Meningitis Scary shit!

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Meningitis outbreak rises to 205 cases: CDC

<cite id="yui_3_5_1_20_1350294625439_321" class="byline vcard">Reuters – <abbr id="yui_3_5_1_20_1350294625439_328" title="2012-10-14T22:25:38Z">11 hrs ago</abbr></cite>



  • Enlarge Photo
    Reuters/Reuters - Vials of the steroid distributed by New England Compounding Center (NECC) - implicated in a meningitis outbreak - are pictured in this undated handout photo obtained by Reuters October 14, …more


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CHICAGO (Reuters) - Seven more people have been diagnosed with fungal meningitis linked to possibly tainted vials of a steroid medication, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Sunday, bringing the total number of cases to 205 in 14 states.
The death toll from the unprecedented outbreak was unchanged at 15, the CDC said. It put the number of people sickened at 205 and said new cases were confirmed in New Hampshire, Florida, Indiana, and Tennessee.
All but two of those who became ill were diagnosed with a rare type of fungal meningitis that has been the hallmark of the deadly outbreak. Two patients were diagnosed with peripheral joint infections linked to the tainted drug.
Tennessee continues to be the hardest hit state, with 53 cases of meningitis and six deaths, the CDC said, followed by Michigan with 41 cases and three deaths, and Virginia with 34 cases and one death.
The outbreak has turned into a major health scandal after a company based in Massachusetts shipped vials that may have been tainted to 23 states and 76 medical facilities.
The scare has prompted multiple investigations, and the Massachusetts-based company at the center of the outbreak, New England Compounding Center, has recalled the product and suspended operations.
NECC distributed thousands of vials of a contaminated steroid that has put 14,000 people at risk of contracting meningitis, according to government health officials.
Meningitis is an infection of the membranes covering the brain and spinal cord. Symptoms include headache, fever and nausea. Fungal meningitis, unlike viral and bacterial meningitis, is not contagious.
The scare raised questions about how the pharmaceuticals industry operates. NECC engaged in a little-known practice called drug compounding that is not regulated by the Food and Drug Administration, which generally oversees drug makers.
In compounding, pharmacies prepare specific doses of approved medications, based on guidance from a doctor, to meet an individual patient's need.
Emails to one NECC customer obtained by Reuters revealed the company solicited bulk orders from physicians and failed to require proof of individual patient prescriptions as required by state regulations.
The emails support assertions made this week by state pharmacy regulators that the compounding firm, which was authorized to deliver products only in response to patient-specific prescriptions, had violated its license in Massachusetts.
Several states, including Michigan, Indiana, Minnesota and Ohio, are investigating the company. New Hampshire and Tennessee have scheduled administrative hearings on possible violations.
(Reporting by James B. Kelleher; Additional reporting by Toni Clarke and Aaron Pressman; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Stacey Joyce)


outbreak rises to 205 cases: CDC

<cite id="yui_3_5_1_20_1350294625439_321" class="byline vcard">Reuters – <abbr id="yui_3_5_1_20_1350294625439_328" title="2012-10-14T22:25:38Z">11 hrs ago</abbr></cite>



  • Enlarge Photo
    Reuters/Reuters - Vials of the steroid distributed by New England Compounding Center (NECC) - implicated in a meningitis outbreak - are pictured in this undated handout photo obtained by Reuters October 14, …more


