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ED Drugs May Boost Orgasm Hormone

August 30, 2007

New research shows that erectile dysfunction drugs such as Viagra, Levitra, and Cialis may increase production of oxytocin, a reproductive hormone released during orgasm.

That news comes from scientists at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. They tested sildenafil (Viagra’s active ingredient), vardenafil (Levitra’s active ingredient), and a related chemical called T-1032 in lab tests on rats.

The researchers exposed part of the rats’ pituitary gland to those chemicals (which are called PDE5 inhibitors) and to mild electrical stimulation. Under those conditions, the rats’ pituitary glands produced more oxytocin.

Does that happen in people, too? This study doesn’t answer that question.

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But that topic deserves further study, since oxytocin is important in various reproductive functions, write researcher Meyer Jackson, Ph.D., and colleagues.

Their study shows no signs of increased oxytocin production without stimulation.

“Erectile dysfunction drugs do not induce erections spontaneously; they enhance the response to sexual stimulation,” Jackson states in a news release.

“The same thing is happening in the [rats’] posterior pituitary - Viagra will not induce the release of oxytocin on its own, but it will enhance the amount of release you get in response to electrical stimulation,” states Jackson.

Their findings appear in the Aug. 9 advance online edition of the Journal of Physiology.

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Viagra spam edges out pump-and-dump

August 18, 2007

Pump-and-dump spam, which dominated inboxes in the first half of the year, has given way to image spam and messages pushing ’sexual enhancement’ drugs, according to a report from security firm BitDefender.

In the seven months since January, BitDefender found that 75 per cent of all image spam was penny-stock related, while text-based spam was the preferred choice for drug-related topics.

Spam messages for sexual enhancement and weight loss drugs accounted for 56 per cent of all text spam. This was followed by spam hawking replica watches, which came third in BitDefender’s image and text spam lists.

New types of spam have also emerged in 2007, most notably hosted-image spam, which instead of containing an image provides a link to a website hosting the spam.

Spam with attachments, such as a PDF file, has also become more prevalent since the beginning of 2007.

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The latest measures used by spammers to try to defeat filters are malformed mail boundaries, which make it hard to unpack emails for inspection, and the use of malformed HTML code in an attempt to confuse parsers.

So-called Bayes poisoning and word obfuscation were used less frequently than in previous years, according to BitDefender.

Vlad Valceanu, head of BitDefender’s Antispam Laboratory, said: “Spammers are emailing fewer targets at a time, while introducing small variations in every email in the hope of avoiding timely detection.

“We expect to see more of this in the next half of the year, as well as increased use of attachments and possibly even embedded Flash.”

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Viagra: a cure for jet lag?

August 15, 2007

Max Davidson has something in common with that globetrotting football star David Beckham: jet lag. Can Viagra keep them perky?

I never thought I would find myself writing this, but it is the literal truth. David Beckham and I have the same problem - and Viagra could be the answer to it.

Air Viagra, is viagra a cure for jet lag?

Now plying his trade in Los Angeles, the footballer still hopes to play a key role in England’s qualifying campaign for the 2008 European Championships, which resumes in four weeks. On form, our boy Becks probably merits selection. But is it realistic to expect him to give of his best when he has just got off a 13-hour flight from Los Angeles?

Jet lag, as every frequent flier knows, can be a killer. In my case, it nearly was. I have never handled transatlantic flights well and in 2006, straight off a flight from the Caribbean, I paid the price. I was driving through Wiltshire at three in the afternoon, nodded off at the wheel and crashed into the car in front. Mercifully, nobody was hurt.

Naturally, with my history, a story in The Daily Telegraph on May 22, about how Viagra could perk up jet-lagged travellers, leapt out at me over the breakfast table. Could this be the answer to my prayers? Within hours, I was round at my doctor’s surgery, clutching the newspaper.

