Tag Archives: drugs

The War on Drugs Announce New Album I Don’t Live Here Anymore, Share “Living Proof” Video: Watch

The War on Drugs:

11-12 Lake Perris, CA – Desert Daze
01-19 Austin, TX – ACL Live  
01-20 Austin, TX – ACL Live
01-21 Dallas, TX – Toyota Music Factory
01-22 Houston, TX – White Oak Music Hall
01-24 Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium
01-25 Atlanta, GA – Tabernacle
01-27 Philadelphia, PA – The Met Philadelphia
01-28 Philadelphia, PA – The Met Philadelphia
01-29 New York, NY – Madison Square Garden
01-31 Boston, MA – House of Blues
02-01 Boston, MA – House of Blues
02-02 Washington, D.C. – The Anthem
02-04 Columbus, OH – Express Live!
02-05 Toronto, Ontario – Queen Elizabeth Theatre
02-06 Toronto, Ontario – Queen Elizabeth Theatre
02-08 Detroit, MI – The Fillmore Detroit
02-10 Chicago, IL – Chicago Theatre
02-11 Chicago, IL – Chicago Theatre
02-12 Milwaukee, WI – Riverside Theater
02-13 Milwaukee, WI – Riverside Theater
02-15 Saint Paul, MN – Palace Theatre
02-16 Saint Paul, MN – Palace Theatre
02-18 Denver, CO – Mission Ballroom
02-19 Salt Lake City, UT – The Union
02-21 Seattle, WA – Paramount Theatre
02-22 Seattle, WA – Paramount Theatre
02-23 Portland, OR – Theater of the Clouds
02-25 San Francisco, CA – Bill Graham Civic Auditorium
02-26 Los Angeles, CA – Shrine Auditorium
03-22 Helsinki, Finland – Helsinki Ice Hall
03-24 Stockholm, Sweden – Annexet
03-27 Oslo, Norway – Sentrum Scene
03-28 Oslo, Norway – Sentrum Scene
03-30 Copenhagen, Denmark – KB Hallen
03-31 Copenhagen, Denmark – KB Hallen
04-02 Berlin, Germany – Verti Music Hall
04-04 Zurich, Switzerland – Halle 622
04-05 Milano, Italy – Alcatraz
04-07 München, Germany – Zenith
04-09 Paris, France – L’Olympia
04-11 Birmingham, England – O2 Academy Birmingham
04-12 London, England – The O2 Arena
04-14 Dublin, Ireland – 3 Arena
04-16 Leeds, England – First Direct Arena
04-18 Edinburgh, England – Edinburgh Corn Exchange
04-20 Köln, Germany – Palladium
04-21 Wiesbaden, Germany – Schlachthof
04-22 Amsterdam, Netherlands – Ziggo Dome
04-23 Antwerp, Belgium – Sportpaleis

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The War on Drugs: 2022 North American and European Tour

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Report Says Gaetz Used Drugs, Despite Support for Welfare Drug Testing

  • The New York Times reported a DOJ probe into Gaetz includes payments made to women.
  • Sources told The Times that Gaetz had used ecstasy prior to sexual encounters with the women.
  • In the past, Gaetz advocated for requiring recipients of public assistance to pass a drug test.
  • See more stories on Insider’s business page.

According to a new report concerning a Justice Department investigation into GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, sources familiar with the events told The New York Times the Florida lawmaker took ecstasy, an illicit drug.

The Times report, which was published Thursday, cited several unnamed sources who said Gaetz paid women via cash apps. Sources told The Times the women said they were paid for sex. Gaetz has denied ever paying for sex and said that all of the allegations against him are false.

Two sources familiar with the alleged sexual encounters told The Times that some people involved, including Gaetz, used ecstasy beforehand.

But during his time in the Florida state legislature, Gaetz advocated for requiring recipients of public assistance to undergo and pass a drug test.

“I strongly support drug-testing for welfare recipients. Applying for welfare is voluntary, if you don’t want to get tested don’t apply,” Gaetz said in a tweet in March 2011. At the time, he was serving in the Florida House of Representatives.

