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  • Hurricane Matthew, a potentially devastating Category 4 storm, swirled across the Caribbean toward Haiti and Jamaica, where residents frantically stocked…
  • A peer-reviewed study found that the sea was rising 60 percent faster than the U.N. estimated. It means that low-lying cities may need to prepare for more severe floods than had been expected.
  • Florida State University head football coach Jimbo Fisher recently penned a letter in praise of Tallahassee. The note was originally written for The…
  • Just because it's cold doesn't mean we should have to give up delicious tomatoes. The "buy-local" movement has spurred a boom in greenhouse grown winter tomatoes in cold climates from Jackson Hole, Wyo., to Madison, Maine. And it uses less water and less land than conventional methods.
  • Today marks the end of another busy hurricane season. It was more active than predicted, with 19 named storms and 10 hurricanes. But the weather outlook…
  • The University of South Florida's research reputation continues to rise. The prestigious American Association for the Advancement of Science has named 15…
  • Shakira Lockett was a pretty good student in elementary, middle and high school. The Miami-Dade County native says she typically earned As and Bs in…
  • Here's a sweet memory from Valerie Alker, host of All Things Considered on WGCU in Fort Myers. Val shared this tale as part of our Florida Holidays…
  • "The night is nowhere as dark as we might think," says one scientist. How does your location light up the night?
  • When the nationwide fungal meningitis outbreak exploded into headlines two months ago, Florida health officials responded quickly, tracking the contaminated drug lots and finding potential victims. At least 25 in Florida were sickened, and three died. While the response was swift, Florida health officials concede the state failed to foresee the danger and take steps to reduce the risk. New England Compounding Center, identified as the source of the tainted drugs, had a Florida non-resident license that allowed it to send drugs into the state. Florida relied on Massachusetts to oversee NECC's operations and make sure its drugs were safe. After the extent of its problems were exposed, NECC was shut down. Florida law gives health officials in this state no power to regulate companies that sell drugs inside Florida but aren’t located here, Assistant Attorney General David Flynn told the Board of Pharmacy at a recent all-day hearing in Orlando. “In short,” Flynn said, “we’re in a box. We need to get authority so we can get out of the box." No permit is required It was mere chance that the meningitis outbreak began in a different state, Board of Pharmacy members discovered. It could just as easily have started in Florida, because the state has no information on how many of the 7,897 licensed pharmacies are compounders. No permit is required. State officials sent out a survey to all pharmacies in October, trying to learn which ones were making their own drugs, especially drugs that require a super-sterile manufacturing environment. But only 10 percent of the pharmacies filled out the survey. So the Pharmacy Board passed an emergency rule that requires pharmacies to answer the survey or face punishment. The answers must be in by Monday. Of all states, Florida should have foreseen trouble with compounding, after the that were scheduled to compete in a championship in Wellington. The drugs -- supposed to be vitamins -- had been made by a veterinary compounding pharmacy in Ocala. 'I couldn't answer the question' After the NECC outbreak became big news at the beginning of October, calls started coming in to the Health Department from reporters, asking how many compounding pharmacies Florida has. Cassandra Pasley, chief of the bureau that regulates health care practitioners, saw there was a gap in the state's information. "I couldn't answer the question as to how many compounding pharmacies we have in Florida because we really don’t have a permit called 'compounding pharmacies,'" she said. Family doctor Kenneth Woliner says he tried to sound a warning about compounding pharmacies in early 2011 after receiving a marketing flier from Rejuvi Pharmaceuticals Inc. in Boca Raton. The flier touted the profits that doctors could make by buying drugs in bulk from Rejuvi at wholesale prices and then selling them to patients at a mark-up. To Woliner, that didn't seem right. Compounding pharmacies are allowed to tailor-make a drug for an individual patient who can't use the official mass-produced version -- if they have a doctor's prescription. They're not supposed to mass-produce other companies' patented drugs and sell them in bulk. Specializing in hormone replacement Rejuvi's specialty, the flier said, was hormone replacement therapy. It advertised human growth hormone and HCG, a pregnancy hormone, for anti-aging and body-building, purposes for which the drugs are not FDA-approved. While it is legal for doctors to prescribe the drugs for non-approved purposes, drug makers are not supposed to tout them for those uses. Woliner said he thought what Rejuvi was suggesting might be illegal for the pharmacy, the doctors, or both. He felt it was certainly unethical. He filed a complaint in April 2011. “I’ve been frustrated because I’ve seen enough of my patients who have come in from other physicians that have been exploited financially and also hurt physically because they are prescribed drugs inappropriately in excessive quantities," he said. "It's mainly because the doctor went for the mark-ups, not because the patients needed therapy.” A month after submitting his complaint to the Health Department, Woliner got a reply. DOH said there wasn’t enough evidence to warrant action. Complaints disappear without a trace Woliner says this type of abuse happens all the time—and he has filed numerous complaints -- but he says the Health Department seldom does anything with them. "It’s almost like they do not want to do the work to investigate and prosecute these cases or protect the health of the public because it’s work for them to do,” he said. A Health Department inspector finally visited Rejuvi in early October, 18 months after Woliner filed his complaint. The inspector found a long list of problems, as . They included mouse droppings, dead insects, dirty water standing in the sink, and a covering of dust all through the compounding area. In addition, information on patients and prescriptions was missing from the pharmacy, and drug labels were missing crucial information on the dose, lot number, and prescribing physician, the report said. Without that information it would be impossible to track down and recall the drugs if a lot were contaminated, the report said. 