

    There’s no cure for HPV, but drug developers are examining T-cell therapies to combat HPV and the cancers it leads to, including Scarlet TCR. Sometimes they’re gene-engineered. (CBD is also being explored for its potential to inhibit cervical cancer cells.) 

    There’s a problem though. The patent proposal and the company’s ties to an ex-government employee and other inconsistencies were revealed in an Oct. 18 report by The American Prospect. The NIH quietly applied to be granted “an exclusive patent for a cancer drug, potentially worth hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars, to an obscure company staffed by one of its former employees,” The American Prospect reports.

    Sanders, chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, demanded a probe of the patent proposal in an Oct. 23 letter to Christi Grimm, who is inspector general of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The HELP committee also announced Sander’s open letter on Oct. 23.

    Sanders suggested the NIH is allowing a company to take advantage of a life-saving cancer drug.

    “I am growing increasingly alarmed that not only has the NIH abdicated its authority to ensure that the new drugs it helps develop are reasonably priced, it may actually be exceeding its authority to grant monopoly licenses to pharmaceutical companies that charge the American people, by far, the highest prices in the world for prescription drugs,” Sanders wrote. “One particularly egregious example has recently been brought to my attention that I believe demands your immediate attention.”

    Sanders argued that the NIH should be doing more to lower the cost of drug therapy.

    “There does not appear to be anything reasonable and necessary about granting a monopoly for a treatment that was invented, manufactured and tested by the NIH, is already in late stage trials and could potentially enrich a former NIH employee who was one of the major government researchers of this treatment,” Sanders wrote. “Based on current law and the best interest of U.S. taxpayers who paid for this cancer therapy, it would seem to make more sense for the NIH to offer non-exclusive licenses so that multiple manufacturers can produce this important cancer therapy at reasonable and affordable prices. The apparent abuse of the system by the NIH with respect to the exclusive patent license for this cancer therapy is so egregious that it has been characterized as a ‘how-to-become-a-billionaire program run by the NIH.’”

    “If accurate,” Sanders wrote, “that would be absolutely unacceptable. The NIH should be doing everything within its authority to lower the outrageously high price of prescription drugs. It should not be granting a monopoly on a promising taxpayer-funded therapy that could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars for cancer patients in a way that appears to exceed its statutory authority.”

    The American Prospect story pointed out that the NIH offering an exclusive license for a cancer treatment to a company with no website or SEC filings staffed by a former NIH employee

    More Ethical Drug Research

    There is historical precedence on life-saving drugs or therapies that didn’t need a patent: On Jan. 23, 1923, Sir Frederick G. Banting, James B. Collip, and Charles Best, discoverers of insulin, were awarded U.S. patents on insulin and the methods used. They all sold these patents to the University of Toronto for $1 each. Banting said, “Insulin does not belong to me, it belongs to the world.” 

    While things have changed and the price of insulin skyrocketed, new efforts are being made by the drug’s top three makers to make insulin affordable once again.

    When the polio vaccine was found to be 90% effective, its discoverer wasn’t in it for the money. On April 12, 1955, Edward R. Murrow asked Jonas Salk who owned the patent to the polio vaccine. “Well, the people, I would say,” Salk responded. “There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?”

    In today’s pharmaceutical world, some of those values are lost.

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    Benjamin M. Adams

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  • Pilot pleads not guilty to attempted murder after ‘trying to turn off plane’

    Pilot pleads not guilty to attempted murder after ‘trying to turn off plane’

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    A PILOT has appeared in court on a staggering 83 counts of attempted murder after allegedly trying to shut down a plane’s engine “while high on magic mushrooms”.

    Joseph Emerson, 44, was off duty on Sunday when he allegedly carried out the dangerous stunt during a flight from Washington to San Francisco.

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    Joseph Emerson appeared in court on 83 counts of attempted murderCredit: AP
    The off duty pilot allegedly attempted to shut down a plane's engine while he was high on magic mushrooms

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    The off duty pilot allegedly attempted to shut down a plane’s engine while he was high on magic mushroomsCredit: Reuters
    He pleaded not guilty to all 83 counts

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    He pleaded not guilty to all 83 countsCredit: Facebook

    The rogue Alaska Airlines pilot allegedly attempted to shut off the engines’ fuel supply.

    He appeared before court in a blue prison jumpsuit and sported a prink t-shirt underneath.

    During the speedy hearing, Emerson did not personally address the court but did speak to his attorney from behind a glass partition.

    He pleaded not guilty to all 83 counts of attempted murder through his lawyer. 

    Earlier today, Emerson was also charged in federal court for interfering with flight crew and also faces severe state charges of 83 counts of attempted murder and reckless endangerment.

    According to a his testimony, Emerson said “I’m not okay” before grabbing two red fire handles which would have shut down the plane’s engines.

    He later told officials: “Yeah… I pulled both emergency shut off handles because I thought I was dreaming and I just wanna wake up.”

    According to a federal affidavit, Emerson had allegedly become depressed around six months ago, and claimed it was his first time taking magic mushrooms.

    The plane made an emergency landing in Oregon before Emerson was arrested. 

    In a statement from the District of Oregon Department of Justice, they said: “Emerson attempted to grab and pull two red fire handles that would have activated the plane’s emergency fire suppression system and cut off fuel to its engines. 

    “After a brief physical struggle with the pilots, Emerson exited the cockpit”.

    Emerson had allegedly been speaking to the planes two pilots before he is claimed to have pulled off his crazed stunt and told them that he had been an employee there for 10 years, before throwing his headset across the cockpit.

    After reaching for the two red levers, one of the pilots “wrestled” him off before declaring an in-flight emergency and telling flight attendants Emerson was “losing it”.

    The two red levers were the fire suppression system which includes a T-shaped handle for each engine.

    “If the T-handle is fully deployed, a valve in the wing closes to shut off fuel to the engine. In this case, the quick reaction of our crew to reset the T-handles ensured engine power was not lost,” Alaska Airlines said.

    The panicked duo then turned off autopilot and changed course for Portland, according to the affidavit.

    One Emerson had exited the cockpit, he was spotted “peacefully walking to the back of the aircraft” and told one flight attendant he “just got kicked out of the flight deck”.

    According to the court documents, he then said: “You need to cuff me right now or it’s going to be bad.”

    Flight attendants allegedly had to place restrain Emerson’s wrists and seat him in the rear of the aircraft.

    He then reportedly tried to grab the handle of an emergency exit and a flight attendant stopped him by placing her hands on top of his.

    One of the attendants also claimed he made statements including “I messed everything up”, and “he tried to kill everybody”.

    In a recorded interview with cops, Emerson said he believed he was having a “nervous breakdown” and had not slept in 40 hours.

    “I didn’t feel okay. It seemed like the pilots weren’t paying attention to what was going on. They didn’t… it didn’t seem right,” he told cops. 

    Emerson ultimately denied taking any medication but admitted to cops he had been using psychedelic mushrooms for the first time.

    The captain allegedly told ground control at the time of the incident: “We’ve got the guy that tried to shut the engines down out of the cockpit.