In May 2011, the state legislature passed a bill that would’ve required state welfare recipients to submit to and pass a drug test in order to be eligible to receive benefits.

Gaetz was a supporter of the bill, which was signed into law by then-Florida Gov. Rick Scott. 

However in October 2011, a federal judge blocked the bill, and it was eventually ruled unconstitutional for violating the ban on unreasonable searches and seizures. After an appeals process, the law was ultimately dismissed.

Gaetz was elected to US Congress in 2016 and became known as a loyal ally of former President Donald Trump.

According to The Times reporting, Gaetz used ecstasy at some point in 2019 or 2020, while he was serving in the House of Representatives. Members of Congress are not required to undergo drug testing, though some have tried to change that.

The Times latest report came on the heels of an explosive report released Tuesday that revealed the Justice Department is investigating whether Gaetz had a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old girl and violated federal sex-trafficking laws. Gaetz denies the allegations, and the story has taken many turns since.

Have a news tip? Contact this reporter at kvlamis@insider.com.



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Demi Lovato Used Several Hard Drugs Weeks Before OD Including Crack, Heroin

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Demi Lovato claims drug dealer assaulted her before overdose

Demi Lovato claims she was sexually assaulted and “left for dead” by the dealer who delivered her a dangerous cocktail of heroin and other drugs on the night she suffered a near-fatal overdose three years ago.

The “Heart Attack” singer recalls how she was forced to face what happened when she woke up in the hospital after the incident and doctors asked her if she had had consensual sex.

“I remembered him lying on top of me, so I said, ‘yes,’” Lovato says in her YouTube docuseries, “Dancing With the Devil.”

She says she soon realized, however, that because of her highly inebriated state the night of the July 2018 near-tragedy, she had been in no condition to agree to sex.

“It wasn’t until maybe a month after my overdose that I realized, ‘Hey, you weren’t in any state of mind to make a consensual decision,’” she recalls. “That kind of trauma doesn’t go away overnight.”

Lovato, 28, admits that after her overdose she relapsed once more.

“I wish I could say the last night that I ever touched heroin was the night of my overdose but it wasn’t,” she says, explaining that she wanted to take “the power back” from her drug dealer, whom she didn’t name, after he allegedly assaulted her.

“I wanted to rewrite his choice of violating me,” she explains. “I wanted it now to be my choice, and he also had something that I wanted, which were drugs. I ended up getting high.”

As part of a misguided plan to get “the power back” after a weeklong intensive trauma retreat she even called up the dealer who attacked her and told him: “I’m going to f–k you.”

Lovato says she regretted doing that, as she realized that, in the aftermath of her relapse, she had hit rock bottom.

“I thought, ‘How did I pick up the same drugs that put me in the hospital?’” she recalls. “I was like mortified at my decisions.”

Now sober from the drugs that put her in the hospital, Lovato says in the docuseries — and in a cover story for the March issue of Elle — she doesn’t restrict herself entirely from marijuana or alcohol.

“I’ve learned that shutting the door on things makes me want to open the door even more,” she says. “I know I’m done with the stuff that’s gonna kill me … but I wish that I could get some relief maybe through like weed or something, right?”

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Why Don’t We Have More COVID-19 Drugs?


Ben Kothe / BuzzFeed News; Getty Images (3)

Even as vaccines roll out, the pandemic’s holy grail — a drug to successfully treat COVID-19 — continues to elude medicine.

On Monday, a World Health Organization panel called for scientists to quit researching hydroxychloroquine, the poster child for drugs that failed to work against the coronavirus. Meanwhile, more than 40,000 people are still hospitalized nationwide with COVID-19, and only a handful of mediocre therapies can help treat them. And with new variants threatening to thwart vaccines, finding drugs to fight SARS-CoV-2 is all the more urgent.

“The bottom line of what we need to do looking forward, and the clear need in this, is the development of potent antivirals directly acting on SARS-CoV-2,” Anthony Fauci, chief of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said at a White House briefing last week. Antivirals would revolutionize the fight against SARS-CoV-2, since they block viruses from replicating and can stop people from getting very sick or dying.