“Viagra?” My GP looked dubious. “As a cure for jet lag?” “It’s all right,” I said hastily. “There’s been some proper research.” “Done by whom?” “Scientists in Buenos Aires.” “And where was it published?” “The, er, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. An American periodical. It’s not The Lancet, but…” No, he said, it certainly wasn’t The Lancet. He shot me a suspicious look. “You’re not…?” Our eyes met across the consulting room. Alpha male looked at alpha male.
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“No,” I said firmly. “I’m not. Two children under my belt. No problems in that department.” “Well, in that case…” Rather magnanimously in the circumstances, he scribbled out a prescription. “Let me look up the original research and email it to you.” Twenty-four hours later, he was as good as his word. “These findings only relate to hamsters,” ran his email. “I am not impressed.” Sure enough, the Buenos Aires researchers who had blazoned forth their findings to the world had confined their study to rodents. What had they done? Flown hamsters to Australia, then taken their blood pressure?

In fact, when one studied their paper, they had been far more ingenious. They had confused laboratory hamsters by switching on their lights early, given half of them Viagra, then observed the results. The hamsters on Viagra, intriguingly, were up and pounding their exercise wheels faster than the ones not on Viagra. Even more intriguingly, the Viagra only worked when west-to-east flight patterns - for example, Los Angeles to London - were simulated.

The other way round, the hamsters didn’t respond. Something to do with their circadian rhythms - body clock, to you and me.

Was it conceivable that these poor drugged creatures were trying to tell us something? As I was about to fly from London to Kuala Lumpur - 12 hours west to east, almost identical to the trip Beckham will have to make from Los Angeles - I decided to put the matter to the test.

Never again. First came the walk of shame to the chemist. “That will be £55,” said the pharmacist, looking at me as if I was Hannibal Lecter.

Fifty-five quid! I could have flown to Venice for that. His assistant, a young Asian woman, couldn’t bring herself to look me in the eyes.

Then came the experiment proper, mimicking the methods of the Buenos Aires team.

I normally struggle mid-afternoon after a long west-to-east flight, so at exactly 15.00 hours on my first day in Kuala Lumpur, I gave myself a small dose of Viagra, fed my partner a placebo of chocolate brownie and awaited developments. Hopeless. We both fell asleep an hour later, within five minutes of each other.

The next day, I doubled the dose of Viagra and gave my partner a placebo of white wine and pretzels. Again, hopeless. Apart from feeling a momentary twinge of lust for a Malaysian waitress who had left me cold the day before, I felt no discernible effects or side-effects.

On the third day, I did feel slightly perkier than I usually do in the early stages of jet lag. But perky enough to embrace Viagra as a cure for the condition? No way. Those boffins in Buenos Aires need to go back to the lab and experiment with something larger than hamsters. Horses perhaps. Or, better still, rhinoceroses.

I’m keeping an open mind. If David Beckham thinks that Viagra will help him combat jet lag as he whizzes to and from Los Angeles, let him give it a try. But he should (a) make sure he gets the dose right; and (b) consult his physician if he starts to feel unnatural cravings for the opposition left-back.

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A step closer to his dream

August 7, 2007

Internationally known sexual-medicine expert Dr. Irwin Goldstein has landed in San Diego, where his medical practice and research will place the city at the center of an effort to establish sexual medicine as a formally recognized medical discipline.

PEGGY PEATTIE / Union-Tribune
After spending three decades in Boston, sexual-medicine expert Dr. Irwin Goldstein has landed in San Diego, where he is creating a center to treat and study sexual problems at Alvarado Hospital.
It’s been about two years since the 57-year-old urologist left Boston University, where he spent three decades pioneering research on impotency and female sexual dysfunction.

Working out of Alvarado Hospital and as a volunteer instructor at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine, Goldstein wants to make the city a destination for people seeking treatment for sexual problems and for those who want to do research in the field.

In addition to naming Goldstein director of sexual medicine at Alvarado, the hospital’s owners have promised to fulfill the doctor’s long-standing dream of creating what could be the first department of sexual medicine in the country.

Goldstein on Monday will open his private practice on the campus of the College Area hospital with a modest staff that includes a certified sex therapist, a nurse practitioner and a medical assistant.