    “He doesn’t sound like he’s causing any issue in the back right now, and I think he’s subdued.

    “Other than that, yeah, we want law enforcement as soon as we get on the ground and parked.”

    There were 80 passengers including children along with four crewmembers on board the plane at the time.

    Aubrey Gavello, who was on board the plane, said a flight attendant told passengers that Emerson suffered a mental breakdown.

    “After we did land and the gentleman was escorted off, the flight attendant got back on the speaker and said, plain and simple, ‘He had a mental breakdown. We needed to get him off the plane immediately’,” she told ABC.

    Alaska Airlines released a statement at 6pm on October 23 saying: “On Oct. 22, Alaska Airlines Flight 2059 operated by Horizon Air from Everett, WA (PAE) to San Francisco, CA (SFO) reported a credible security threat related to an off-duty Alaska Airlines pilot, identified as Captain Joseph Emerson, who was traveling in the flight deck jump seat.

    “Captain Emerson unsuccessfully attempted to disrupt the operation of the engines.

    “The Horizon Captain and First Officer quickly responded, and the crew secured the aircraft without incident.

    “Engine power was not lost despite the off-duty pilot’s attempt to shut down the engines by engaging the Engine Fire Handle, also known as the fire suppression system. 

    “All passengers on board were able to complete their journey with a new crew and aircraft.

    “We are grateful for the patience of our guests throughout this event and are reaching out to each of them individually to discuss their experience and check-in on their well-being.

    “Captain Emerson joined Alaska Air Group as a Horizon First Officer in August 2001. In June 2012, Emerson left Horizon to join Virgin America as a pilot. 

    “Emerson became an Alaska Airlines First Officer following Alaska’s acquisition of Virgin America in 2016.

    “He became an Alaska Airlines Captain in 2019. 

    ‘Throughout his career, Emerson completed his mandated FAA medical certifications in accordance with regulatory requirements, and at no point were his certifications denied, suspended or revoked.”

    He claimed it was his first time taking the psychedelic drug

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    He claimed it was his first time taking the psychedelic drugCredit: Facebook
    Emerson joined Alaska Air Group as a Horizon first officer in August 2001 and in 2012, left Horizon to join Virgin America as a pilot

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    Emerson joined Alaska Air Group as a Horizon first officer in August 2001 and in 2012, left Horizon to join Virgin America as a pilotCredit: Facebook

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    Taryn Kaur Pedler

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  • Roche is using AI to find the hardest-to-find lung cancer patients, with a potential blockbuster drug on the line

    Roche is using AI to find the hardest-to-find lung cancer patients, with a potential blockbuster drug on the line

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    Roche Holding AG’s lung cancer drug scored a big win against a standard therapy in a study this week. Now, the Swiss drugmaker is turning to artificial intelligence to find patients who can benefit. 

    When given after surgery to remove lung tumors, Roche’s Alecensa cut the risk of either cancer recurrence or death by 76% compared with standard chemotherapy, according to results from a primary analysis of the trial released Wednesday. The drug could “potentially alter the course of this disease,” Roche Chief Medical Officer Levi Garraway said in a statement. 

    But finding patients to treat may be difficult: The study examined the effects on people with an error in a gene called ALK that’s found in only about 4% to 5% of lung cancer patients. Most of them are younger and less likely to have smoked than typical lung tumor patients, and often go undiagnosed early on. 

    To solve the problem, Roche will use an AI collaboration with Israeli tech company Medial EarlySign Ltd. to help doctors determine when to use CT scans. While the technology, called LungFlag, doesn’t currently detect ALK-positive patients, the company said on Saturday that it’s actively exploring how to expand it so they can benefit. 

    That will help find tumors before they spread and while needed surgery is still possible, said Charlie Fuchs, Roche’s head of oncology and hematology drug development. 

    “Sometimes when you really use deep data algorithms, you may find things that identify people who are non-smokers and yet at risk,” Fuchs said in an interview. “We hope more patients can be found early and benefit from this.”

    Roche has said it will file the Alecensa study results with regulators for approval. The full results were presented Saturday at the European Society for Medical Oncology meeting in Madrid. Alecensa is already approved in the US, Europe, Japan and China for patients with ALK-positive metastatic lung cancer. 

    Analysts anticipate that Alecensa will generate 1.56 billion Swiss francs ($1.75 billion) in sales this year. That it would be a blockbuster medicine even though it treats such a small portion of lung cancer patients shows that effective drugs don’t have to serve a big patient population to be scientific and financial successes, Fuchs said. 

    Subscribe to Well Adjusted, our newsletter full of simple strategies to work smarter and live better, from the Fortune Well team. Sign up for free today.

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    Naomi Kresge, Bloomberg

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  • Chilling motive of Brit wife, 38, who murdered husband, 34, as she faces hanging

    Chilling motive of Brit wife, 38, who murdered husband, 34, as she faces hanging

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    LACED with sedatives, Sukhjit Singh had no idea his favourite Biryani curry would be his last.

    The dad-of-two went to bed that night only for Ramandeep Kaur Mann, his British wife of 11 years, to smother him with a pillow.

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    Sukhjit Singh and Ramandeep Kaur Mann appeared to have a perfect marriage
    But Ramandeep is now facing the noose after masterminding a plot to kill her husband for life insurance cash

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    But Ramandeep is now facing the noose after masterminding a plot to kill her husband for life insurance cashCredit: Caters News Agency

    Her lover – Sukhjit’s childhood best friend – then burst into the room, smashing the 34-year-old’s head in with a hammer.

    Ramandeep finished him off by slitting his throat, leaving Sukhjit to bleed to death inside his own mother’s home.

    The savage murder in northern India was the culmination of a twisted plot to seize £2 million in life insurance and £100,000 in assets.

    Ramandeep, now 38, and lover Gurpreet Singh planned to start a new life with the cash.

    But their barbaric holiday murder in Basantapur, Uttar Pradesh, near the border of Nepal, was foiled.

    It was witnessed by the couple’s eldest son Arjun, then just nine.


    Do YOU have a story you want to share? Get in touch: tom.hussey@thesun.co.uk


    His twisted mum hoped sedatives in the curry would knock the lad out before she killed Sukhjit, but Arjun wasn’t hungry that night.

    He didn’t eat enough for the drugs to kick in and just after 10pm he awoke to the sound of his dad struggling as his mum smothered him.

    Arjun later told police: “My dad was great but my mum was bad and I don’t want to see her face ever because she killed my dad in front of my eyes.

    “She kept a pillow on my dad’s face and asked Gurpreet to slit his throat.”

    Police were called and immediately arrested Ramandeep and Gurpreet was nicked trying to board a flight home to Dubai.

    The horrors that unfolded that night in September 2016 were a world away from Littleover, the middle-class suburb the family hailed from in Derby.

    I got the impression she always got what she wanted

    Friend of the family

    And it was unimaginable that Ramandeep, who grew up in a large semi in a tree-lined street in Slough, Berkshire, was capable of bloody murder.

    After all, their marriage seemed perfect.

    A pal of the couple told MailOnline Sukhjit “worshipped the ground” his wife walked on.

