This new article, 47 patients linked to meningitis infections, from CNN notes that nearly 10% of drugs administered
in the United States come from compound pharmacies, according to a 2003
Government Accountability Office report. However, there are a number of things that the reporters fail to point out. Some articles cite the tragic Franck's case involving the 21 dead horses. The Food and Drug Administration attempted to stop Franck in that case but a district court judge in Florida said it did not have any jurisdiction over veterinary compounding. The FDA appeal to the 11th Circuit Federal Court of Appeal. The case will be argued next month. In the mean time Franck was at it again, causing eye infections from human drug compounds. No one can fault the FDA in that case because the FDA had tried to stop Franck. The state board of pharmacy imposed a fine for the dead horses. The insurance companies are now suing Franck to get back their money.
Other articles fail to cite the end result of the Apothecure and Gary D. Osborn case, where human compounded drugs resulted in deaths. In that case the federal government prosecuted Apothecure and Gary D. Osborn after all the civil lawsuits. Apothecure and Gary D. Osborn pled guilty but were recently sentenced to no jail time and a $100,000 fine was imposed on both-- not much for the harm caused. But again the FDA and the United States Attorney's Office in the Northern District of Texas did take action. They did try to stop the bad compounders.
But as my previous post noted, we must have compounded drugs. No one seems to be pointing out that a lot higher percentage of compounded drugs are used on animals. That is so evident in the veterinary world where most of the drugs used for animals are either human drugs or most likely compounded drugs made special for a specific animal. What must continue to be stressed is that there is a place for compounded drugs and that there are good compounding pharmacies and pharmacists out there who do everything within their powers to follow all the rules and regulations, who have compliant sterile rooms, who spend the money to test to make sure the compound is what it is suppose to be. Tragic as the New England Compounding Center meningitis outbreak is hopefully the world of compounded drugs for both humans and animals will become a better, safer environment, not one that no longer exists.
Update: News articles are now reporting on the Apothecure and Gary D. Osborn case. Still not much coverage on why we must have compounded drugs in the United States. See previous post for a list of reasons compounded medications for animals and humans are essential.
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