OVERVIEW

Background: Internationally renowned sexual-medicine physician Irwin Goldstein has relocated to San Diego, opened a private practice and been named head of sexual medicine at Alvarado Hospital.

What’s changing: Goldstein hopes to make San Diego a center for treating and studying sexual dysfunction as well as for training other physicians in the field.

The future: Establishment of a sexual-medicine department at Alvarado – possibly the first in the country – could help lead to the recognition of sexual medicine as a formal medical specialty.
He says he hopes the business will grow into a center for treatment, research and training, not unlike the 5,000-patient Institute for Sexual Medicine that he created and oversaw at the Boston University School of Medicine until May 2005.

“What he is going to be doing here is transforming our understanding of sexual medicine,” said Dr. Pedram Salimpour, one of Alvarado Hospital’s owners.

With some research suggesting that nearly half of all women and more than a third of all men experience sexual dysfunction at some point in their lives, the need for physicians with special training in the field is increasingly coming into focus, said Dr. Ira Sharlip, a clinical professor of urology at the University of California San Francisco who counts Goldstein among his friends.

“What we hope will occur is that sexual medicine will become a well-recognized and respected specialty in the panoply of medical specialties,” Sharlip said. “It is a serious medical specialty with its own vocabulary, set of clinical conditions, treatments and biochemistry.”

Some critics, however, say that much of the push to medicalize sexual problems is coming from drug companies seeking new markets, particularly among women.

PEGGY PEATTIE / Union-Tribune
Irwin Goldstein’s new ID notes that his practice is sexual medicine.
“Female sexual dysfunction is a concocted term,” said Dr. Leonore Tiefer, an associate professor of psychiatry at the New York University School of Medicine. “It’s all been sort of the cart leading the horse.

For sexual medicine to gain legitimacy, she said, it must expand beyond the narrow focus of treating people who have difficulty having sex and include other related matters, such as sexually transmitted diseases, gender identity problems, fertility issues, and rape and sexual-abuse issues.

“I don’t think that creation of this thing as sexual medicine is the right thing at the right time for the public,” Tiefer said.

For now, sexual medicine remains outside the 130 specialties recognized by the American Medical Association. Doctors who practice in the field must specialize instead in a related recognized area, such as urology, obstetrics and gynecology, neurology or endocrinology.

That can lead to practical problems, Goldstein said.

At Boston University, he encountered obstacles that made it difficult for him to work with physicians outside the Department of Urology, which oversaw his sexual-medicine institute. “I had handcuffs everywhere I went,” he said.

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While there is nothing unusual about bureaucratic walls between medical specialties, the divisions at Boston University became untenable for Goldstein.

He was operating in a world in which a growing body of research was linking sexual dysfunction to cardiovascular disease, neurological problems, hormone deficiencies and other physiological conditions. He believed that the evolution of sexual medicine demanded more cross-specialty collaboration than was possible in traditional academic medicine.

Differences over those strictures eventually led to his departure from Boston University.

“Dr. Goldstein made a number of requests to the medical center regarding department organization,” Boston University School of Medicine spokeswoman Ellen Berlin wrote at the time of the doctor’s departure. “The medical center was unable to reach an acceptable agreement with Dr. Goldstein and therefore decided not to continue his contract.”

Goldstein said the parting of ways was mutual. “You have to look in the mirror and say, ‘I could spend the rest of my life in the Department of Urology’ . . . or I could say, ‘I’m not willing to do that anymore.’ I chose to pursue my dream,” he said.

Goldstein said a search for a new home in the academic world took a year and a half, and included discussions with Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles and the University of California Irvine Medical Center. Those talks came up empty because most teaching hospitals were unwilling to give him the level of independence he sought.

Then in late 2006 he received a call from Salimpour, a Los Angeles pediatrician who had worked as Goldstein’s research assistant in the late 1990s.

An investor group headed by Salimpour and his older brother, Pejman Salimpour, also a Los Angeles pediatrician, was preparing to purchase Alvarado Hospital for $22.5 million. The hospital had been forced into a sale by federal authorities after several years of legal and financial difficulties.