    They added: “[He] waited on her hand and foot. I got the impression she always got what she wanted.”

    The pair met in 2002 when Ramandeep was just 17 and Sukhjit, over from India, was 20.

    They fell in love and married in 2005 and after running a pizza restaurant in Carshalton, Surrey, moved to Derby to raise their two boys.

    THE AFFAIR

    Years went by and in November 2015 the couple took their sons on holiday to Dubai to visit Sukhjit’s best pal Gurpreet.

    It was here that Ramandeep began an affair and eventually, after flying home, hatched a plan to murder Sukhjit.

    One year later, the dad, who spoiled his wife with “nice clothes and jewellery”, was discovered dead in bed, lying in a pool of blood.

    It was only in October 2023 that Ramandeep and Gurpreet were finally convicted of Sukhjit’s murder.

    Ramandeep has now been sentenced to death by hanging, her lawyers have appealed and could change the sentence to life in prison.

    Gurpreet was jailed for life and fined £3,000 but spared the death sentence.

    Ramandeep’s family claim she was set up by Sukhjit’s family in an elaborate conspiracy, claiming they wanted him dead for plans to sell family land.

    The Manns even paid to get their eldest daughter out of prison, serving remand at family friends in rural India.

    After the sentencing in India, Sukhjit’s mother told reporters her “prayers were answered”.

    It is unclear when Ramandeep will meet the hangman’s noose.

    A pal of the couple told MailOnline Sukhjit 'worshipped the ground' his wife walked on

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    A pal of the couple told MailOnline Sukhjit ‘worshipped the ground’ his wife walked onCredit: Caters News Agency
    Sukhjit, who spoiled his wife with 'nice clothes and jewellery', was discovered dead in bed in northern India

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    Sukhjit, who spoiled his wife with ‘nice clothes and jewellery’, was discovered dead in bed in northern IndiaCredit: Caters News Agency
    The horrors that unfolded that night in September 2016 were a world away from Littleover, the middle-class suburb the family hailed from in Derby

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    The horrors that unfolded that night in September 2016 were a world away from Littleover, the middle-class suburb the family hailed from in DerbyCredit: Caters News Agency

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    Tom Hussey

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  • Four minority-owned marijuana manufacturers join forces under one roof – The Cannabist

    Four minority-owned marijuana manufacturers join forces under one roof – The Cannabist

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    Finding a physical location to open a cannabis business in Denver is challenging. Ask local Sarah Woodson and she’ll tell you it’s among the biggest barriers to entry for new entrepreneurs.

    Woodson would know. In addition to opening Denver’s first legal marijuana tour bus company, The Cannabis Experience, she’s the founder of The Color of Cannabis, an organization that advocates for BIPOC representation in the industry. One of the pillars of her work is a 10-week course that supports social equity business applicants — people of color and other marginalized groups that were disproportionately harmed by the war on drugs — and helps them bring their ideas to life.

    Last year, while scouting potential brick-and-mortar locations with one of her class graduates, Woodson found a creative solution to one of the challenges facing cannabis entrepreneurs: A 10,000-square-foot warehouse in Montbello where multiple product manufacturers could share the space and, importantly, the rent.

    Read the rest of this story on DenverPost.com.

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    The Cannabist Network

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  • Olive Branch traffic stop leads to 376 lbs of seized marijuana – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Olive Branch traffic stop leads to 376 lbs of seized marijuana – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    OLIVE BRANCH, Miss. (WMC) – Police officers in Olive Branch discovered hundreds of pounds of drugs during a traffic stop.

    On Sunday morning, officers pulled over a vehicle with California tags on Hacks Cross Road, near Highway 78.

    After pulling over the vehicle, the officer searched and found 376 pounds of marijuana.

    The drugs were seized and valued at $975,000.

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    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

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    MMP News Author

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  • Using Marijuana May Protect You From COVID-19 – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Using Marijuana May Protect You From COVID-19 – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    Using Marijuana May Protect You From COVID-19 Original Author Link click here to read complete story.. … Read More

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    MMP News Author

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  • National Survey Reveals Americans Saving $5,000 a Year by Ordering Prescriptions From Canada

    National Survey Reveals Americans Saving $5,000 a Year by Ordering Prescriptions From Canada

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    93% Say Prescription Drug Costs Are Important to How They’ll Vote in the Next Election, Compared to 84% a Year Ago

    Americans choosing to import their prescription medications from licensed Canadian pharmacies report saving $4,920 a year and four times the savings compared to U.S. pharmacies, GoodRx and Amazon Pharmacy, according to survey results and price comparison analysis released today by the Campaign for Personal Prescription Importation (CPPI).

    This national CPPI survey demonstrates a remarkable trend of increasing savings for patients importing medications from Canada over the last five years. It also highlights the importance of personal prescription importation as a means of accessing affordable medication for Americans.

    Key Survey Findings

    • Average annual savings of $4,920 in 2023, as reported by Americans importing prescription medications from Canada, compared to U.S. costs, reveals a major 5-year trend:
      • In 2022, the average annual savings amounted to $3,744
      • In 2021, savings averaged $2,736
      • In 2020, savings averaged $2,940
      • In 2019, savings averaged $2,352
    • Americans importing their prescription medications from Canada reported saving an average of $410 per month, compared to U.S. costs.
    • 99% of respondents would recommend importation to their friends and family members.
    • 93% of respondents say that addressing the high cost of prescription drugs in the U.S. is important to how they will vote in the next election, compared to 84% just one year ago. 

    CPPI 2023 Survey Data Cross Tabs

    “Savings of nearly $5,000 a year on medications from Canada versus prices four times higher at U.S. pharmacies is often a matter of life and death for patients across America,” says Jack Pfeiffer, CPPI Executive Director. “While state and federal efforts aim to lower prescription drug costs, the truth is we hear from Americans every day who still can’t afford U.S. drug prices. Americans’ only immediate, safe solution to access critically necessary, affordable daily prescriptions is to order from licensed Canadian pharmacies.”

    Federal negotiation of drug prices for Medicare does not provide immediate relief from the astronomical prices that Americans pay for their life-saving medicines. The drugs subject to price negotiation will not be made available at lower cost until 2026 and it is unclear if consumers will see those lower prices. It is unlikely that any of the potential savings from this program will affect the hundreds of millions of Americans who are not eligible for Medicare. Only 10 drugs will be subject to the initial price negotiation. What’s more, the price negotiation is subject to multiple lawsuits and legislative challenges that could prevent lower prices from ever becoming a reality.  

    States have joined the battle to allow for the importation of affordable medicines from Canada. While 10 states have wholesale importation laws on the books, none are operational as none of the state programs have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The state plans face U.S. and Canadian regulatory restrictions, as well as legal challenges and opposition to wholesale importation

    Meanwhile, millions of Americans import prescription medications from abroad. 89% are over the age of 65 according to the CPPI survey. 91% cite the high cost of prescription drugs in the U.S. as the primary reason for ordering from licensed Canadian pharmacies. They rely on international pharmacies for critical daily prescription medications such as ELIQUIS and XARELTO to treat and prevent blood clots and strokes. 

