Tag Archives: Walgreens

CVS and Walgreens Near $10 Billion Deal to Settle Opioid Cases – The New York Times

  1. CVS and Walgreens Near $10 Billion Deal to Settle Opioid Cases The New York Times
  2. CVS Health reaches settlement in opioid epidemic KENS 5: Your San Antonio News Source
  3. CVS and Walgreens agree to $10 billion in tentative deals on opioid cases. Walmart will also reportedly settle CNN
  4. Walgreens, CVS, Walmart in $12B opioid settlement • VillageMD may grow by buying rival • Silver Cross, UChicago neuroscience deal Crain’s Chicago Business
  5. CVS, Walgreens to Pay More Than $10 Billion to Settle Opioid Lawsuits The Wall Street Journal
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Opioid settlement: CVS, Walgreens and Walmart reach a tentative $12 billion deal



CNN
 — 

CVS has tentatively agreed to pay $5 billion to settle lawsuits brought by states and local governments alleging the retailers mishandled prescriptions of opioid painkillers.

Two other major retailers – Walgreens and Walmart – have tentatively agreed to pay billions of dollars to settle similar lawsuits, according to reports from Bloomberg and Reuters.

The deal calls for Walgreens to pay at least $4 billion and Walmart to pay $3 billion, Bloomberg reported, citing sources familiar with the matter.

The agreement wouldn’t be finalized until enough states, counties and cities agree to the terms, Bloomberg said.

CNN has reached out to the companies for comment.

CVS said if the settlement is reached, it would pay the states over 10 years beginning in 2023.

“We are pleased to resolve these longstanding claims and putting them behind us is in the best interest of all parties, as well as our customers, colleagues and shareholders,” said Thomas Moriarty, CVS’ general counsel, in a statement. “We are committed to working with states, municipalities and tribes, and will continue our own important initiatives to help reduce the illegitimate use of prescription opioids.”

US states, cities and counties have filed more than 3,000 lawsuits against opioid manufacturers, distributors and pharmacies, accusing them of downplaying the addiction risk and failing to stop pills from being diverted for illegal use.

More than 500,000 overdose deaths over the past two decades – including more than 80,000 in 2021 alone – are blamed on the US opioid crisis, government data show, with an estimated 9.5 million Americans age 12 and older reported in 2020 to have misused opioids, including 9.3 million prescription pain reliever abusers and 902,000 heroin users.

Meantime, synthetic opioids, primarily fentanyl, caused nearly two-thirds of the more than 100,000 drug overdose deaths in the US in the 12-month period ending April 2021 – up 49% from the year before – the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics found.

Opioids are drugs formulated to replicate the pain-reducing properties of opium and include prescription painkillers like morphine, oxycodone and hydrocodone and illegal drugs like heroin and illicitly made fentanyl.

People who become dependent on opioids may experience withdrawal symptoms when they stop using it, and dependence is often coupled with tolerance, meaning users need to take increasingly larger doses for the same effect.

A federal judge in August ruled CVS, Walgreens and Walmart must pay a combined $650.6 million to two Ohio counties for damages related to the opioid crisis. The lawsuit was initially filed in 2018 as part of federal multi-district litigation created that year to address the manifold claims against opioid manufacturers and distributors.

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries in July announced a $4.35 billion proposed nationwide settlement that could resolve thousands of lawsuits over the drugmaker’s alleged role in the US opioid epidemic.

Purdue Pharma – whose OxyContin painkiller has been widely blamed for kickstarting the opioid crisis – and the Sackler families in March announced a settlement with a group of states that would require the Sacklers to pay out as much as $6 billion to states, individual claimants and opioid crisis abatement, if approved by a federal bankruptcy court judge.

And Johnson & Johnson and the three largest US drug distributors – McKesson Corp, Cardinal Health Inc and AmerisourceBergen Corp – finalized a $26 billion nationwide opioid settlement in February.

