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Search resuls for: "Products Regulatory Authority"


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Homeland Security, as well as companies that help identify counterfeit products such as Israel’s BrandShield. Fake weight-loss drugs will be a key focus in the agency’s annual counterfeit medicines report, due next year, the official said. “We have counterfeit products and stolen products,” the official said. "We will look online and if we find something that infringes (obesity drug trademarks) we'll get it taken down,” said Yoav Keren, BrandShield CEO. When a consumer buys those fakes, “what you get are expired drugs, counterfeit drugs, or nothing,” he added.
Persons: George Frey, Eli Lilly, BrandShield, Novo’s Ozempic, , Jim Mancuso, Mancuso, Europol, Novo, Lilly, , Ozempic, Yoav Keren, MHRA, Eli, Mounjaro, Patrick Wingrove, Aurora Ellis Organizations: Novo Nordisk, Pharmacy, REUTERS, Novo Nordisk’s, Pharmaceutical Security Institute, drugmakers Novo Nordisk, Europol, Interpol, U.S . Homeland Security, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, U.S . Department of Homeland, Coordination Center, PSI, Medicines, Healthcare, Agency, Health Organization, Ireland’s, Products Regulatory Authority, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Provo , Utah, U.S, America, Europe, Germany, Egypt, Russia, North America
Mouth cancer rates in Britain have been rising for two decades, with an all-time high of diagnoses likely a result of lifestyle factors, oral health experts told Reuters. This is contrary to claims shared online that COVID swab tests have caused an increase in oral cancer. One social media user spreading the falsehood here wrote: “Mouth cancer has hit an all time high! The Oral Health Foundation cites tobacco, alcohol and human papillomavirus (HPV) as the most common causes of mouth cancer (here). Oral cancer rates in Britain have been rising for at least two decades and there is no evidence a record high number of diagnoses are a result of COVID-19 swabs.
A fabricated poster mimicking the branding of the Irish Health Service Executive (HSE) has resurfaced online appearing to list “sudden death” as a side effect of COVID-19 vaccines. The poster mimics the typography, style and graphics used in official posters printed by the HSE. “This is not an HSE poster, and the information included on the poster was not authorised or published by the HSE,” the spokesperson told Reuters. No such official poster was printed by the Irish health executive, a spokesperson for the HSE told Reuters. No such poster exists in an archive of public posters printed by the HSE and text reading “People of Ireland” on the fake poster differs from language on official HSE posters.
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