    Daniel Wendell from California says, “I have had asthma since I was a child and have been on various drugs for its treatment my entire life. Generic versions of my inhaler did not work as well for me. Brand name inhaler prices in the U.S., even from a discount pharmacy, are outrageous — $400/month. I can get the same medicine from Canada for $100/month from a certified Canadian pharmacy.”

    Four Times The Savings

    CPPI price comparisons regularly demonstrate savings of 50% to 90% on commonly prescribed brand-name prescription medications from Canada compared to leading U.S. pharmacies, GoodRx and Amazon Pharmacy. Analysis of these price comparisons shows four times the savings on medications from Canada.  

    How to Find a Safe Pharmacy

    Americans need greater access to safe, reliable, and affordable medications. The importance increases for people with multiple underlying conditions, as 66% of survey respondents who report taking four or more medications can attest.

    • 80% of surveyed Americans who import their prescriptions report being referred by a trusted medical professional, friend, or family member.
    • 80% of survey respondents know how to identify “rogue” pharmacies and are savvy in their search to find an online pharmacy they can trust.
    • 99% of respondents would recommend importation to their friends and family members.

    CPPI recommends searching only certified websites for prescription drugs from licensed Canadian pharmacies. Click here for more information on how to find trusted Canadian pharmacies.

    Survey Methodology

    CPPI conducted this online survey between Nov. 15, 2022, and June 31, 2023. Based on the universe of followers of CPPI, this sample of 1,162 responses represents statistically significant findings with a standard sampling error of plus or minus 5%. All registered trademarks referred to herein belong to their respective owners.

    Source: Campaign for Personal Prescription Importation

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  • Tift Co. Sheriff’s Office makes arrest after deputies find over 12 pounds of marijuana – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Tift Co. Sheriff’s Office makes arrest after deputies find over 12 pounds of marijuana – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    TIFT COUNTY, Ga. (WALB) – The Tift County Sheriff’s Office seized firearms and over 12 pounds of marijuana, THC vapes and gummies after an independent investigation.

    The sheriff’s office says they used tips from the community and made an independent investigation to find cause for search warrants in the 600 block of Bellview Circle on Wednesday.

    A warrant was served by the sheriff’s office led to the arrest of Cody Milton, 26. The warrant also resulted in the finding of firearms and over 12 pounds of marijuana, THC vapes and gummies.

    Milton has been charged with trafficking marijuana, two counts of possession with intent to schedule 1 (controlled substance), possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime, three counts of possession with intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of school grounds and three counts of possession with intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of a housing project.

    Information and tips can be sent to the sheriff’s office online or by downloading the Tift County Sheriff’s Office mobile app.

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

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  • Bags of fentanyl discovered beneath ‘trap floor’ of NYC daycare centre

    Bags of fentanyl discovered beneath ‘trap floor’ of NYC daycare centre

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    New York City police find the narcotics a week after four toddlers were treated for opioid poisoning, including one who died.

    The owners of a New York City daycare centre where a toddler died and three others were sickened by opioid exposure last week were hiding bags of fentanyl beneath a trap door in the children’s play area, police say.

    New York City detectives were executing a search warrant on the Bronx apartment on Thursday when they found the narcotics, including a large quantity of fentanyl and other paraphernalia concealed by plywood and tile flooring. Photos shared by police showed bags full of powder inside the “trap floor” a few steps away from a shelf of children’s toys.

    The grim discovery came nearly a week after four children at the daycare in the Bronx apartment were treated for opioid poisoning. One of the victims, 1-year-old Nicholas Dominici, is believed to have died from the exposure.

    The daycare centre operator, Grei Mendez, and a tenant of the building, Carlisto Acevedo Brito, were charged with murder of “depraved indifference” in Dominici’s death. Authorities are still seeking a third individual, Mendez’s husband and a cousin of Brito.

    Prior to finding the drugs beneath the trap door, police had already announced the discovery of a kilogramme (2.2lb) of fentanyl that was stored near mats that children used for sleeping along with multiple devices used by traffickers for mixing drugs and pressing it into bricks.

    Federal prosecutors said Mendez, 36, took steps to cover up the drug operation on September 15 shortly after realizing that some of the children in her care were not waking up from their naps.

    Before alerting first responders, she called her husband, authorities said. He was seen on surveillance footage entering the building moments later, then leaving through a back alley with multiple shopping bags.

    “All of that happened while the children, the babies, were suffering from effects of fentanyl poisoning and in desperate need of help,” Manhattan US Attorney Damien Williams said at a press conference on Wednesday.

    During a federal court appearance in Manhattan, a lawyer for Mendez said she had no knowledge of the drug operation while suggesting her husband was responsible for the narcotics. Brito, 41, did not speak during his court appearance.

    Both face up to life in prison if convicted on federal charges of possession with intent to distribute narcotics resulting in death and one count of conspiracy. They were also charged in state court with murder, manslaughter and assault.

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  • Hunter Biden’s Gun Case Isn’t Just Unusual — It’s Possibly Unconstitutional

    Hunter Biden’s Gun Case Isn’t Just Unusual — It’s Possibly Unconstitutional

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    When a grand jury indicted Hunter Biden last week for buying a gun in 2018 despite using crack cocaine, the legal logic was clear: You can’t own a gun if you use illegal drugs, and he clearly did both.

    The Navy Reserve had discharged the president’s son four years earlier after he tested positive for cocaine, and he discussed his crack addiction in his 2021 autobiography, “Beautiful Things.”

    That gives special counsel David Weiss substantial proof that Biden lied when he signed the required ATF form pledging that he did not use illegal drugs so that he could buy a .38-caliber revolver — and that he possessed the gun illegally because of his drug use.

    But the seemingly straightforward case is also very unusual. Federal prosecutors almost never file stand-alone charges against drug users who buy or possess guns.

    In the rare cases in which they do, prosecutors usually have hard evidence in the form of physical guns and drugs that were discovered in the defendant’s possession. It’s usually after a drug search or traffic stop turns up those guns and drugs.

    In this case, law enforcement never apprehended Biden with drugs, or even the gun.

    “I can’t recall a single case like this,” said former U.S. Attorney for North Dakota Tim Purdon, who has both prosecuted and defended dozens of federal firearms cases. “I was an active practitioner in that space for 20 years.”

    Stanford Law School professor John Donohue said it was “incredibly unusual” for the gun and drug possession charge against Hunter Biden to be prosecuted, “especially since he didn’t do anything wrong with the gun, other than possess it.”

    SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

    The list of celebrities who have openly discussed possessing firearms during times that likely overlap with illicit drug use includes podcaster Joe Rogan, actor Brad Pitt, and members of hip-hop group Cypress Hill, whose first album describes possessing guns and marijuana simultaneously in nearly every song.

    In theory, the FBI could go chase any of these people down based on that information alone. In practice, federal law enforcement rarely charges these crimes at all.

    “It’s hard to find cases where they just charge someone with this,” said Dru Stevenson, a professor at South Texas College of Law Houston. “It’s almost always incident to a drug bust. That can happen because of a traffic pullover and they find drugs in the car. They do the drug arrest and they find the guy with a gun, so it’s an extra charge.”