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Delta, Walgreens, Applied Materials and others

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Delta Air Lines (DAL) – The airline’s stock rose 3.9% in the premarket on the strength of an upbeat current-quarter forecast as travel demand continues to rebound. For its most recent quarter, Delta earned an adjusted $1.51 per share, a number that was 2 cents below consensus but included a 3-cent impact from the effects of Hurricane Ian.

Walgreens (WBA) – Walgreens rallied 6.8% in the premarket after the drugstore operator reported better-than-expected quarterly profit and revenue. The company also raised its long-term sales targets.

Applied Materials (AMAT) – Applied Materials lowered its current-quarter revenue outlook, with the chip manufacturing equipment maker saying it would be negatively impacted by new U.S. regulations restricting exports to China. Applied Materials lost 2% in premarket action.

Victoria’s Secret (VSCO) – Victoria’s Secret gained 3.1% in premarket trading after the lingerie maker said current quarter sales and profit would come in at the high end of prior forecasts. The upbeat forecast comes ahead of a meeting with analysts and investors scheduled for Thursday.

Digital World Acquisition (DWAC) – Digital World Acquisition surged 11.2% in the premarket after Google approved Truth Social – the social media platform backed by former President Donald Trump – for inclusion in its app store. Digital World is the special purpose acquisition company that plans to merge with Truth Social and take it public, though shareholders have yet to approve the merger.

Dish Network (DISH) – Dish gained 1% in premarket action after blank-check firm CONX Corp. said it was in talks to buy Dish’s retail wireless unit Boost Mobile. CONX is backed by Dish Network chairman Charles Ergen.

Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) – Taiwan Semi rose 2.3% in the premarket after the chip maker reported an 80% jump in quarterly profit and on reports that the U.S. granted Taiwan Semi a one-year license to continue ordering U.S. equipment for use in China.

Kohl’s (KSS) – Kohl’s gained 2.2% in premarket trading following a Wall Street Journal report that activist investor Macellum Advisors is warning the retailer that another proxy battle could be ahead. Macellum is said to be calling for the replacement of at least three directors after talks to sell the retailer earlier this year collapsed.

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Walgreens (WBA) Q4 2022 earnings

Walgreens Boots Alliance on Thursday exceeded fiscal fourth quarter sales and earnings expectations, as the drugstore chain turns itself into a more health-care focused company.

The company said it anticipates full-year adjusted earnings per share of $4.45 to $4.65 in the coming fiscal year, which is about in line with what Wall Street expected. Yet Walgreens said its business growth will face tough comparisons as it laps strong demand for Covid vaccines and gets hits by the strength of the dollar.

Shares were up about 5% in premarket trading.

Here’s what the company reported compared with what analysts were expecting for the fiscal fourth quarter ended Aug. 31, based on Refinitiv data:

  • Earnings per share: 80 cents, adjusted, vs. 77 cents expected
  • Revenue: $32.45 billion vs. $32.09 billion expected

Sales declined from the previous year’s quarter. Including certain costs, Walgreens swung to a loss in the three-month period. Its net loss was $415 million, or 48 cents per share, compared with a net income of $627 million, or 72 cents per share, a year earlier.

The company said its profits took a hit from a non-cash impairment charge in its Boots UK business and from its long-term cost management program. A year ago, Walgreens laid out a cost savings goal of $3.3 billion by 2024.

Walgreens has made significant investments to transform from a major drugstore chain to a large health-care company. It is opening hundreds of doctor offices with VillageMD. It invested $5.2 billion to become majority owner of the primary-care company. It recently announced plans to accelerate acquisitions of two other companies: CareCentrix, which coordinates care and benefits for at-home care, and Shields Health Solutions, a specialty pharmacy company.

Walgreens CEO Roz Brewer said in a news release that the coming fiscal year “will be a year of accelerating core growth and rapidly scaling our U.S. Healthcare business.”

At the end of the quarter, Walgreens had a total of 334 doctor offices with VillageMD. The clinics, called Village Medical, are located next to its drugstores. It also has 70 stores with Health Corners, a designated space where a registered nurse or pharmacist can schedule a mammogram, screen a patient for high blood pressure or diabetes or help with other health-care needs.