'Never been as horrified' The pharmacy had been cited for problems before, the report said, but this time was worse. The inspector “has never been as horrified by the conditions of a pharmacy department as he was by the conditions of Rejuvi,” the report said. Surgeon General John Armstrong issued an emergency suspension order on Rejuvi, shutting it down along with another compounding pharmacy. The owner of Rejuvi declined to speak with Health News Florida; his attorney, Julie Gallagher, said of the Woliner complaint that went nowhere: “I have no comment on hearsay and speculation. If a case was closed for lack of legal sufficiency, that should tell you something. “ The Health Department can’t explain why Dr. Woliner’s complaint was so quickly shelved; in fact, officials can’t even confirm they ever got the complaint. Unless formal charges are brought, under the law the complaint remains confidential. Gallagher says Rejuvi will appeal the suspension unless it reaches an amicable settlement .
  • An iconic Christmas photo went viral six years ago – it shows donated, holiday wreaths laid on the snow-covered graves in Arlington National Cemetery.Now…
  • Zimmerman's lawsuit alleges NBC deliberately altered 911 calls he placed to a dispatcher; by rearranging the conversation, he claims the network wrongly smeared him as a racist.
  • For all of you interested in health news, consider this a holiday present.WUSF Public Media recently acquired Health News Florida, an award-winning…
  • A new industry of apps is helping parents stay one step ahead of their kids online, monitoring every post, photo and text they send or receive. Some argue this is necessary parental oversight in the modern digital age. Others say it sends the wrong message to kids and can backfire.
  • USF didn't wait long, naming Willie Taggart as the third head football coach in the program's history, less than a week after firing Skip Holtz.Speaking…
  • As Congress and the White House wrestle over a variety of expiring tax breaks due to take effect Jan. 1, accountants and other financial professionals face tough questions from their clients. The pros are also in the dark; the best they can offer is advice on various possible outcomes in the fiscal cliff talks.
  • In the Supreme Court's Affordable Care Act ruling this summer, it decided that states' plans for expansion of the Medicaid program should be optional. That led governors to ask if they could expand the program in part but still receive federal funding. The administration has said no.
  • Here's a holiday tradition in Tampa's Hyde Park neighborhood: Residents wrap the old oaks and palm trees that line South Boulevard with tiny white twinkle…
  • Confession: Publix holiday commercials turn me to mush.Maybe it's the music. Maybe it's because I'm already in the holiday spirit. Or maybe it's just good…
  • Living with rats and bugs. Enduring no heat in the winter or cooling in the summer. Surviving torture.These are conditions that Lee Ellis endured as a…
  • Schools in the Tampa Bay area are re-examining their security in the wake of the shooting today at a Connecticut elementary school.The Chief Operating…
  • After the shock of a gunman killing 20 small children and six adults at an elementary school in Connecticut, districts are increasing police patrols, locking schools' doors and taking other steps.
  • Much of what Americans learned from the news media Friday about the events in Newtown was wrong. Journalists know early accounts of crisis events are often misleading and incomplete, but often are compelled to pursue them without waiting for authoritative confirmation.
  • Don’t expect Friday’s massacre of first graders to nudge Florida in the direction of gun control, not even on assault weapons. Washington is one thing. Tallahassee is something else. Rep. Dennis Baxley, who chairs the state House Judiciary Committee, says the problem in schools is that there are not enough guns. “In our very admirable zealous desire to make people safe, we created these gun-free zones, and we have inadvertently made them a target for this kind of activity,” said Baxley, R-Ocala. Meanwhile in Washington, as The Palm Beach Post reports, some gun-rights supporters said the Friday slaughter of 20 children and seven adults by 20-year-old Adam Lanza had made them reconsider the wisdom of current gun laws. Most frequently mentioned: sale of assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition clips and the unregulated sale of weapons at gun shows. U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor of Tampa saw it as a teachable moment: “We cannot tolerate this any longer,” she said. The Tampa Bay Times quoted Castor as saying she hoped President Obama would follow through on his call for change in a speech Sunday in Newtown, the site of the mass shooting. She wished he had made a stronger statement, she said, “But from what I heard in his voice and saw in his eyes last night, he is determined."
  • Wood stork populations in the southeast U.S. are making a comeback. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Commission announced today a proposal to change the bird's…
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