    Without such hard evidence, proving that drug abuse coincided with a gun purchase or possession can become tricky.

    “Beyond reasonable doubt is a very high standard,” Purdon said. “To prove that someone was a drug user in possession of a firearm, an ideal case would be a blood test taken within an hour of a person handling a firearm that showed the presence of a drug. Without evidence of that sort, I think a lot of prosecutors would be concerned about carrying the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”

    The Justice Department does not routinely publish prosecution data broken down by charging statute. But of the 7,373 firearms offenders sentenced in 2021, the U.S. Sentencing Commission identified only 5.3% as prohibited possessors of firearms because they were drug users. That amounts to about 390 offenders nationwide, or a little more than half a percent of the federal criminal caseload at the district level.

    “It’s incredibly unusual for this to be prosecuted, especially since he didn’t do anything wrong with the gun, other than possess it,” said Stanford Law School professor John Donohue. “And he only had the gun for a matter of days ― it wasn’t a long period.”

    Hallie Biden, the widow of Hunter Biden’s brother Beau, discovered the gun within a couple of weeks of the purchase and threw it in a dumpster behind a grocery store. A man later found it in the trash while looking for recyclables.

    “I don’t think there’s any doubt that the fact that he’s related to the president is harming his prospects here,” Donohue added. “Probably hundreds of thousands or millions of people have done what Biden has done, and no one has prosecuted them or thought to prosecute them.”

    “I can’t recall a single case like this. I was an active practitioner in that space for 20 years.”

    – Former U.S. Attorney for North Dakota Tim Purdon

    Even half a percent of the federal criminal caseload likely exaggerates the Justice Department’s focus on drug-using gun possessors. Prosecutors often decline these cases.

    Prosecutors are most likely to pursue charges for possessing guns while using drugs when they suspect the alleged offender is involved in more serious criminal conduct. Federal prosecutors have charged suspected drug dealers and potentially violent political extremists with possessing guns and drugs at the same time, either to secure a conviction or ratchet up pressure for a plea deal, according to the Dallas Morning News.

    “When you dig into this and you try to find when this case gets charged, it looks like it gets charged as a tag-along charge to more serious cases of felon-in-possession and things like that,” Purdon said.

    Lying on ATF Form 4473, the other major charge that Biden faces, is almost never prosecuted at all, according to data made public by The Washington Post through the Freedom of Information Act. The form requires gun buyers to pledge that they can legally own firearms.

    One disqualification that applicants have to answer “yes” or “no” to is whether they are “an unlawful user of, or addicted to, marijuana or any depressant, stimulant, narcotic drug, or any other controlled substance.”

    In Delaware in fiscal year 2019, the same state and time frame of Biden’s alleged firearm offenses, the U.S. attorney didn’t prosecute a single case against someone lying on ATF Form 4473 about drug use.

    When prosecutors did pursue cases against people lying to buy guns, they were usually more serious, typically involving straw purchases.

    One woman bought two pistols for her boyfriend, a felon under investigation for attempted murder at the time. Investigators recovered one of the guns after he died in a shootout with police.

    Another man bought a Ruger 10/22 in a straw purchase, then handed the rifle off to someone who used it in a home invasion. A third woman bought a pair of pistols at a pawnshop to give to her drug dealer as payment.

    Explosive Second Amendment Law

    Complicating matters further, the Biden indictment comes in the midst of a Supreme Court-mandated overhaul of Second Amendment rights.

    In last year’s landmark case New York State Rifle and Pistol Assn. v. Bruen, the conservative-dominated court held that New York could not keep qualified applicants from obtaining a concealed handgun permit by requiring them to name a specific threat to their safety.

    The majority opinion, penned by Justice Clarence Thomas, went on to contend that courts do not have to weigh states’ interest in public safety at all when assessing the constitutionality of gun restrictions. Instead, the Bruen standard only considers gun laws constitutional in cases where they fit within a tradition of gun regulation that can trace its origins to sometime between 1791, when the Bill of Rights was signed, and the end of the Civil War.

    That novel and vague standard has created a tidal wave of new constitutional challenges to long-standing gun laws, with lower courts overturning state assault weapons bans, age restrictions for handgun purchases and regulations on possessing firearms with scrubbed serial numbers.

    One of the clearest targets for Second Amendment challenges is the provision of the Gun Control Act of 1968 that banned drug users from owning guns.

    The wave of marijuana legalization since California legalized medical use in 1996 has created a situation in which many otherwise law-abiding gun owners become felons if they use cannabis, even in legal states. Major cases in several states have challenged the law barring marijuana users from possessing firearms as unconstitutional.

    The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a conviction last month on constitutional grounds against Mississippi man Patrick Daniels, who was apprehended in his vehicle with a semi-automatic rifle, a pistol and some marijuana. The 11th Circuit will hear oral arguments next month in a constitutional challenge to gun restrictions on medical marijuana patients filed by a group of plaintiffs including former Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried.

    Winning gun rights for crack users has less of a social movement behind it, but the energy behind marijuana could have implications for Hunter Biden.

    The Supreme Court will give public signals about its evolving thinking on gun rights on Nov. 7, when it’s slated to hear USA v. Rahimi, in which the 5th Circuit overturned a decades-old federal law barring domestic abusers from possessing guns.

    With Biden expected to plead not guilty, his case may be among the many legal challenges that ultimately reshape gun legislation in America.

    There’s no guarantee that the case will go very far, however. Federal defendants almost never take their cases to trial. Last year, about 8% of them had their cases dismissed, while almost 90% pleaded guilty.

    Biden himself almost avoided indictment on the gun charges through a plea deal that fell apart. He still faces federal prosecution for alleged tax violations and the looming possibility of future legal problems tied to his business dealings overseas. That pressure may give him and his legal team an incentive to keep working toward a new plea deal.

    And special counsel Weiss also has an incentive to avoid pushing too hard on a prominent case with the potential to rewrite gun law.

    “I don’t think that the government wants to settle this question,” Purdon said. “I think they’re afraid of what the answer might be.”

    Like many legal scholars, Donohue, the Stanford law professor, sees the Bruen decision as vague and impractical, making it hard to guess whether the Supreme Court will ultimately uphold, limit or overturn prohibitions on drug users possessing guns.

    “The problem with the Bruen decision is it literally makes no sense in any way,” Donohue said. “I have a feeling that they may want to pull back a little bit on Bruen. But you never know with them. They seem so confused. They might just double down on Bruen and say, ‘You can’t prohibit any of this stuff.’”

    Justice Thomas’ requirement in the Bruen ruling for a historical analog to uphold a gun restriction, however, could work in Biden’s favor in the unlikely event that the Supreme Court does take the case.

    “In 1791, there was no crack cocaine,” Donohue said.

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  • Son of drug kingpin El Chapo pleads not guilty to US trafficking charges

    Son of drug kingpin El Chapo pleads not guilty to US trafficking charges

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    Ovidio Guzman was extradited from Mexico on Friday and faces multiple charges over the alleged trafficking of drugs, including fentanyl.

