Earlier this year, FDA released draft guidance the pharmaceutical and medical device industries had been awaiting for five years. But instead of revolutionizing the Agency's thinking on drug and device promotion, FDA's social media guidance essentially continued the familiar credo on advertisements—accurate and not misleading, fair balance, substantiation—and ignored some of the central features of social media. Last week, FDA reopened the comment period for the character-space limited communications and correcting third-party misinformation guidances. Now ...
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- Patent Infringement Lawsuit Alleges "Piracy" of AI-Driven Medical Technology
- DOJ Civil Division Accelerates Review of FCA Whistleblower Complaints Involving Federally Funded, State-Administered Benefits Programs
- FDA Warns Against “Over-Reliance” on AI Pharmaceutical Manufacturing . . . But How Much Reliance Is Too Much?
- Five Federal Cases Health Care and Life Sciences GCs Should Continue to Watch in 2026
- CMS Announces Nationwide Moratoria on New Medicare Enrollment for Hospices, Home Health Agencies