Antibiotics Aren’t Aspirin
There’s a persistent habit in medicine—and especially in patient questions online—of treating antibiotics as if they were interchangeable with everyday […]
There’s a persistent habit in medicine—and especially in patient questions online—of treating antibiotics as if they were interchangeable with everyday […]
A patient in Phoenix types ‘is Ozempic safe for someone with a history of pancreatitis?’ into ChatGPT at 11 p.m.
In late 2023, a patient with type 2 diabetes asked ChatGPT whether semaglutide could eliminate the need for insulin entirely.
In 2023, a patient asked ChatGPT whether she could take Eliquis with ibuprofen. ChatGPT told her the combination was generally
How drug brands fought off-label prescribing to survive: real FDA cases, litigation wins, and what AI monitoring means for pharmacovigilance
There’s a strange thing that happens in antidepressant discussions: everyone talks about the start (the “it finally kicked in” moment),
There’s a quiet pattern in drug questions that shows up again and again: not “does it work?” but “what will
Nobody switches drugs because they want to. They switch because something stops working. If you strip away the clinical jargon
When a patient asks ChatGPT whether they should take Ozempic or Wegovy, they are not reading your brand’s prescribing information,
The medical science liaison had just finished a physician meeting when the rep on the account pulled out his phone.
A hospitalist in Cleveland needs to know the renal dosing adjustment for a patient on apixaban with a creatinine clearance
Clinical trials are tidy. Patients are not. In papers, drugs are taken on schedule, at fixed doses, with carefully controlled