    Ovidio Guzman, one of the sons of jailed Mexican drug lord Joaquin Guzman, better known as El Chapo, has pleaded not guilty in a court in the United States to multiple charges, including drug trafficking and money laundering.

    Guzman, one of El Chapo’s four sons, appeared in court in Chicago on Monday, a few days after his extradition from Mexico.

    During a brief hearing under tight security, Guzman, wearing an orange jumpsuit with his ankles shackled, listened to the proceedings through a Spanish interpreter, according to the Chicago Tribune.

    He entered a not-guilty plea to multiple drug trafficking, money laundering and firearms charges, the Department of Justice said in a statement.

    Known by the alias El Raton or The Mouse, he is accused of conspiring to ship cocaine, fentanyl, heroin, methamphetamine and marijuana into the US.

    His father, El Chapo, was extradited from Mexico to the US in 2017 and convicted two years later. He is now serving a life sentence for drug trafficking and murder in a maximum-security prison.

    The US has said El Chapo’s four sons, together known as The Chapitos or The Little Chapos, inherited control of his Sinaloa Cartel after his conviction.

    Three of the 66-year-old’s other sons have also been indicted in the US.

    Ovidio Guzman was captured in the city of Culiacan in northern Sinaloa on January 5.

    Following his arrest, cartel members set vehicles on fire and created mayhem, an echo of the massive shootouts in 2019 when the younger Guzman was arrested but quickly freed to avoid bloodshed.

    Two of the six counts Guzman faces in the US carry a mandatory life sentence, prosecutors said, according to the Chicago Tribune. The US agreed not to pursue the death penalty as part of its extradition negotiation with Mexico, the daily said.

    Guzman will be held in custody until his trial and is next due in court in November.

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  • Ovidio Guzman, son of feared Mexican drug lord ‘El Chapo’, extradited to US

    Ovidio Guzman, son of feared Mexican drug lord ‘El Chapo’, extradited to US

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    Ovidio ‘the Mouse’ Guzman was flown across the border from a prison in Mexico to face drug charges in the US.

    Ovidio Guzman, 32, a son of jailed Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, has been extradited to the United States, where he is wanted on fentanyl trafficking charges, Mexican and US authorities said.

    US Attorney General Merrick Garland said on Friday that Ovidio Guzman – who is known by the alias “The Mouse” – had been extradited, calling it the latest step in US efforts to attack “every aspect” of the drug trafficking operations run by the Sinaloa Cartel long associated with the Guzman family.

    “I am also grateful to our Mexican government counterparts for this extradition,” Garland said in a statement.

    “The fight against the cartels has involved incredible courage by United States law enforcement and Mexican law enforcement and military service members, many of whom have given their lives in the pursuit of justice,” he said.

    “The Justice Department will continue to hold accountable those responsible for fuelling the opioid epidemic that has devastated too many communities across the country.”

    Guzman, one of the heirs to his father’s trafficking empire, was briefly arrested in the northern city of Culiacan in 2019 but released on the orders of Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador to avoid bloodshed when his cartel struck back following his arrest.

    The Mexican army used Black Hawk helicopter gunships against the cartel’s truck-mounted heavy machine guns. The cartel’s gunmen hit two military aircraft forcing them to make emergency landings and then sent gunmen to Culiacan city’s airport where military and civilian aircraft were also hit by gunfire.

    The violence killed 30 people in Culiacan, including 10 military personnel.

    The son was captured again in January after an intense firefight in the northern Mexican state of Sinaloa.

    Mexican media including news network Milenio reported that Guzman had been taken out of a maximum security prison in central Mexico to be flown across the US border.

    The US government asked for Guzman’s extradition in February so he could face drug charges in a US court.

    In April, US prosecutors unsealed sprawling indictments against Guzman and his brothers, known collectively as the “Chapitos”.

    They laid out in detail how following their father’s extradition and eventual life sentence in the US, the brothers steered the cartel increasingly into synthetic drugs like methamphetamine and the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl. The indictment said their goal was to produce huge quantities of fentanyl and sell it at the lowest price.

    The Chapitos are also known for their grotesque violence that appeared to surpass any notions of restraint shown by earlier generations of cartel leaders.

    They have denied the allegations of drug trafficking.

    In 2021, the US Department of State offered a $5m reward for information leading to Ovidio’s arrest or conviction.

    His father, “El Chapo” Guzman, rose to prominence at the helm of the Sinaloa Cartel and was extradited to the US in 2017 after twice escaping from prison in Mexico.

    The elder Guzman is now at a high-security “supermax” prison in the state of Colorado.

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  • We should all support Biden’s war on Big Pharma

    We should all support Biden’s war on Big Pharma

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    “This time, we beat Big Pharma”, United States President Joe Biden tweeted, after finally giving his government the power to negotiate the price of 10 prescription drugs, including medicines used to treat diabetes, blood cancer and kidney disease.

    Through these negotiations, it’s expected that millions of Americans will save a small fortune, as the price of drugs provided through the government’s national insurance programme tumble. The pharmaceutical giants are furious. For decades they have been able to charge Americans with public insurance whatever the market will bear for their products. Big Pharma, as these giants are known by their detractors, has now launched multiple legal actions to protect its monopoly power.

    By European standards, Biden’s actions are moderate. Most countries negotiate the price of drugs purchased by public health systems. While drug prices are still high across Europe, putting severe strain on overburdened health systems, they are a fraction of the price paid by Americans. What makes Biden’s action so significant is precisely that, up to now, Big Pharma has always had the upper hand in the US, using its power to extract whatever profits it likes from the American public. Despite the unpopularity of the industry, only a few brave politicians would stand up to it.

    What’s changed? First, it’s difficult to overstate the impact of the so-called “opioid crisis” on American society. Hundreds of thousands of Americans have died from opioid overdoses. The real scandal is that the major contributor to this epidemic was a drug company called Purdue Pharma, which spent years pushing an opioid called OxyContin on patients. The drug is so strong and addictive that it shouldn’t be prescribed for any but the most serious, end-of-life, pain. But Purdue spent a fortune cajoling doctors into prescribing the drug for even moderate pain, pretending there was little chance of getting hooked. The levels of addiction and death that followed hollowed out whole towns, as can be seen in the recent dramatisation by Netflix, Painkiller.

    So the opioid crisis has created mass hostility to the pharma industry. But there’s something deeper going on too, a realisation that these corporations, which we assume are inventing the life-saving medicines of the future, are actually seriously failing in that task.

    A big wake-up moment was the COVID-19 pandemic. In the run-up to the pandemic, Big Pharma had little interest in researching pathogens that might cause a major epidemic, or indeed in researching vaccines full stop. They simply didn’t represent the sort of jackpot that, say, a new cancer drug could produce.

    The research that had been done into coronaviruses was carried out with public money. Once the pandemic struck, that public funding was multiplied many times over: Big Pharma was handed billions of dollars to bring vaccines to us as fast as possible. But then, the intellectual property was privatised. Big Pharma owned vaccines created using public money, and got to decide who produced them, at what price, and who got to buy them. Corporate executives, employed to maximise their shareholder returns were in charge of who lived and who died.