Goldstein was scheduled to visit San Diego on behalf of Pfizer, the maker of Viagra, for a grand round – a meeting with other doctors to discuss his latest clinical work. The gathering was set for mid-January, a few weeks after the Salimpours were to close the hospital deal.

Hoping to garner positive attention for Alvarado within the medical community, Pedram Salimpour asked his friend and mentor to conduct the grand round at the College Area hospital. During the dinner that followed, the Salimpours proposed that Goldstein consider moving to San Diego and opening a new practice at Alvarado.

By the end of the next day, Goldstein and the Salimpours had hammered out a deal that promised the sexual-medicine expert the freedom and flexibility he desired.

Goldstein and the Salimpours would not say whether any financial arrangement exists between the doctor and the hospital. Under California law, hospitals are generally barred from directly employing physicians.

Having Goldstein on Alvarado’s medical staff will undoubtedly increase the hospital’s visibility and could boost its reputation, which suffered under previous owner Tenet Healthcare.

Goldstein is often quoted in articles about sexual medicine that appear in publications around the world, and he is editor-in-chief of The Journal of Sexual Medicine, the most influential publication in the field. Both San Diego and Alvarado are listed under the doctor’s name on the credits page of the journal.

“This shows everyone that we are pioneers and innovators,” Pedram Salimpour said.

Goldstein’s arrival also could have a more practical effect on the 306-bed hospital. Surgical procedures performed by the doctor, such as penile implants, and his research activity will help bring in patients. And many of his patients might be referred to other specialists who practice at Alvarado, Goldstein said.

On a recent afternoon in an Alvarado meeting room, Goldstein fiddled with an identification card hanging from the breast pocket of his sport coat. Made an hour earlier, the tag showed his photograph, his name and the words “sexual medicine” printed along the bottom. In Boston, his ID had read “urology.”

Goldstein smiled broadly as he cradled the new tag.

“This card doesn’t exist anywhere,” he said. “I went into the bathroom and stared at it in the mirror.

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Suit blames Viagra for vision loss

August 2, 2007

A Denver man has sued the company that makes Viagra, saying the erectile dysfunction drug caused a stroke that deprived him of vision in one eye.

Thomas Parker filed the suit in U.S. District Court in Denver on Tuesday against Pfizer Inc.

Parker’s complaint alleges that Pfizer failed to notify consumers of the potential side effects and has downplayed those risks.

Neither Parker, his lawyer nor a Pfizer representative could be reached for comment.

The suit contends that Viagra contains “unreasonably dangerous design defects.” It also states that Pfizer knew of and failed to use a safer design and ingredient for Viagra.

On July 8, the FDA approved updated labeling for Cialis, Levitra and Viagra to reflect what the agency described as a “small number” of reports of sudden vision loss attributed to a condition in which blood flow is blocked to the optic nerve.

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The FDA advisory cautioned patients taking the medication to consult with a doctor or health care provider if they experienced a sudden or decreased loss of vision in one or both eyes.

The advisory also stated that it is “not possible” to determine whether those drugs were responsible for the vision loss, citing other possible factors such as high blood pressure, diabetes or a combination of these problems.

According to Business Week, Americans consumed $434 million worth of Viagra in the first three months of 2007, an increase of 11 percent over the same period last year.

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hina seizes 18 000 fake Viagra pills

July 26, 2007

Beijing - Chinese police have seized more than a tonne of fake drugs for impotence, bird flu and malaria, including at least 18 000 fake Viagra tablets, state media reported on Wednesday.

The Ministry of Public Security, which launched the national crackdown on counterfeit goods in 2005, announced 10 of its top cases ranging from fake drugs to fake toothpaste on Tuesday, the Xinhua news agency said on its website.

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More than 30 people were detained on suspicion of either making or selling the drugs.

Police in the eastern province of Zhejiang raided a gang making counterfeit Viagra and selling the tablets to 12 countries, including the United States and Holland, it said, adding that a total of 18 000 pills were seized.

