Remove 2003 Remove Healthcare Remove Prescription
article thumbnail

Direct to Patient Healthcare

Healthcare Success

Struggling with burnout while maintaining high-quality healthcare services that patients love? Tune in to our latest podcast as Lee Aase, founder of HELPCare, LLC, shares how he transitioned from his pioneering social media work at Mayo Clinic to lead an innovative membership-based direct-to-patient healthcare business.

article thumbnail

A Primer on Telepharmacy

Nixon Gwilt Law

Some of the country’s largest healthcare companies (e.g., CVS, Walgreens, and Optum) are using telepharmacy as part of their long-term strategy to deliver whole-person healthcare. Due to the success of the North Dakota Telepharmacy Project, the Board of Pharmacy in North Dakota permanently implemented telepharmacy regulations in 2003.

Medical 52
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

The Inflation Reduction Act Passed, Now What?

PM360

In April 2022, we released an article describing proposed policies from the federal government that could impact prescription drug pricing. healthcare system with major implications for the Medicare Advantage and Medicare Part D programs. On August 16, 2022, President Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) into law.

article thumbnail

Beating the Big C

Pharmaceutical Technology

” “Between 2003 and 2005 global sales for cancer-treating drugs grew by 40%.” “There’s a huge clinical need which has been undelivered for years,” says Gustav Ando, manager of the healthcare business development unit [HBDU] at Global Insight.

article thumbnail

How the U.S. election could impact the healthcare industries

Clarivate

Healthcare delivery has not been the hottest topic on the campaign trail this election season, despite sharp policy differences between the candidates and parties. In public speeches, she has suggested possibly expanding the program beyond Medicare, presumably to the commercial insurance market (covering 47% of all lives in the U.S.).