    The Biden administration was horrified when Moderna’s vaccine – almost entirely paid for by the public purse – was making Moderna’s CEO into a multibillionaire, while the US government seemingly had little power to get the vaccine know-how shared and produced more widely. Moderna seemed more interested in legal action to shore up its control of this technology – even going as far as refusing to recognise three government scientists as co-inventors on some of its patents.

    Pfizer’s vaccine did involve some private funds but was still made with vast sums of public money. Imagine the horror of the US administration when Pfizer tried to charge the government an eye-popping $100 a dose – on a vaccine that seems to have cost somewhere between $0.95 and $4 to produce. One former official accused them of “war profiteering” while another complained, “It’s not even their vaccine.”

    COVID-19 was not a one-off. Almost all medicines receive substantial public funding. Meanwhile, the folks we think create medicines – Big Pharma – actually invent very few new drugs. Rather, these corporations behave like hedge funds – buying up the monopoly rights to produce medicines which others have made. They then aggressively squeeze everything they can out of this intellectual property – even if it means the vast majority of humanity has no access to medicines.

    Just look at the drug known as Humira, a treatment for diseases like Crohn’s and rheumatoid arthritis. The technology behind Humira was created at Cambridge University, and the drug itself was devised by a spin-off company. At some point in the 2000s, AbbVie effectively bought the company and the rights to Humira. They spent some money on the drug but, according to a US congressional committee, a large part of that money was “dedicated to extending the company’s market monopoly.” They then jacked up the price 470 percent from its launch price. In the US, Humira costs around $77,000 for a year’s supply. Even in Europe, the price means the drug, where available, is often rationed.

    The distrust that this behaviour had bred is by no means restricted to Biden’s administration. Price-jacking on insulin in the US forces one in four US diabetics to ration their medication. To overcome the problem, California, Michigan and Maine have all started looking at public manufacturing, with California allocating $100m to make insulin through a public enterprise at close to cost price, available to all.

    While Big Pharma is ripping off Americans, and breaking health systems across Europe, it’s also failing to provide the medicines people across the world most need. The search for goldmine drugs means research into diseases suffered by less wealthy people, in less wealthy countries, takes a back seat. So does research into potentially catastrophic epidemics or new-generation antibiotics. Even though antibiotic resistance is likely to lead to tens of millions of deaths a year in coming decades, it’s simply not profitable enough for corporations used to making eye-watering returns.

    Biden’s recent action against Big Pharma is a sign that things may be beginning to change. But he’ll have to go much further if we’re to build a medicine model which realises the right to healthcare of everyone in the world. Across the world, governments need to back medical research and development, build public manufacturing infrastructure and ensure that the know-how produced is open knowledge, fostering sharing and cooperation. The medicines we need are too important to be treated as financial assets. It’s time for change.

    The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

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  • Six killed in Peru in clash between military and Shining Path rebel group

    Six killed in Peru in clash between military and Shining Path rebel group

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    Remnants of the Maoist rebel group once focused on overthrowing the government have turned to drug trafficking.

    At least four soldiers and two alleged members of the Shining Path rebel group have been killed in a clash in a region of Peru known for coca production.

    In a statement on Monday, the Peruvian army said that a group of soldiers was attacked in the early morning hours by rebels in the province of Huanta, part of the Andean region of Ayacucho.

    “During the confrontation, the security forces managed to kill two terrorist criminals, who fell with their long-range weapons,” the army said in a press release.

    “Unfortunately, during this action, four brave members of the armed forces died, whose remains will be transferred shortly to the city of Huamanga.” The army said three wounded soldiers were also transferred to a nearby hospital.

    Peruvian President Dina Boluarte paid tribute to the soldiers shortly afterwards on social media.

    “My deepest condolences to the families of the four courageous members of the Peruvian army who died in Putis, Ayacucho, during a confrontation with narcoterrorists,” Boluarte wrote.

    The deadly skirmish underscores fighting between the military and armed groups seeking control of the lucrative drug trade in Peru, the second-largest coca leaf producer in the world after neighbouring Colombia.

    Monday’s violence took place in the Valley of the Apurímac, Ene and Mantaro rivers, known in Spanish by the acronym VRAEM.

    Known for high levels of poverty, the VRAEM region has become infamous as a centre for cocaine production. A 2021 government report estimated that 69.3 percent of the country’s total coca leaf production during the preceding year came from the valley.

    The region has also gained a reputation as the last remaining outpost for the Shining Path, a Maoist rebel group that emerged in Peru in the 1980s. Authorities say the group often collaborates with local drug traffickers, offering them armed security.

    Monday’s violence is the second major confrontation in the VRAEM this year. In February, seven law enforcement officers were also killed in the area, in what Peru’s Interior Ministry called the deadliest single attack on police in a decade.

    “My government has ordered a frontal fight against this alliance of terrorism and drug trafficking in the VRAEM and throughout the nation’s territory,” Boluarte said at the time. “We will not allow more deaths, more violence.”

    Peru’s President Dina Boluarte has promised to crack down on what she considers ‘narcoterrorism’ in the VRAEM region [File: Angela Ponce/Reuters]

    The Shining Path played a prominent role in Peru’s internal conflict, particularly in the 1980s, when it launched a “people’s war” to violently overthrow the government and restructure society.

    The government mounted a brutal counterinsurgency to stamp out the group. Over the next two decades of fighting, an estimated 70,000 people were killed. Widespread human rights violations were committed by both the rebels and the military, according to Peru’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

    Poor, rural regions of the country such as Ayacucho, home to a large Indigenous population, bore the brunt of the suffering. The conflict largely ended in the 1990s with the death or imprisonment of most of the Shining Path leadership.

    But remnants of the group have remained active, with several hundred fighters estimated to live in the VRAEM.

    Ayacucho was a hotspot for protests against the Boluarte government after the 2022 impeachment of former President Pedro Castillo.

    A report by rights group Amnesty International accused the armed forces of employing deadly force at higher rates in regions like Ayacucho, showing “a blatant disregard for human life” that disproportionately targeted poor, rural and Indigenous protesters.

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  • U.S. health officials may re-categorizing marijuana restrictions – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    U.S. health officials may re-categorizing marijuana restrictions – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    USDA Certified Organic Tinctures and salves

    Health officials possibly re-categorizing marijuana restrictions

    It’s legal for recreational and medicinal use in New Mexico, and many other states, but there are still restrictions on pot. How does this affect New Mexico?