Covid vaccines, which boosted Walgreens’ sales and foot traffic, have fallen off significantly. In the fourth quarter, the drugstore chain administered 2.9 million vaccinations. That’s a decline from 4.7 million vaccines in its fiscal third quarter, and a sharp drop from the 15.6 million vaccines in the first quarter and the 11.8 million in the second quarter.

Sales in Walgreens’ retail and pharmacy division in the U.S. decreased by 7.2% to $26.7 billion in the fourth quarter compared with the year-ago period. Comparable sales rose 1.6%, however.

Its international business took a big hit from currency headwinds. It had fourth quarter sales of $5.1 billion, a drop of 6.6% from the year-ago period. That included a 13.3% adverse currency impact.

As customers come back to stores, Walgreens also said it is investing in its workforce to return to normal operating hours. However, it has continued to see some changes in shopping habits. Its U.S. digital sales growth grew 14% in the fourth quarter, on top of an 82% increase in the year-ago period.

On Thursday, the company raised its outlook for the health care division. It said it now anticipates a sales target of $12 billion, rather than $11 billion, for fiscal 2025.

As of Wednesday’s close, Walgreens shares are down nearly 39% so far this year. That trails behind the S&P 500, which is down about 25%. Shares of Walgreens closed Wednesday at $31.94, down about 2%.

Read the company’s earnings release here.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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How to identify new shot at CVS, Walgreens


COVID omicron booster: How to identify updated vaccine at CVS, Walgreens. A pedestrian walks past the Walgreens on the corner of Cesar Chavez Street and Mission Street on Friday, October 22, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif.

Constanza Hevia H./Special to The Chronicle 2021

With the omicron-specific COVID-19 booster now available, how can you ensure that the booster you sign up for is the new one and not the old one?

While some pharmacy sites, like Walgreens, make it clear when you sign up for an appointment that they are offering the “updated” booster, others, like CVS, don’t specify.

But rest assured — any booster shot you receive now will be the new one, pharmacists confirmed.

When the U.S. Food and Drug Administration authorized the updated vaccine — called a bivalent vaccine — the agency also changed its authorization for the original vaccine, saying it can no longer be used as a booster for people 12 and older.

The original vaccine will still be used for people getting their initial vaccine doses, a CVS spokesperson confirmed.

As of Friday, CVS had booster appointments available in San Francisco for the afternoon, while Walgreens had booster appointments available starting next week.

Danielle Echeverria is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: danielle.echeverria@sfchronicle.com @DanielleEchev

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CVS, Walgreens and Walmart Must Pay $650.5 Million in Ohio Opioids Case

At trial, Mr. Lanier’s experts said the counties would need more than $3 billion, which he described as an amount equivalent to “the sun, the moon and the stars.” Judge Polster, however, had agreed only to “the moon,” Mr. Lanier added, acknowledging that he was nonetheless quite pleased with that result.

Adam Zimmerman, who teaches complex litigation at Loyola Law School, Los Angeles and who has closely followed the national opioid litigation, said: “Just imagine the costs for the other 3,000 similar plaintiffs in this litigation, or the nearly 20,000 incorporated cities around the country. With those kinds of numbers, it’s no wonder so many defendants have chosen to settle out of court.”

The money must be paid in installments over 15 years, the judge ruled. He also ordered the companies to comply with a strict series of monitoring and reporting rules within 90 days to ensure that they improve how they dispense opioids and spot potential problems. Those requirements include putting in place hotlines for anonymous tips and policies for internal compliance committees.

Judge Polster noted that both CVS and Walgreens had already agreed to such restrictions in a May settlement of opioid claims with the state of Florida. Although such practices should already exist in accordance with federal regulations, this order gives additional oversight to an outside administrator.

Judge Polster’s ruling not only sharply scolds the pharmacy chains for their business dealings in the two Ohio counties, but also implicitly stands as a warning to these companies in other pending cases. Of the three groups of defendants, the pharmacy chains have been the most reluctant to settle cases.