But efforts to develop such drugs have languished because of a lack of funding and coordination: While Operation Warp Speed devoted nearly $18.75 billion to develop vaccines, it only set aside $6.34 billion for drugs. Instead, scientists tried to repurpose older drugs, including antivirals for other diseases, to see if they worked against COVID-19.

“Everyone was looking for a quick fix,” Fauci told BuzzFeed News. The FDA has so far only authorized one drug to treat COVID-19, remdesivir, initially developed against Ebola. But it is far from a perfect drug: Results on how it affects the length of hospital stays have been mixed, and it has not been shown to reduce deaths.

“There’s nothing wrong with looking for quick fixes, but you’ll also have to make the long-term investment,” Fauci said, noting the search for effective new drugs would take anywhere from months to a year. The goal would be to develop drugs that are explicitly designed and targeted to SARS-CoV-2 like the “spectacularly successful” ones made against HIV and hepatitis C, which made the deadly diseases treatable, he said.

But that’s not happening yet. After evaluating hundreds of older drugs, the National Institutes of Health has no new antivirals for COVID-19 in its public-private partnership of clinical trials, called Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines (ACTIV). There are no newly designed antivirals listed among the 160 NIH-supported clinical trials registered by the National Library of Medicine. Operation Warp Speed’s “medical countermeasures” effort also contains no new antivirals.

The only new treatments on the ACTIV list are monoclonal antibodies — like the ones former president Donald Trump took — which are difficult to give patients because they require hourlong transfusions near the start of an illness.

Scientists have tried to repurpose older drugs to help treat COVID-19 — without much success.

The most successful repurposed drug in the pandemic has been dexamethasone, a steroid invented in 1957 — so long ago that Fauci said he prescribed it in graduate school. Instead of attacking the coronavirus, dexamethasone suppresses the immune system, which can turn the body against itself and attack vital organs in the later stages of COVID-19. This cheap and safe drug lowered deaths among COVID-19 patients on ventilators by about a third, a compelling argument to look for another needle in the haystack of older drugs that could work directly against the virus.

“There’s a lot of reasons to use those FDA-approved medications, because they have already known properties in human patients,” said Texas A&M biochemist Wenshe Ray Liu, who is researching both new and repurposed drugs to fight the coronavirus. And testing them is relatively easy: Companies just have to dose infected cells in test tubes with their library of existing drugs and pull out the ones that seem to block SARS-CoV-2. Because they’ve already been vetted, the winners can go straight into clinical trials without extensive studies to show they are safe.

Clinical trials are expensive, Liu added, and pharmaceutical companies prefer to test drugs they’ve already spent money to develop. For both of those reasons, drug companies have largely pursued small clinical trials with too few patients to show that their own drugs worked, hoping to hit a home run. Those patients have little incentive to sign up to test the experimental drugs at the early stages of the disease when they aren’t terribly sick.

Molnupiravir, an antiviral designed to fight the flu, is an example of the challenges facing clinical trials to test promising drugs. Safety trials this summer looked promising for the drug, and the drug company Merck started a larger clinical trial of 1,300 patients in October to see if it will lower virus levels. It is expected to end in December 2021, taking three to four times longer than vaccine trials that enrolled tens of thousands of people. On top of other challenges, the study measures reduced viral loads rather than improved patients’ symptoms, which might not convince the FDA of its benefits.

These kinds of hurdles are one reason that repurposed drugs haven’t shown much benefit in patients. And while NIH-funded scientists are studying more than a dozen old drugs for diseases such as arthritis, cancer, malaria, hepatitis, or gout to see if they can fight SARS-CoV-2, the only antiviral besides remdesivir in clinical trials is a Japanese pancreatitis drug developed in the 1980s. Results from that trial, which started last August, are projected for the end of this year.

