In A First, Pill Version Of Wegovy Goes On Sale Nationwide For $149
The weight loss pill is now available at pharmacies and via telehealth, and drugmaker Novo Nordisk has pledged to keep up with demand. Meanwhile, some lots of injectable Wegovy have been recalled due to contaminants in the prefilled syringe.
The first and only oral GLP-1 for weight loss in adults is now available to consumers. Drugmaker Novo Nordisk announced Monday that its daily oral Wegovy pill is now available by prescription. Consumers with prescriptions may pick up the new Wegovy pill at pharmacies nationwide or have it delivered through telehealth companies, according to Novo Nordisk. (Kindelan, 1/5)
麻豆女优 Health News:
Older Americans Quit Weight-Loss Drugs In Droves
Year after year, Mary Bucklew strategized with a nurse practitioner about losing weight. 鈥淲e tried exercise,鈥 like walking 35 minutes a day, she recalled. 鈥淎nd 39,000 different diets.鈥 But 5 pounds would come off and then invariably reappear, said Bucklew, 75, a public transit retiree in Ocean View, Delaware. Nothing seemed to make much difference 鈥 until 2023, when her body mass index slightly exceeded 40, the threshold for severe obesity. (Span, 1/6)
Multiple lots of weight-loss medication聽Wegovy聽were recalled by pharmaceutical giant Novo Nordisk because hair was found in a prefilled syringe, according to two notices published by the Food and Drug Administration聽last聽week.聽(Phillips, 1/5)
More pharma and tech developments 鈥
The stimulants Ritalin and Adderall have been used to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) for decades, but research shows they don鈥檛 act on the brain鈥檚 attention circuitry as had long been assumed. Instead, the medications primarily target the brain鈥檚 reward and wakefulness centers, according to a new study published in the journal Cell. The research, which used brain imaging data from almost 5,800 children ages 8 to 11, also pointed toward the important role that lack of sleep plays in the disorder. (Johnson, 1/6)
Alzheimer鈥檚 disease affects millions worldwide鈥攂ut confirming a diagnosis is far from simple. Doctors currently rely on costly brain scans or invasive spinal fluid tests to identify the condition鈥攎ethods that can be stressful, time-consuming and out of reach for many patients. Now, researchers say a simpler approach could be on the horizon: just a quick prick of a patient鈥檚 fingertip might one day help doctors detect the disease, which affects an estimated 7.2 million Americans age 65 and older. (Notarantonio, 1/5)
Blocking a protein linked to aging helped older mice regrow knee cartilage without using stem cells, research from Stanford University in California shows. Blocking the protein 15-PGDH also increased older animals鈥 muscle mass and endurance, they reported. (Hille, 1/5)
A smart toilet that can send health alerts and a portable, battery-powered food allergen detector are among the new gadgets thronging Las Vegas for the CES consumer tech show. (Velazco, 1/6)
Withings, the French company that pioneered the category of Wi-Fi bathroom scales, unveiled a new top-of-the-line model that monitors signs of hypertension, the latest in a wave of consumer health gadgets attempting to help manage high blood pressure. The device, called the Body Scan 2, will cost $600 in the US, making it the company鈥檚 priciest smart scale yet. (Wollman, 1/5)
Corewell Health and independent laboratory company Quest Diagnostics have completed their agreement to form a joint venture providing laboratory services. The venture, Diagnostic Lab of Michigan will be based at the Corewell Health Southfield Center in Southfield, Michigan. The facility is slated to open in the first quarter of 2027. (DeSilva, 1/5)