Earlier this month, for example, the nation’s big three distributors settled with more than a hundred West Virginia counties and cities for $400 million for their business practices during the opioid epidemic. Loosely comparing that settlement to Judge Polster’s ruling, Mr. Lanier said the takeaway was that “it’s a heck of a lot cheaper to settle than it is to lose at trial.” Referring to the pharmacies, he added, “I mean, they could have settled this for a heck of a lot less than they’re doing now.”

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Walgreens contributed to San Francisco opioid crisis: judge

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A federal judge ruled this week that Walgreens can be held responsible for contributing to San Francisco’s opioid crisis.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer on Wednesday upheld a city attorney’s claim that the pharmacy chain had not exercised proper oversight with prescriptions, including over-dispensing addictive substances and failing to report suspicious orders. 

“Walgreens pharmacies in San Francisco dispensed hundreds of thousands of red flag opioid prescriptions without performing adequate due diligence,” the judge wrote. “Tens of thousands of these prescriptions were written by doctors with suspect prescribing patterns.”

“The evidence showed that Walgreens did not provide its pharmacists with sufficient time, staffing, or resources to perform due diligence on these prescriptions,” Breyer added.

SAN FRANCISCO ISSUES WARNING AMID FENTANYL OVERDOSE DEATHS

A Walgreens in San Francisco. (Google Maps)
(Google Maps)

The judge noted that the influx of red-flag opioid prescriptions led to San Francisco hospitals being overwhelmed, children’s playgrounds being littered with drugs and even city libraries being forced to close due to syrine-clogged toilets.  

Walgreens released a statement denying the city’s claim. 

VIRGINIA COUNTY REPORTS PRESENCE OF OPIOID MORE DEADLY THAN FENTANYL

“We never manufactured or marketed opioids, nor did we distribute them to the ‘pill mills’ and internet pharmacies that fueled this crisis,” Walgreens spokesman Fraser Engerman said.

Homeless people consume illegal drugs in an encampment along Willow St. in the Tenderloin district of downtown on Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022 in San Francisco, CA.
(Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Engerman also claimed that ruling was an “unprecedented expansion of public nuisance law” and called the attempt “misguided and unsustainable.”

A ruling on monetary damages has yet to be determined. 

MICHIGAN OFFICER DETAILS HARROWING MOMENT HE COLLAPSED FROM FENTANYL EXPOSURE

The Golden Gate city has been hit especially hard by the opioid crisis. According to the city’s health department, 474 people died in San Francisco last year from fentanyl-related overdoses.

Last week, San Francisco’s new district attorney announced that she would revoke former DA Chesa Boudin’s policy of offering lenient plea deals for drug offenders.

People sleep near discarded clothing and used needles on a street in the Tenderloin neighborhood in San Francisco, on July 25, 2019. 
(AP)

The new policy prevents serious offenders from being referred to San Francisco’s community justice court (CJC). The CJC is a “progressive reform” program that addresses “the primary issues facing the individual and not just their crime,” according to the Superior Court of San Francisco.

Under DA Brooke Jenkins’ new policy, dealers arrested with an excess of five grams of drugs can no longer be referred to CJC. 

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“The previous administration’s policy had no weight limit threshold, was not adhering to CJC guidelines, and allowed drug dealers, arrested with as much as 500 grams of fentanyl, and who had multiple open fentanyl cases, to be referred to CJC,” according to Jenkins’ office. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Walgreens helped fuel San Francisco’s opioid crisis, judge rules

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Walgreens helped fuel the opioid epidemic in San Francisco by shipping and dispensing the addictive drugs without proper due diligence, a federal judge ruled Wednesday in what attorneys suing the retailer called a “wake-up call for companies.”

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer said Walgreens “substantially contributed” to one of the nation’s deadliest public health crises by not stopping suspicious orders and dispensing drugs that were diverted for illicit use, causing a public nuisance in a major city that is among the hardest hit by addiction and overdoses. Walgreens, responsible for shipping nearly 1 out of every 5 oxycodone and hydrocodone pills distributed nationwide during the height of the opioid crisis, was the only drug company sued by San Francisco that did not settle, going to trial in April.