Results from smaller trials for molnupiravir might come as soon as May, said University of North Carolina virologist Victor Garcia-Martinez, who led a February study showing the drug was very effective in mice equipped with human lung tissue. If it eventually proves effective, Garcia-Martinez said, “This will be easy to manufacture and distribute. Particularly if there is an outbreak, say, in a nursing home, you can get it right away to people.”


Scott Olson / Getty Images

Jasmine Mitchell treats Curtis Jones with remdesivir to help him recover from COVID-19 at Roseland Community Hospital in Chicago, Illinois on Dec. 15, 2020.

The coronavirus has characteristics that make it hard to find an effective drug to fight it — but there is reason to be hopeful.

Many drugs regularly hobble viruses in test tubes, even other coronaviruses, said drug researcher Martin Michaelis of the University of Kent in the United Kingdom. Scientists were initially optimistic that these drugs would similarly work against SARS-CoV-2, but this virus is different enough that most of those drugs may not be effective.

In a recent study, Michaelis and colleagues laid out the differences between SARS-CoV-2 and its closest human-infecting relative, the SARS virus, which killed 774 people after the 2002 outbreak. While they are about 80% similar genetically, the two viruses differ in the biological machinery they use to replicate inside cells, Michaelis and his colleagues found. That’s important because interfering with this viral replication is a main task of antiviral drugs. If viruses can’t replicate, they can’t spread.

Although the spikes on the outside of the coronavirus are now mutating wildly to produce more contagious variants, the virus has less freedom to change its reproductive process, Michaelis said. That’s because the same machinery is also vital in other basic viral functions, making it a more reliable target for drugs taking aim at the virus.

“You can’t say these conserved regions will never mutate,” he said, “but it is a lower probability.”

Examples of new antivirals designed specifically against SARS-CoV-2 are now turning up in animal studies. A Feb. 18 report by Chinese researchers in the journal Science found that two drugs successfully reduced viral loads in the lungs of mice.

And there are other signs we may find helpful COVID-19 drugs. A year into the pandemic, scientists know much more about how SARS-CoV-2 works and may be better equipped to find existing drugs that could attack it, Texas A&M’s Liu said. His team recently found a high blood pressure drug that in a computer simulation fits like a key in a lock to the coronavirus. The drug may have been overlooked because it’s a generic and doesn’t have a corporate sponsor willing to invest in a clinical trial.

“We’ll try to start our own clinical trial if we can’t find a corporate sponsor,” Liu said.


Andrew Caballero-reynolds / Getty Images

Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at National Institutes of Health, speaks during a House Oversight And Reform Committee hearing on March 11, 2020.

More money is needed to push as hard on treatments as we did on vaccines.

On March 11, 2020, the day that the pandemic was first declared by the WHO, Fauci testified to Congress that there were two avenues for medicine to address the coronavirus: vaccines or drugs.

From a scientific perspective, there were a lot of reasons to have expected an effective antiviral drug to turn up sooner than a vaccine, Fauci told BuzzFeed News. “You generally know relatively quickly whether a [drug] treatment works or not because you’re giving a treatment to somebody that’s already sick,” he said.

A vaccine, meanwhile, requires giving real shots and placebos to tens of thousands of people and then waiting until natural infections cause enough infections to show it’s effective.

“We were fortunate in that we had a couple of vaccine candidates that were red-hot and really turned out to be good,” Fauci said. “And unfortunately for the country, but fortunately for the vaccine trials, we continued to have a high level of infection, which allowed us to get an answer pretty quickly.”

Vaccines trigger a well-understood natural immune reaction, making their design and safety testing more straightforward compared to new antivirals, Michaelis added. But the US vaccine trials also had significantly more funding than ones for treatments.

“There is not that much money in antiviral drugs for acute diseases that are only used for a week or so,” Michaelis said. The lack of a clear path means new antivirals designed explicitly against the coronavirus will likely require a big public investment, Fauci said. The NIH only recently started an initiative to research new antivirals, which would be “unlikely to provide therapeutics in 2021,” NIH chief Francis Collins told the New York Times.

