Queensland, Australia Urges Remaining Women To Get HPV Shots
This article was originally published in PharmAsia News
Executive Summary
The Australian state of Queensland has launched a campaign to get unvaccinated young women to get their cervical cancer shots before the free-dose program expires June 30. The state's health chief also urged the two-thirds of the nation's women who have received the first two inoculations of the vaccine to get the third by Dec. 31. The national government intended to have all women between the ages of 18 and 26 vaccinated against the human pappilloma virus responsible for most cervical cancer. (Click here for more
You may also be interested in...
New EU Approvals
The Pink Sheet's list of EU centralized approvals of new active substances has been updated to add two new products, including Ryzneuta, Evive Biotechnology's treatment for chemotherapy-induced neutropenia.
Pair Of Deaths Linked To Recalled Vyaire Medical Respiratory Devices
The US FDA has labelled a recall of more than 6 million Airlife respiratory support devices class I. The recall covers devices manufactured in 2017 or earlier that can fail to provide adequate ventilation.
Over The Counter 2 Apr 2024: Analyzing The Spin-Out Trend In Consumer Health, With HBW’s Malcolm Spicer And Tom Gallen
In this episode, HBW Insight’s Europe and US editors bring their expertise to bear on the current the trend towards standalone OTC companies in global consumer health. We look at four major players: Haleon, which separated from GSK almost two years ago; Kenvue, soon to celebrate its first anniversary as a new company; Sanofi Consumer Healthcare, which is poised to split from its pharma parent; and Bayer, which has decided to buck the trend, holding on to its consumer health division. We discuss some of the advantages of becoming a standalone company, for example in leaning into a wider concept of self-care.