“Walgreens has regulatory obligations to take reasonable steps to prevent the drugs from being diverted and harming the public,” Breyer wrote. “The evidence at trial established that Walgreens breached these obligations.”

A trial will be held later to determine how much the company must pay the city to address the harms of the opioid crisis. The city does not yet have an estimated amount it will seek.

Walgreens spokesman Fraser Engerman said the company was “disappointed” with the decision and would appeal.

“As we have said throughout this process, we never manufactured or marketed opioids, nor did we distribute them to the ‘pill mills’ and internet pharmacies that fueled this crisis,” he wrote in an email. “We stand behind the professionalism and integrity of our pharmacists, dedicated healthcare professionals who live in the communities they serve.”

City Attorney David Chiu said the first bench trial finding Walgreens liable in the opioid epidemic “has national significance” in a years-long effort to hold drug distributors and pharmacies responsible. As the company has recently closed stores in the city, citing the effects of the drug epidemic, Chiu accused Walgreens of shifting blame.

“This is akin to an arsonist complaining about the fire,” he said at a news conference.

The verdict marks a second blow for the pharmacy giant — with thousands of other lawsuits by states, cities and counties remaining. Unlike the three largest drug distributors and drugmakers Johnson & Johnson and Teva, Walgreens has not reached a national settlement. It did not go through bankruptcy as manufacturers Purdue Pharma, Mallinckrodt and Insys have.

In a 112-page opinion, Breyer spelled out the specifics of the city’s drug crisis and the timeline of Walgreens’s response to drug misuse. Paul Geller, an attorney representing San Francisco and other communities across the country fighting drug companies, said the verdict “is anything but a run-of-the-mill legal ruling,” pointing to meticulous detail about the crisis in the city and the ways Walgreens contributed.

“I hope it is distributed as required reading in Big Pharma boardrooms throughout the country,” Geller said, “because his painstakingly detailed ruling ought to be a wake-up call for companies and help ensure this never happens again.”

Peter Mougey, an attorney also representing San Francisco and other communities, said the verdict will help in other cases.

“Walgreens has hidden, covered up and run from the truth throughout the entirety of this five-year litigation,” he said. “Walgreens knew its system to detect and stop suspicious orders was nonexistent but continued to ship opioids at an alarming pace to increase profits. San Francisco is now one step closer to starting the healing process.”

The decision comes after the company reached a $683 million settlement with the state of Florida in May, halting a trial in state court. In November, a jury in Ohio found that the company, along with CVS and Walmart, contributed to the opioid crisis in two counties — the first decision of its kind in a pharmacy case.

Walgreens stopped distributing opioids after the Drug Enforcement Administration shut down a warehouse in 2012.

But the city argued that the impact of Walgreens’s shipping and dispensing continues to reverberate as people who use drugs have moved from prescription pills to heroin to fentanyl as the illicit drug market has evolved.

Opioid overdoses, including heroin and fentanyl, have skyrocketed in San Francisco, where there was a 478 percent increase in those deaths between 2015 and 2020, climbing to 584, according to data from the city. Opioid-related emergency-room visits tripled at the same time, at nearly 3,000 in 2020.

During the trial, city officials testified about the extent that the crisis infiltrated everyday life. Needles were removed from the city’s parks “like changing out the toilet paper in the restrooms,” a park ranger said. When paramedics respond to someone who has no pulse and is not breathing, they assume it’s an opioid overdose.

The system of monitoring for suspicious orders Walgreens was required to maintain under the Controlled Substances Act was ineffective, the judge said. Thousands of suspicious orders were sent to its pharmacies without investigation.

Breyer’s verdict criticized the company and faulted executives who failed to stop the diversion of drugs and repeatedly denied internal requests for a central database of reports on suspicious customers. He said the head of compliance was “vague and evasive” on the stand.

The judge sided with the city, agreeing that the company exerted pressure on pharmacists, who had little time and oversight before dispensing drugs. Pharmacists filled out the due-diligence forms via paper and stored them in filing cabinets rather than electronically. A pharmacist in one store could not access records from other locations.