    NICO STARR AND KELSEY MEDINA, US HEALTH REGULATORS ARE CONSIDERING A CHANGE TO THE RESTRICTIONS ON MARIJUANA. REPORTER JULIAN PARIS EXPLAINS WHAT THIS MEANS AND HE JOINS US HERE IN STUDIO. JULIAN. YEAH, THAT’S RIGHT, SASHA. SO SO THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES IS RECOMMENDING THAT THE DRUG ENFORCEMENT AGENCY RESCHEDULE CANNABIS. NOW, AS IT STANDS, MARIJUANA IS LEGAL IN MANY STATES FOR RECREATIONAL AND MEDICINAL USE, BUT IT IS STILL CATEGORIZED AS A SCHEDULE ONE DRUG, AND THAT MEANS IT’S IN THE SAME GROUP AS DRUGS LIKE LSD, HEROIN AND METH. IF RESCHEDULED, MARIJUANA WOULD FALL UNDER A SCHEDULE THREE GROUP, WHICH WOULD MEAN BEING ON THE SAME LEVEL AS ANABOLIC STEROIDS OR KETAMINE. STATE LEGISLATORS AND CANNABIS BUSINESS OWNERS TELL US WHAT THEIR STANCE IS ON THIS ISSUE AND WHAT IT MEANS TO THEM. I DO BELIEVE THAT THERE ARE SOME MEDICINAL BENEFITS FROM CANNABIS, BUT THE HONEST ANSWER IS WE DO NOT HAVE AN EVIDENCE BASED WAY OF DECLARING THAT AT THIS POINT MARIJUANA IS HERE TO STAY, WHETHER IT’S IN NEW MEXICO OR NEW GUINEA. IT IS HERE…

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

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  • Shabu, marijuana seized in Luzon – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Shabu, marijuana seized in Luzon – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    Emmanuel Tupas – The Philippine Star

    August 28, 2023 | 12:00am

    MANILA, Philippines — Shabu and marijuana with a collective value of P14.88 million were seized in separate anti-narcotics operations in Cavite and Kalinga over the weekend.

    Pangandapon Macatiwas, 39, was arrested following a sting in Dasmariñas, Cavite that also resulted in the seizure of P4.08 million worth of shabu, according to Col. Dionisio Bartolome Jr., chief of the Philippine National Police-Drug Enforcement Group.

    In Kalinga, marijuana plants with an estimated market value of P10.8 million were seized and destroyed in Barangay Bunnay, Tinglayan. No one was arrested in the raid.

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  • Bradley Cooper Admits He’s ‘Lucky To Be Alive’ And Sober After Battle With Substance Abuse

    Bradley Cooper Admits He’s ‘Lucky To Be Alive’ And Sober After Battle With Substance Abuse

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    Bradley Cooper is thanking his lucky stars for surviving past drug and alcoholism.

    The Oscar-nominated actor opened up about his journey towards sobriety in a recent episode of National Geographic’s “Running Wild With Bear Grylls: The Challenge.” When asked by the eponymous adventurer about his “wild years,” Cooper was rather candid.

    “‘The Hangover’ was pretty career changing,” he told Grylls. “I was 36 when that happened so I was already in the game for 10 years just banging around, so I didn’t get lost in fame. In terms of alcohol and drugs, yeah, but nothing to do with fame, though.”

    The 48-year-old was “very lucky” to have accepted sobriety at 29 before the overwhelming fame took hold. Cooper, who shares a six-year-old daughter with Irina Shayk, was nearly knocked off-course when his father died of cancer in 2011.

    “I definitely had a nihilistic attitude towards life after, just like I thought ‘I’m going to die,’” Cooper told Grylls. “I don’t know, it wasn’t great for a little bit until I thought I have to embrace who I actually am and try to find a peace with that, and then it sort of evened out.”

    Cooper previously admitted he almost quit acting while starring opposite Jennifer Garner in “Alias.” He told GQ in 2013 he begged showrunner J.J. Abrams to write him off before realizing substance abuse was going to “sabotage [his] whole life” if he didn’t get sober.

    Cooper said his career opportunities after becoming sober have been “a real blessing.”

    ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images

    He famously confronted those demons for the whole world to see after co-writing, directing and starring in “A Star is Born” (2018) to critically-acclaimed results. Grylls reminded him about that between snow-blanketed tasks in the canyons of the Wyoming Basin.

    “That made it easier to be able to really enter in there,” he told Grylls. “And thank goodness I was at a place in my life where I was at ease with all of that, so I could really let myself go. I’ve been really lucky, Bear, with the roles I’ve had to play. I mean I really have.”

    “It’s been a real blessing,” he continued. “I hope I get to keep doing it.”

    Cooper’s seat at the table will surely stay open if his humility is any indication. The great outdoors could become a new refuge if it doesn’t, however, as he bravely ate a boiled bear tongue while encamped at dizzying heights and rappelled between cliffsides on his own.

    Need help with substance use disorder or mental health issues? In the U.S., call 800-662-HELP (4357) for the SAMHSA National Helpline.

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  • Marijuana and hallucinogen use, binge drinking reach highest level among adults 35 to 50 – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Marijuana and hallucinogen use, binge drinking reach highest level among adults 35 to 50 – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    Past-year use of marijuana and hallucinogens by adults 35 to 50 years old continued a long-term upward trajectory to reach all-time highs in 2022, according to the Monitoring the Future (MTF) panel study, an annual survey of substance use behaviors and attitudes of adults 19 to 60 years old. Among younger adults aged 19 to 30, reports of past-year marijuana and hallucinogen use as well as marijuana and nicotine vaping significantly increased in the past five years, with marijuana use and vaping at their highest historic levels for this age group in 2022. The MTF study is funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National Institutes of Health, and is conducted by scientists at the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research, Ann Arbor.

    While binge drinking has generally declined for the past 10 years among younger adults, adults aged 35 to 50 in 2022 reported the highest prevalence of binge drinking ever recorded for this age group, which also represents a significant past-year, five-year, and 10-year increase.

    “Substance use is not limited to teens and young adults, and these data help us understand how people use drugs across the lifespan,” said NIDA director, Nora Volkow, M.D. “Understanding these trends is a first step, and it is crucial that research continues to illuminate how substance use and related health impacts may change over time. We want to ensure that people from the earliest to the latest stages in…

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  • Is there a crime wave happening in Adelaide, and are stronger police powers working? – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Is there a crime wave happening in Adelaide, and are stronger police powers working? – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    Reports of anti-social behaviour in Adelaide’s CBD including intoxication, large gatherings, street harassment, and shop theft has seen media headlines declaring a “crime wave” in the city. 

    But are the claims accurate?

    What has been reported so far? 

    Businesses and city-dwellers have been raising concerns about anti-social behaviour in Adelaide’s CBD in recent months — especially in the North Terrace precinct.

    Law student-turned-opposition staffer Simran Bacchal said she regularly felt fearful working in her family’s Bank Street cafe, and had considered abandoning the CBD for a “safer” location.

    Simran Bacchal says she does not feel safe after witnessing violence near her family’s cafe in the North Terrace precinct.(ABC News: Isabel Dayman)

    “We would witness a crime near the cafe every single day,” she said.

    “We just don’t know what comes next — [people] might hit you, or they might get aggressive, and there have been multiple occasions where this has happened in the cafe.”

    Ms Bacchal said every Monday morning was spent cleaning “alcohol, spit and bodily fluids” from the front of the cafe, pushing her customers away.

    Owner of O’Connell’s Bookshop, Ben O’Connell, said property damage was common in the area, especially overnight, and greater police presence was always welcome.

    A man dressed in a coat looks.

    Ben O’Connell says more mental health services is needed to support those in need.(ABC News: Isabel Dayman)

    But he said he had not witnessed anything to suggest a “crime wave”.

    What do the…

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

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