In some ways, the lack of COVID-19 antivirals underscores just how lucky humanity is to have effective vaccines, Michaelis said.

“People tried many, many compounds against SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, but they just haven’t had the big, big, successful candidate so far,” he said. Forging ahead to create new drugs, he added, “becomes tougher and harder work.”


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Repurposing drugs to treat Covid-19: Everything old is new again

The most famous (or perhaps infamous) example is sildenafil — aka: Viagra. Originally developed to treat high blood pressure, the little blue pill received US Food and Drug Administration approval in 1998 to treat erectile dysfunction, and very quickly became a blockbuster drug.

Another notable example is thalidomide. Given to women in the late 1950s to prevent morning sickness — and soon found to cause severe birth defects — it got a second life in 1998 as treatment for leprosy (now called Hansen’s disease), and then a third life in 2006, when it was approved to treat multiple myeloma, cancer of the bone marrow.

When Covid-19 became a pandemic last year, the race was on to find any treatment that could help against the novel virus that gravely sickened and even killed some, while leaving others completely unscathed.

One option was developing new medications that specifically targeted SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, from scratch. New treatments, such as monoclonal antibodies, are the result of those efforts. But developing, testing and then getting approval from the FDA, not to mention creating the infrastructure for the production and distribution of a new medication, all takes time — time the world didn’t, and still doesn’t, have.

Other researchers quickly began to look around at what was already on hand, in hospitals and pharmacies, and on drug store shelves.

“The advantage of drug repurposing is that that drug is already approved. It’s already gone through the regulatory process to show that it’s safe and effective for something. So if you can find additional uses for that drug, you already know there’s a good safety profile,” explained Dr. David Fajgenbaum, an immunologist at the University of Pennsylvania, and the director of the Center for Cytokine Storm Treatment and Laboratory.

Not to mention: Cheap, generic versions of many older medications exist because their patents have expired.

“It’s just a matter of matching the right drug to the right disease,” Fajgenbaum said. “Thankfully, there are over 2,000 drugs that are already approved by the FDA for at least one disease, and we’ve learned that there are many other diseases that those drugs can also be repurposed for.”

In fact, Fajgenbaum said he has “dedicated [his] life towards advancing drug repurposing” for diseases without specific treatments. His passion is driven in part by his own experience. In 2010, while in medical school, he first became ill with Castleman disease, a rare autoimmune disorder that, like Covid-19, can trigger the immune system to suddenly flood the body with inflammatory chemicals in a so-called cytokine storm; the result can be tissue and organ damage, and sometimes death.

Castleman disease brought Fajgenbaum close to death five times — until he found his own treatment in a repurposed drug.

“I’m actually alive today because of a drug that was developed 30 years ago for another condition that we identified through a very systematic process and we thought it could help to save my life,” he said. “Here I am, over seven years later.”

During the time he was sick, he founded the Castleman Disease Collaborative Network, a global initiative devoted to fighting Castleman disease. CDCN’s collaborative method for organizing medical research later became a model for other diseases without treatments.

A blueprint to save lives

When Covid-19 emerged, Fajgenbaum realized that he was perfectly positioned to look for repurposed drugs to fight it. On March 13, 2020, the day when much of the country began to shut down, “I found myself that night sitting next to my wife, hoping and praying that some researchers somewhere would follow the blueprint that we went through to identify this drug that saved my life,” he said.

About a minute later, he said, he realized “that researcher somewhere” would be him. He tapped his team at the Center for Cytokine Storm Treatment and Laboratory.

“I turned to my team and said, ‘This is a disease that has many similarities to Castleman disease. You’ve experienced doing systematic drug repurposing, and frankly I’m alive today because of it. Let’s apply this approach to Covid,’ ” he said.

With that, they launched the CORONA project (Fajgenbaum is its director and lead investigator), one of many global efforts (both private and governmental) trying to identify, trial and/or track promising treatments among existing drugs for Covid-19. His lab assembled a team of volunteers to systematically go through “all reported cases of any drug being given to any human with Covid-19,” and pulling all the information into one database, one central repository.