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Eastern by Barry Schwartz

July 25, 2007

Google’s Matt Cutts explained in a blog post why Google has banned Alex Chiu’s web page selling an immortality device. It’s not that Google wants to help hide the secret of immortality, as Chiu claims. Rather, it’s because of massive and irrelevant keyword stuffing.

Meanwhile, Erik Dafforn showed how the University of Kentucky’s high quality page on how to sell Cialis gets to have third page rankings in Google. OK, so it’s someone spamming Google by taking advantage of the university’s site. But it leads to a funny choice:

Which would I rather be banned on Google?

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One that is life threatening versus one that guarantees you will live forever?

This post is here to illustrate, with sarcasm, some of the back trenches of what goes on behind the scenes in the SEO world.

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The ‘global disaster’ of fake internet pharmacies

July 21, 2007

The decry follows last week’s coroners report over the death of a Canadian woman who dies from metal poisoning after purchasing fake drugs over the internet.

The death and coroners report on 58-year-old Marcia Bergeron, who was found dead in her bed three days after Christmas last year, has thrown the issue of rouge internet pharmacies firmly into the spotlight.

Toxicology reports identified the pills Bergeron bought, including the hypnotic zolpidem, the active ingredient in Sanofi’s Ambien which is not legally available in Canada, were the cause of her death, saying the concentration of aluminum in her liver was some 15 times above the expected normal level.

The Bergeron case is one of many recent examples of the counterfeit drug black market infiltrating the bona fide pharma market.

Just two months ago batches of parallel imported fake Zyprexa (olanzapine), Plavix (clopidogrel) and Casodex (bicalutamide) were recalled after they were found to contain less than the required amount of active pharmaceutical ingredient (API).

Last week, Zheng Xiaoyu, the former director of China’s State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA) was put to death after he was found to have “sought benefits” for eight pharmaceutical companies by inappropriately approving hundreds of drugs and medical devices between 2001 and 2003. At least six of the products proved to be fake and dozens of people were killed by counterfeit and inferior products in China during his tenure.

Meanwhile, the saga involving diethylene glycol (DEG) contamination of products is ongoing, with the most recent moves being the recall of batches of contaminated toothpaste.

But, pharma industry players are most concerned with the raft of internet pharmacies that offer fake drugs because detection rate is low and the counterfeiting and infiltration is highly sophisticated.

Americas Watchdog chief executive Thomas Martin called the presence of fake internet pharmacies a “global disaster” saying there was upwards of 4000 fake pharmacies and that 90 per cent of products on the internet were counterfeit.

The US consumer advocacy group recently launched the covert operation-like Global Piracy and Counterfeiting Consultants initiative with the aim of stamping out the $40bn international counterfeit market, but the group has spent the last year involved in behind-the-scenes screening of internet pharmacies, he told US-PharmaTechnologist.com.

Martin feared if the operations were not brought under wraps there was real potential for bioterrorism, especially as he estimated some five million US people bought drugs off the internet because the sites promised anonymity, cheaper prices, and access to drugs currently unavailable in the country or without a prescription.

But the drugs would be marketed differently online to what was sent. Drugs resulting from dodgy cleaning practices, which introduced new chemicals into the drugs, to altering the amount of API or changing fundamental ingredients, were making their way into the patient market, with the most commonly faked drugs being Pfizer’s Viagra (sildenafil citrate), Eli Lilly’s Cialis (tadalafil) and Bayer’s Levitra (vardenafil) - all products for the treatment of erectile dysfunction.

The problem with the sites was “they change their names as often as you or I change out socks,” making them very hard to track down, Martin said.

Meanwhile, the drugs were getting into the country easily via a standard yet sophisticatedly modified envelope, he said.

In the past whole pill packets had been posted but now Americas Watchdog had found the drugs were being packaged in a plastic pouch and sealed in flat aluminum packaging before being put into a standard envelope.

“It’s really getting tough because the packaging is perfectly done. It’s very difficult for drug sniffing dogs. We think they have got so sophisticated getting into the country that we don’t think we can stop it by the mail,” Martin said.

