Psychiatrists who are exposed to conflict-of-interest (COI) policies during their residency are less likely to prescribe brand-name antidepressants after graduation than those who train in residency programmes without such policies, according to a new study by researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, USA [1].
- INICIO
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Genéricos
Novedades
- FDA approves generic teriparatide and levetiracetam
- US generics launch and approval for Dr Reddy’s and Lupin
- Five Chinese companies join UN’s MPP for Covid-19 medicines
- South Korean companies to make generic Bridion and COVID-19 drugs
Investigación
- Japan’s drug shortage crisis: challenges and policy solutions
- Saudi FDA drug approvals and GMP inspections: trend analysis
- Generic medications in the Lebanese community: understanding and public perception
- Community pharmacists’ understanding of generic and biosimilar drugs: Lebanon case study
General
- EMA launches European shortages monitoring platform to tackle persistent medicine shortages
- Crecimiento de medicamentos genéricos en Brasil y Venezuela
- Penetración de los medicamentos genéricos en México y Brasil
- FDA releases one-year progress report for the Generic Drug Cluster
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Biosimilares
Novedades
- FDA approves tocilizumab biosimilar Avtozma
- January 2025 biosimilar approvals in Europe
- EC approves eight biosimilars, eight more await final authorization
- Canada approves first omalizumab biosimilar Omlyclo
Investigación
- Biosimilares en países de ingresos bajos y medios
- Resultados positivos del criterio principal de seguridad y eficacia de AVT05 (biosimilar propuesto de golimumab)
- ¿Están en riesgo los biosimilares intercambiables?
- Estudios comparativos de eficacia: ¿dónde estamos ahora?
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