“Initially we thought there might be maybe a couple of dozen drugs that would be trialed. It’s incredible — there have now been over 400 different drugs, given to patients with Covid-19,” he said, noting that the number of patients involved is approximately 270,000.

Fajgenbaum explained that several approaches can be used to make the match between a disease and a potential treatment. They include translational research, which involves finding out what goes wrong on the cellular level with a given disease and seeing if there is an existing drug that fixes the problem. There’s also high throughput drug screening, which is basically testing different drugs in a petri dish with patients’ cells and seeing what happens. Artificial intelligence can also be used to find previously unknown connections between disease processes and medications.

“But at the end of the day, really the only way to know if one of these drugs that looks promising in the lab actually works in humans, is to give it to humans and to see how well those patients do,” he said.

Testing medications to treat Covid-19 in a trial is critical and tricky.

Since people can get better without medication (unlike, say, Castleman disease or pancreatic cancer), it’s important to conduct randomized, controlled trials, where patients are randomly selected to get the active drug or a placebo; otherwise it’s hard to know if patients would have gotten better on their own anyway.

This country’s experience with hydroxychloroquine is a case study of what happens when hype gets ahead of the science. Based on early, often observational studies, many believed that the anti-malarial drug (itself repurposed as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis) would help treat people with Covid-19, or maybe prevent them from getting infected or sick. But when the results of randomized, controlled trials came back, the drug was shown to be ineffective.

Getting the timing of drug administration right is also important. A great example, Fajgenbaum said, is dexamethasone, an inexpensive steroid that has been around for decades and is used to treat many conditions, from inflammatory arthritis to skin, eye and breathing issues.

“Amazingly, one-third of patients on ventilators, their lives are saved if you give them dexamethasone. It’s a huge benefit. It also is helpful in patients who are not yet on ventilators, preventing them from having to get onto ventilators. Interestingly, dexamethasone is actually harmful if it’s given too early in the disease course. So taking it when you’re recently diagnosed actually is going to be harmful for you, which highlights how complicated Covid-19 is,” he said.

If researchers don’t get the timing right, study results can also be inconclusive or contradictory, which can be confusing and frustrating. One example is tocilizumab. Several studies have shown it helps patients survive, and several others have shown it doesn’t. The key appears to be timing. For it to work, it appears it needs be given within 24 hours of a patient being admitted to the intensive care unit.

“This isn’t a disease where there’s going to be one size fits all, one drug that is uniformly effective. In fact, there could be different drugs given during different stages of the disease course,” he said.

Other drugs that Fajgenbaum said appear to show promise are baricitinib, which like dexamethasone and tocilizumab also suppresses the immune response and is approved for rheumatoid arthritis, the gout drug colchicine, the blood thinner heparin and intravenous immunoglobulin.

Helping critically ill patients survive is one important part of the puzzle. Another is preventing infected patients from getting so ill in the first place. That is where one of the real needs lie, said Fajgenbaum.

“I think we really need to focus on … those patients who are newly diagnosed and prevent them from needing to be hospitalized in the first place. That’s a tough population to do trials in … because in these patients’ cases, though they’re not showing symptoms, they all were first infected five to 14 days ago,” he said, noting that antivirals are unlikely to be effective so far along into the disease course.

One drug he said is looking promising for helping patients avoid hospitalization is fluvoxamine, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) that is used to treat depression. It decreases inflammation in the brain. A couple of early studies have found it helps keep newly infected people out of the hospital.
One benefit of fluvoxamine is that, unlike monoclonal antibodies which need to be infused, it’s a pill.

No ‘home runs’ yet

Dr. David Boulware, a professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota, has been involved in a number of different trials looking at repurposed medications for Covid-19, including a series of trials on hydroxychloroquine.

“These are really inexpensive available medicines, which is exactly why we should be studying [them], because they’re really inexpensive and they’re available,” he said.

Now Boulware is involved in a multi-center trial on fluvoxamine. But it’s been challenging, he says, because the trial has to recruit newly-infected patients as early as possible.

