Can our generic drugs be trusted? How overseas manufacturing, haphazard regulation and a drive for profits impacts the safety and quality of our most basic medicine: PRIVATE EVENT

March 15, 2024

Target Audience

All pharmacists

Learning Objectives

At the completion of this activity, the participant will be able to:

Identify how the manufacturing practice of dual-track productions leads generic drug companies to make different-quality drugs for different markets.
Learn how the FDA's inspection practices at overseas drug plants differ from its practices at domestic manufacturing plants, and how that can impact the quality of finished drugs.
Review how generic drugs can differ from one another, and from equivalent brand drugs, and how that can impact patients.
Examine how market incentives can impact the manufacturing and quality of generic drugs.
Learn how FDA inspectional findings can impact drug shortages, and lead to lower-quality medicine being cleared for use

Course summary
Available credit: 
  • 1.00 ACPE
    The Arnold & Marie Schwartz College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education.
Course opens: 
02/15/2024
Course expires: 
11/21/2025
Event starts: 
03/15/2024 - 11:30am EDT
Event ends: 
03/15/2024 - 12:30pm EDT
Cost:
$0.00
Rating: 
0
Long Island University Brooklyn Campus
NY
United States

Katherine Eban:

Katherine Eban is an award-winning investigative journalist, best-selling author, Vanity Fair special correspondent and Andrew Carnegie fellow. Her articles on pharmaceutical counterfeiting, gun trafficking, coercive interrogations by the CIA and COVID-19’s origins, have won international attention and numerous awards. Her Vanity Fair article “Rorschach and Awe,” which first identified the architects of the CIA’s torture methods used on 9/11 detainees, inspired the 2019 film “The Report.”

Her second book, Bottle of Lies: The Inside Story of the Generic Drug Boom, is a New York Times bestseller and one of the New York Times’ 100 Notable Books of 2019. It won numerous awards, including: the National Association of Science Writers science in society book award; the Overseas Press Club of America’s Cornelius Ryan award for best non-fiction book on international affairs; Investigative Reporters & Editors best book; and the American Society of Journalists and Authors general non-fiction book award.

Based on a decade of reporting, the book reveals endemic fraud and dire conditions in the overseas manufacturing plants where the majority of our low-cost generic medicine is made. Katherine speaks widely about pharmaceutical quality, the impact of globalization, and investigative reporting.

Her first book, Dangerous Doses: a True Story of Cops, Counterfeiters and the Contamination of America’s Drug Supply, was named one of the Best Books of 2005 by Kirkus Reviews and was a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers pick. 

Educated at Brown University and Oxford, where she was a Rhodes Scholar, Eban lives in Brooklyn with her husband, two daughters, Newfoundland dog Romeo and pandemic rescue cat Marley.

ACPE UAN #  0042-0000-24-014-L99-P

Available Credit

  • 1.00 ACPE
    The Arnold & Marie Schwartz College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education.

Price

Cost:
$0.00
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