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Biotech

Drug Testing Entire Cities at Once 562

Ellis D. Tripp writes "Researchers have developed a technique for determining what illicit drugs people might be consuming in a given area, by testing a sample from the local sewage treatment plant. As little as a teaspoonful of untreated wastewater can reveal drug use patterns in a given community. Obviously, any drugs found can't be tied to any specific user, but how much longer until the drug warriors want to deploy automatic sampling units farther upstream of the sewage treatment plant?" From the article: "one fairly affluent community scored low for illicit drugs except for cocaine. Cocaine and ecstasy tended to peak on weekends and drop on weekdays, she said, while methamphetamine and prescription drugs were steady throughout the week."
Patents

Submission + - Patent Nonsense extends to retiring a medication

CodeShark writes: "Yesterday I went to the pharmacy to pick up a new Asthma rescue inhaler for the beginning of the school year that the school keeps on hand for my daughter. Usually this requires a $10 copay for the generic — but now the generic is no longer available, leaving my only choices to be very expensive patented versions of the same medicine. When I went up on the web to find out why, I found this article from US News and World Report that just happens to explain that that Asthma inhalers no longer qualify for the "essential use" of a CFC propellant, therefore the only choices left happen to be those patented medications — even if the only difference is the propellant that delivers the albuterol from the inhaler.

Those patents don't run out until around 2012 — and it strikes me that this is more about corporate greed than it is about health, the ozone layer, or any other good reason for the FDA to make the change. Doesn't this strike you as governmental regulation gone horribly terribly wrong? And more importantly, how can we do something about it?"

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