So far, he says they have about 300 people enrolled out of the 1,000 needed. “So it’s been relatively slow. … If we had 500 people enrolled over the next week, we’d be done in two to three weeks and we’d have a definitive answer,” he said.

Both Boulware and Fajgenbaum said another challenge is funding.

Fluvoxamine, Boulware said, costs about $12 for a course of treatment. “They’re generic medicines, so there’s no patent on them. … There’s no big pharmaceutical company behind that to push that forward,” he said.

He says it’s really up to private donors or the federal government to support the research, since there is no profit incentive for pharmaceutical companies to do so.

“To date, most of the trials really focused on early treatment had been by private donors by philanthropy groups. But I think that there is emerging interest on the federal level now to look at some of these repurposed medicines,” Boulware said.

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, said that the government has thrown its weight behind repurposed drugs.

“We’ve invested a heck of a lot. And that’s been an obsession for me for the last 10 or 11 months. I looked around at where we were back in March of 2020, and the effort to find therapeutic agents was pretty scattershot at that point,” he said. “A lot of it was focused on hydroxychloroquine, which we all know did not turn out well. … But in terms of other possibilities, there were about 600 ideas of candidates out there that might potentially be valuable, but no really organized way to prioritize them.”

Collins said he worked with industry to set up a public-private partnership, called ACTIV: Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines. A working group of experts reviewed all 600 options and helped prioritize the ones worth investigating. So far about 20 have been tested.

The project has had some successes. “That was remdesivir, and that’s dexamethasone, and that is a drug called baricitinib … but most of the repurposes haven’t panned out … and that is not unusual,” he said, explaining the lack of what he termed “home runs.”

As for fluvoxamine, Collins said the jury is still out: “Fluvoxamine looks promising right now, but it might be where hydroxychloroquine was a year ago and doesn’t work. So I want not to sort of open the door for everybody to start using it. I want to say, ‘Let’s test that. Let’s find out the answer.’ “

And so the search continues.

Fajgenbaum is both haunted and driven by the prospect that other medications are sitting there, in plain sight, and could help someone battle something.

“So what keeps me up at night is saying, ‘These drugs are out there. What work can we do to figure out how these drugs that are approved for something can maybe be used in a new way that can save a patient’s life,’ ” he said.

“There are drugs sitting in the neighborhood pharmacy you could potentially [use as] treatment for you or for someone that you love,” he said.

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Parents warn of fentanyl danger from fake pills after Rocklin teen’s heartbreaking death

The piano in the Didier family home in Rocklin has gone silent. The teenager who used to wake his parents and siblings with the sounds of beautiful music is gone – the victim of a growing and terrifying trend of fentanyl poisoning. Zachary Didier, 17, was a straight “A” student with what seemed like a limitless future. He was a standout athlete in soccer and track, and a talented self-taught musician. “Zach was just a beautiful soul. He loved life. He loved people, he loved his family,” said Zach’s mom, Laura Didier.The Whitney High School senior was set to graduate in June with honors and had his sights on Stanford or UCLA. “He lived the most incredible life. But we have to talk about how he died because it’s information we all have to know,” Didier said. On Dec. 27, during winter break, Zach’s dad found him slumped over his desk with his head resting in his arm. He wasn’t breathing and CPR had no effect. “I was utterly confused and obviously in a fog and traumatized,” Chris Didier recalled. “How does this happen? What happened? He just fell asleep.”What was first an inexplicable tragedy has since become a cautionary tale. Zach was a victim of fentanyl poisoning. Laura and Chris Didier didn’t know, but on a couple of occasions their son had experimented with prescription drugs — the same medications millions of people use for pain management every day. Zach thought he was buying Percocet, but what he got instead was a counterfeit pill made of fentanyl, a powerful prescription painkiller that, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine. Just a few grains can be lethal.“Unfortunately, we’ve now come to know other parents who have suffered this tragic type of loss with fentanyl poisoning and it’s heartbreaking how many of us there are,” Laura Didier said. The Didier family is haunted not only by the fake pills but by the way Zach got them. He didn’t slip down a dark and seedy alley. He just opened Snapchat. The same phone app millions of people use. “This is an important message to get out that this is a big game-changer. And what may have been OK, or relatively safe in the 70s and 80s, or even the 90s … This is a very different environment right now,” Chris Didier said.It was not easy for Chris and Laura Didier to share their son’s story publicly. There is a stigma that surrounds drugs. Although Zach had no history of addiction, they were worried the truth might tarnish people’s memory of him. They are now committed to awareness and ensuring no other child is lost the same way.“We need to talk about this. We need to talk about what’s happening. We can’t protect Zach now, but hopefully, we can protect your kid,” said Laura.| Video | Parents warn about fake pills made with fentanyl

