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Doctor calls for more regulation amid deadly meningitis outbreak
(CBS News) Dr. William Schaffner, chairman of Preventive Medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, wants to see more government regulation of so-called "compounding pharmacies" amid an outbreak of fungal meningitis that has spread to nine states. Seven patients have died out of the 91 reported cases of the disease.
All the cases are connected to a steroid distributed by a Massachusetts pharmacy. That pharmacy is now recalling all of its products as a precaution.
A compounding pharmacy, Schaffner explained Monday on "CBS This Morning," is different from major pharmaceutical manufacturers in that it takes medications and sets them up for highly specialized uses, and then sells them to pain clinics and other medical facilities.
There are 7,500 compounding pharmacies in the U.S., with $3 billion in sales, representing 3 percent of prescriptions filled, according to the International Academy of Compounding Pharmacists.
"They are not regulated the way the major pharmaceutical companies are," Schaffner said. "They seem to have fallen into a regulatory gap. That's something that really needs to be addressed by the Congress."
CDC: More than 90 people ill with meningitis
Meningitis cases climb to 47 infected in seven states
Meningitis outbreak spotlights risks of drug mixing
Meningitis outbreak may affect more than 23 states
Meningitis scare has patients on edge
Asked what he fears most in the outbreak, Schaffner said, "I fear that we will continue to have more cases going on into the future from this tainted lot. This will take us a while to determine that. But I really think that going forward we need to have a regulatory structure that doesn't permit this to happen."
For more with Schaffner on "CBS This Morning," including his advice on what to do if you've recently been treated with these types of injections, watch the video in the player above.
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