Earlier this month, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced its concern over the number of people who continued to buy drugs over the internet.

“The use of prescription drugs without a prescription is an intrinsically unsafe practice,” the regulator said in a statement.

The FDA urged the public to reconsider when looking to purchase drugs over the internet.

Likewise Health Canada has issued a warning on its website following Bergeron’s death: “If you order from these sites, you may get counterfeit drugs with no active ingredients, drugs with the wrong ingredients, drugs with dangerous additives, or drugs past their expiry date. Even if these drugs do not harm you directly or immediately, your condition may get worse without effective treatment.”

The FDA has undergone several investigations into reports of bogus internet sites. In August 2005, the FDA conducted an operation at New York, Miami, and Los Angeles airports which found that nearly half of the imported drugs the FDA intercepted from four selected countries were shipped to fill orders that consumers believed they were placing with “Canadian pharmacies.”

Of the drugs being promoted as “Canadian,” based on accompanying documentation, 85 per cent actually came from 27 other countries around the globe and a number of the products were found to be counterfeit.

The website Bergeron used to purchase her drugs claimed to be Canadian, and has since disappeared offline.

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Reports in local media said the FDA had previously flagged the website as dodgy.

The FDA, who is involved, along with Health Canada and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, in the ongoing investigation of Bergeron’s death, declined to comment when approached by US-PharmaTechnologist.com.

Meanwhile, some big pharma are waking up to the problem, which in some cases is taking more than a $1m a day from the pockets of pharmaceutical companies.

In May, the chief security officer and vice president of global security at the world’s largest pharmaceutical company, Pfizer, addressed Congress about the dangers of the black market, which is threatening to grow to be worth $75bn by 2010.

Said John Theriault: “The problem of counterfeit medicines, once thought to be limited to developing countries with weak regulatory systems, is now recognized as a global problem from which no country is immune.”

“The manufacture of counterfeits is not limited to China and India. They are produced in at least 24 countries, including Canada, the UK, and four other members of the EU - Belgium, the Netherlands, Poland and Portugal.”

Eleven Pfizer drugs are currently targeted by counterfeiters, according to Theriault, and in 2006 more than 8.1 million fake Pfizer tablets were seized, an increase of 20.8 per cent over 2005.

“In March 2007, we heard of a tragic story of a woman’s death which, according to press reports, was caused by drugs she ordered online from a bogus Canadian pharmacy . . . We fear that there may be more terrible stories like this one,” he said.

“As Congress develops drug safety legislation, it is essential that you carefully consider this very dangerous situation that has yet to be adequately addressed.”

A US draft law was put before congress in May calling for stronger punishments for drug counterfeiters including a 10 to 20 years prison sentence for counterfeiting offenses that cause serious bodily injury and loss of all proceeds and profits from the illegal activity.

Meanwhile, similar legislative measures have been put before the European Parliament with a positive response in the Parliament’s April plenary session in Strasbourg. Under the European proposals, those found guilty of drug counterfeiting (classed as a “serious crime”) would be punished with the maximum penalty, a fine of at least €300,000 ($407,000) and/or four years’ imprisonment.

Last year, the Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturers Association (SOCMA) of the US and the European Fine Chemicals Group (EFCG) banded together to demand increased regulatory inspections of foreign facilities manufacturing APIs.

Americas Watchdog’s Martin believed the problem was becoming too big for government’s, industry sectors and companies to control and with the technologies as sophisticated as they were, it made it even more difficult to overcome the problem.

“The only way to keep counterfeiting in check is to go after these guys,” he said in reference to the initiative the advocacy group launched, which would involve integrated buy operations to wheedle out the bad guys.

Meanwhile, the National Association of Chain Drug Stores (NACDS) is calling for a hard line approach.

“NACDS opposes the importation of prescription drugs, which threatens the health and safety of consumers,” NACDS federal health care programs vice president Julie Khani told US-PharmaTechnologist.com.