The piano in the Didier family home in Rocklin has gone silent.

The teenager who used to wake his parents and siblings with the sounds of beautiful music is gone – the victim of a growing and terrifying trend of fentanyl poisoning.

Zachary Didier, 17, was a straight “A” student with what seemed like a limitless future. He was a standout athlete in soccer and track, and a talented self-taught musician.

“Zach was just a beautiful soul. He loved life. He loved people, he loved his family,” said Zach’s mom, Laura Didier.

The Whitney High School senior was set to graduate in June with honors and had his sights on Stanford or UCLA.

“He lived the most incredible life. But we have to talk about how he died because it’s information we all have to know,” Didier said.

On Dec. 27, during winter break, Zach’s dad found him slumped over his desk with his head resting in his arm. He wasn’t breathing and CPR had no effect.

“I was utterly confused and obviously in a fog and traumatized,” Chris Didier recalled. “How does this happen? What happened? He just fell asleep.”

What was first an inexplicable tragedy has since become a cautionary tale. Zach was a victim of fentanyl poisoning.

Laura and Chris Didier didn’t know, but on a couple of occasions their son had experimented with prescription drugs — the same medications millions of people use for pain management every day.

Zach thought he was buying Percocet, but what he got instead was a counterfeit pill made of fentanyl, a powerful prescription painkiller that, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine. Just a few grains can be lethal.

“Unfortunately, we’ve now come to know other parents who have suffered this tragic type of loss with fentanyl poisoning and it’s heartbreaking how many of us there are,” Laura Didier said.

The Didier family is haunted not only by the fake pills but by the way Zach got them. He didn’t slip down a dark and seedy alley. He just opened Snapchat. The same phone app millions of people use.

“This is an important message to get out that this is a big game-changer. And what may have been OK, or relatively safe in the 70s and 80s, or even the 90s … This is a very different environment right now,” Chris Didier said.

It was not easy for Chris and Laura Didier to share their son’s story publicly. There is a stigma that surrounds drugs. Although Zach had no history of addiction, they were worried the truth might tarnish people’s memory of him.

They are now committed to awareness and ensuring no other child is lost the same way.

“We need to talk about this. We need to talk about what’s happening. We can’t protect Zach now, but hopefully, we can protect your kid,” said Laura.

| Video | Parents warn about fake pills made with fentanyl

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‘Cocaine bananas’ mistakenly shipped to grocery stores

A botched drug-trafficking operation resulted in banana shipments stashed with cocaine being accidentally sent to Canadian grocery stores, authorities said.

Police in Kelowna said Tuesday that 21 kilograms of cocaine were shipped from Colombia as part of the failed drug deal, Global News reported.

“Our investigation leads us to believe these illicit drugs were not meant to end up in the Central Okanagan, and arrived here in the Okanagan Valley as a result of a missed pickup at some point along the way,” said Jeff Carroll, an officer with the Kelowna Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

The discovery was originally made by workers at a Kelowna grocery store who found 12 packages of cocaine hidden under a banana shipment in February 2019.

Later that day, another grocery store owner contacted authorities about also discovering the drug in the fruit delivery.

Police seized the two shipments of cocaine, which they estimate amounted to more than 800,000 doses, and launched an international investigation.

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