If pharmacists refused to fill a prescription, they noted the refusal in the internal computer system, which was limited to 320 characters.

“Walgreens pharmacies operated in information silos,” Breyer said. “This need not have been so.”

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US to Distribute 400M N95 Masks Next Week. Here’s Where to Get One in Illinois – NBC Chicago

A total of 400 million N95 masks will be made available for free starting next week as U.S. health officials assert the importance of wearing highly-protective face coverings during the current omicron surge.

The Biden administration previously announced plans to partner with pharmacies and community health centers to distribute masks from the country’s Strategic National Stockpile.

While shipments were expected to begin this week, the program likely won’t be fully operational until early February.

Masks will be distributed at health centers and pharmacies enrolled in the Federal Retail Pharmacy Program, a nationwide program that relies on such entities to help expand COVID-19 vaccine access.

Here’s a list of where you’ll be able to find a free N95 mask in Illinois, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:

  • Albertsons Companies (including Osco, Jewel-Osco and other subsidiaries)
  • Costco
  • CPESN USA
  • CVS
  • Good Neighbor Pharmacy and AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation’s pharmacy services administrative organization (PSAO), Elevate Provider Network
  • Health Mart Pharmacies
  • Hy-Vee
  • LeaderNET and The Medicine Shoppe Pharmacy, Cardinal Health’s PSAOs
  • Meijer
  • The Kroger Co. (including Kroger, Mariano’s, Pick-n-Save and other brands under the company)
  • Piggy Wiggly
  • Schnucks
  • Walgreens
  • Walmart (including Sam’s Club)

To find a health center near you, click here. A full list of which pharmacies and retailers are participating in the program can be found here.

Each resident will be limited to three masks per person to ensure broad access to the program, according to a White House official.

The Biden administration will begin making 400 million N-95 masks available for free to Americans starting next week.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidance on masks for the general public Jan. 14, saying people “may choose” to wear N95 and KN95 masks because they offer the best protection against Covid. But the agency stopped short of recommending that people seek out certain masks over others.

During the early days of the pandemic, people in the U.S. were urged to leave N95 masks and the KN95 versions made in China for health care workers, according to NBC News. But since then, the U.S. has bolstered its manufacturing capacity, and the country now has a stockpile of 750 million N95 masks as part of the Strategic National Stockpile for health care workers.

Some members of Congress have pressured Biden to more aggressively address the financial cost of Covid tests and masks to shift the burden away from U.S. households. The N95 masks can sell for as little as $1 and be reused several times, but they can add up to be more expensive than reusable cloth masks over time.

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Walgreens ‘Pleased to Partner’ With Biden Administration in Distributing Free N95 Masks – NBC Chicago

As part of its ongoing battle to push back a surge in COVID cases and hospitalizations related to the omicron variant, the Biden administration is expected to make 400 million N95 masks available for free to United States residents, and Walgreens says that it will participate in the program.

The Chicago-based company announced that it would make the masks of varying sizes available to the public, free of charge, beginning in the near future.

“We are pleased to partner with the administration to make N95 masks in varying sizes available free of charge at select Walgreens locations nationwide while supplies last,” a company spokesperson said. “We know masks are an effective way to stop the spread of COVID-19.”

According to a White House statement, the masks will come from the government’s Strategic National Stockpile, which has more than 750 million of the highly-protective masks on-hand.

The masks are expected to be available for pickup at pharmacies and community health centers across the country, and final details are still being worked out, according to Walgreens officials.

The Biden administration will begin making 400 million N-95 masks available for free to Americans starting next week.

“We are currently finalizing the operational details of this program and will provide information once available,” the company said.

The masks will begin shipping this week, and distribution will begin later this month, according to officials. Each individual will be able to get up to three of the masks.

The news comes after the CDC recommended that residents wear properly-fitted N95 and KN95 masks, as those coverings were shown to be more effective at protecting individuals from the omicron variant of the virus.

Cloth masks can still be worn, according to officials.

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