“NACDS and its members are greatly concerned about the patient safety implications of prescription medications sold through rogue internet sites. . . NACDS supports increased penalties for those that engage in the counterfeiting of prescription drugs, and prescription drug pedigree requirements for prescription drugs that have left the normal distribution channel.”

In May, in regards to comments filed with the Senate Judiciary Committee, the association released a statement saying it wanted to work with Congress to eliminate the illegal sites.

“We believe that the most effective way to guard against these rogue internet sites is to enact narrowly tailored solutions that focus resources on shutting down these illegal suppliers, rather than developing broad policies that sweep up legitimate, state-licensed pharmacies into a federal regulatory scheme that could potentially limit consumer access to state-licensed pharmacies through the internet,” the statement said.

While technological advances are continually being made to counteract the infiltration of counterfeits into the supply chain, such as radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, and barcodes, there is a strong feeling from the US industry that this will not completely stop the problem, especially if the World Wide Web continues to foster counterfeiters.

Ahead of a US Patent and Trademark Office seminar later this month, Temple University pharmacoeconomist Albert Wertheimer, who will be speaking at the conference on counterfeit pharmaceuticals coming out of China, said in a statement internet pharmacies posed the biggest threat, which were difficult to monitor and regulate.

“Technology cannot be a permanent, foolproof solution, and only by improving importation and regulation policy can counterfeiting be contained further. The Food and Drug Administration’s Counterfeit Drug Task Force believes that attacking the problem through multiple routes will be the most effective way to combat drug counterfeiting.”

But regardless of what decisions are made, what technological advances are achieved, there is one fact that will remain unchanged, as Regional coroner Rose Stanton involved in the Bergeron case told The Globe and Mail: “What we have is the first person (for whom) we have all the facts, who we know died as a result of these drugs.”

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Viagra sales go limp after surge

July 17, 2007

The little blue pill seems to be finding it difficult to fly off the chemist’s shelves. Viagra and its numerous desi cousins, a cure for erectile dysfunction, have shown a minuscule growth of only 5.43% in sales in the past one year.

As per latest ORG-Marg figures, the viagra segment has clocked a turnover of Rs 121 crore for 12 months ending May 2007 as compared to a total turnover of Rs 115 crore during the same period last year.

The market has grown from Rs 57 crore in 2003 to Rs 122 crore in 2007, a compounded annual growth of 29%. Soon after the launch of the drugs, growth of this segment had ranged between 50% and 75%, prompting major pharma companies to predict big business for Viagra clones.

Medicos attribute sluggish sales to growing apprehensions about side effects of the drugs. “The hype around the drug has mellowed noticeably in the past two years. People had huge expectations, thinking it to be a ’switch-on’ pill that would help them have an erection the minute they pop it. Once they find it does not work like that, the segment, which was buying for fun has reduced,” says sex-therapist Dr Mrugesh Vaishnav.

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Industry watchers attribute the slow sales to entry of sub-standard generic players, which have taken a lion’s share of the market. On the sildenafil citrate-based drug front, the top three brands now are Manforce (Mankind), Penegra (Zydus) and Caverta (Ranbaxy), which have a market share of 39%, 14.21% and 12.13%.

Medical experts insist that almost 50% of Viagra clones are bought over the counter, rendering people vulnerable to side effects.

“Headache and visual disturbances have affected a lot of people who took the pill without proper guidance,” says psychiatrist Dr Hansal Bhachech.

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Working hard for the money

July 11, 2007

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Working hard for the money
Freelancers in Israel have a tough time.
Laura Goldman 11 Jul 07 15:52

Many people will find it hard to believe that native English speaking immigrants are among the immigrant groups exploited in Israel. It seems that the Zionist dream has turned into a nightmare for many Anglos. Aliyah of choice turned into a battle to scrap together enough money to put food on the table.

It is true that many of the immigrants coming from the United States, England, Australia, Canada, and other English speaking countries may be equipped with a good education and some savings. But their skills are not always in demand or valued in the Israeli economy. For each job vacancy, there are 100 applicants. The economic laws of supply and demand have conspired to keep the salaries low.