Related Content








CHICAGO (Reuters) - Seven more people have been diagnosed with fungal meningitis linked to possibly tainted vials of a steroid medication, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Sunday, bringing the total number of cases to 205 in 14 states.
The death toll from the unprecedented outbreak was unchanged at 15, the CDC said. It put the number of people sickened at 205 and said new cases were confirmed in New Hampshire, Florida, Indiana, and Tennessee.
All but two of those who became ill were diagnosed with a rare type of fungal meningitis that has been the hallmark of the deadly outbreak. Two patients were diagnosed with peripheral joint infections linked to the tainted drug.
Tennessee continues to be the hardest hit state, with 53 cases of meningitis and six deaths, the CDC said, followed by Michigan with 41 cases and three deaths, and Virginia with 34 cases and one death.
The outbreak has turned into a major health scandal after a company based in Massachusetts shipped vials that may have been tainted to 23 states and 76 medical facilities.
The scare has prompted multiple investigations, and the Massachusetts-based company at the center of the outbreak, New England Compounding Center, has recalled the product and suspended operations.
NECC distributed thousands of vials of a contaminated steroid that has put 14,000 people at risk of contracting meningitis, according to government health officials.
Meningitis is an infection of the membranes covering the brain and spinal cord. Symptoms include headache, fever and nausea. Fungal meningitis, unlike viral and bacterial meningitis, is not contagious.
The scare raised questions about how the pharmaceuticals industry operates. NECC engaged in a little-known practice called drug compounding that is not regulated by the Food and Drug Administration, which generally oversees drug makers.
In compounding, pharmacies prepare specific doses of approved medications, based on guidance from a doctor, to meet an individual patient's need.
Emails to one NECC customer obtained by Reuters revealed the company solicited bulk orders from physicians and failed to require proof of individual patient prescriptions as required by state regulations.
The emails support assertions made this week by state pharmacy regulators that the compounding firm, which was authorized to deliver products only in response to patient-specific prescriptions, had violated its license in Massachusetts.
Several states, including Michigan, Indiana, Minnesota and Ohio, are investigating the company. New Hampshire and Tennessee have scheduled administrative hearings on possible violations.
(Reporting by James B. Kelleher; Additional reporting by Toni Clarke and Aaron Pressman; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Stacey Joyce)
 
my wifes Progesterone vials look way worse then that, and they also come from a compounding pharmacy! wait til i take pictures of my wifes vials and u see how shitty the labels are, u will shit urself!
 
I had a friend who actually had one of these cases in his hospital last month. I don't know if all of this shit got recalled but no one I know of is still using it.
 
my wifes Progesterone vials look way worse then that, and they also come from a compounding pharmacy! wait til i take pictures of my wifes vials and u see how shitty the labels are, u will shit urself!

Pics or ban!!!
 
well my wife is going to fucking kill me, i went to take a pic of her progesterone bottle to show how shitty the labels are from these cheap ass compounding pharmacys and the bottle fell on the floor and shattered,lol, a brand new bottle. I have zero fucking luck!

anyhow ere is the bullshit they sent my wife through the compounding pharmacy the fertility doctor uses. The Fertility Doctor/Geneticist is the best in New jersey yet they use these fucking horrible back alley labs.
 
Does she still need to continue on it since she's already pregz?

yeah through the pregnancy im pretty sure, so now she is gonna ask what the fuck is wrong me with me,lol, i think im going to blame the dogs some how,lol
 
yeah through the pregnancy im pretty sure, so now she is gonna ask what the fuck is wrong me with me,lol, i think im going to blame the dogs some how,lol

lol well I hope she doesn't check on here! I'm sure they can replace it (dunno cost) but prolly not the end of the world, I'm sure someone has accidentally broken one before.
 
It's actually quite scary especially when you consider all the "home made" gear that floats around today. I mean this was an actual lab and they had it happen.
 
lol well I hope she doesn't check on here! I'm sure they can replace it (dunno cost) but prolly not the end of the world, I'm sure someone has accidentally broken one before.

nah she doesnt come around here anymore, lol, and yeah its just a call away to get a new one. Hell i could prolly find someone online to make a better bottle then this shit,lol
 
haha nice, well I hope she doesn't beat ur ass too badly when she see's it's broken. Damn dogs, always messin with shit....
 
lol, yeah the dog knocked it out of our cabinet above the microwave,lol, fuckers got skills! lol
 
ok guys, I understnad your frustration. Im 797 certified which means that I can compound pharm grade shit in a sterile environment. I understnad the lables look like shit but these machines that I have seen used to do this are antiquated and hospitals are cheap when it comes to up-grading machines. I can tell you that I have seen very large, very reouatible coumpounding pharmacies that make 10's of millions get loose with there protocols and people die and it gets sweeped under the rug. Its life.
I once saw a HUGE coumpoundiung facility accidentaly mix magnesium for sodium and people got hurt over that one over-site. Its a numbers game. If your making millions of products, your bound to fuck up once in a while. Now since everyone is going crazy about this,, the poor mom-pop little coumpouders will get more red-tape and profit margins shrink and they go out of buisness bc of knee-jerk reactions.
 
Scarey shit.. Now I hear FBI went into the lab to look for possibility someone on the inside setting this up . Like goin postal in a round about sic way..
 
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