My French immigrant friends have told me that they are encountering the same problems in securing employment.

New Anglo immigrants like me share some of the responsibility for our feckless fate. Many English speakers are slow to learn Hebrew. Since many Israelis want to practice their English, there is not as pressing a need for us to learn Hebrew as it is for other new immigrants groups.

Many new immigrants also have trouble transferring their degrees, especially advanced ones. After arguing with the Ministry of Health for four years, one doctor of osteopathic medicine had to hire a lawyer to get his license in Israel. Even PhDs do not transfer easily. My friend Lauren could not get her PhD from the University of Paris recognized in Israel. She only earned the salary of a teacher with a Master’s degree.

Throughout history, greenhorns have been taken advantage of by native sons. This is not a new story or unique to Israel. I just did not realize the extent of the oppression here. The use of the word oppression is not an exaggeration.

A recent posting on a Yahoo group for freelance writers in Israel offered experienced travel writers $6 to $8 dollars an hour. The company offering the job was too embarrassed to even identify themselves.

David Nordell, a member of the group and a former correspondent for AP, posted this response, “please remember that $6 an hour translates into about 26 NIS which at the official working month of about 150 hours (180 less breaks) comes to less than 4000 shekels, or less than 1000 dollars.”

He continued, “Most Israeli companies and publications behave with little or no respect for the writers, who usually invest a great deal of time and trouble in their work, both because Israeli business culture doesn’t understand that you need to pay well to get high quality work (and conversely, that if you pay peanuts, you get monkeys), and because there is a much larger supply of English-speakers who can write than there is demand for their work.”

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This unlivable wage is not unique to writers. After graduation from Ulpan, my beautiful and well spoken friend Stephanie H. searched high and low for a job. She finally found a job for 4000 shekels a month “selling Viagra to old men from Texas or their girlfriends” at an Israeli company which illegally shipped the organic Viagra from India to the United States.

Stephanie arrived late for dinner before the start of Yom Kippur because her Israeli boss did not close down the office for the holiest of holy days in the Jewish calendar. Stephanie gave up a job in the film business in London to make Aliyah. She, and I, question whether it was worth it.

Call centers operated by IDT and HAS Advantage Visa are some of the biggest employers in the country. If you chose to work through the night, you can earn 45NIS an hour. While they are not selling Viagra, they are collecting payment from bounced checks or selling credit cards. Most college graduates are overqualified for this type of work but many Anglos in Israel can not find another work.

Friendly Technologies advertised for someone to build a potential customer database. In an effort to better integrate into Israel and upgrade my Hebrew by working in a Hebrew environment, I took the job.

Since I had previously taught cold calling at Merrill Lynch for hundreds of dollars an hour, my pay of 30 shekels an hour and a bonus of 20 shekels for each name that I added to the data base was quite a comedown.

Like a factory worker that was paid by the piece, it was “suggested” to me that I add 3 names to the data base every hour. I was a factory worker doing piece work.

In the beginning, I adhered to this work rule and ate any additional time it took me to do my work. The salesman that I was working with had four solid leads from my work. His typical sale was the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

As a part time freelancer, I did not expect to have my own desk, even though I had a corner office in Philadelphia. I just did not expect to have to call in each day and ask if I could come to work. Sometimes I was told that I had to leave by 3 because someone needed my desk.

Realizing that my working conditions were not going to improve any time soon, I found a graceful exit. My friends joked, “I hope you get a desk and a chair in your next job.”

When I shared my experiences, many freelancers told me that “at least you got paid”. I posted queries about freelancing experiences on several Internet sites. There was an outpouring of complaints about non-payment and other issues.

Since it was a writer’s list, it was not surprising that the Jerusalem Post was the focus of many complaints. It is one of the largest employers of English speaking writers. Kendall wrote, “The Post owes me 4000 shekels.” Janet told me, “I wrote a story about the new mayor of Raanana and they did not pay.”

The life of a freelancer would not be complete without a run-in with the tax authority. That, and plans to improve the working conditions of freelancers, would be another column.

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