Pharmacy Podcast Network
Pharmacy Podcast Network
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Pharmacy Podcast Network (PPN) is the world's largest network of podcasts dedicated to pharmacy professionals and industry insiders. It covers topics from community, long-term care, and specialty pharmacy to drug development, government policy, and digital health. The network features dynamic people in the pharmacy industry who are making a difference and delivering the best pharmacy care. PPN partners with brands to connect with thousands of daily listeners across various specialties and topics.
Episoder
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Compounding Advocacy in Heels: 2026 State Legislation Edition | Essential: The Pharmacy Compounding Podcast 04.06.2026 41minThis episode we look at some of the latest compounding news, and then we’ve got a deep dive into state-level legislation with the Leading Ladies of Pharmacy Compounding Advocacy.What bills are being introduced? What do they really mean when you read the detail? How will they affect state policies, and what could come next? And, of course, how are APC and compounding pharmacies fighting back against the bad bills that put patients at risk?If you’re a compounder, if you have patients who use compounded medications, or if you’re a patient yourself, you’ll want to hear this.Links from the podcast:The FDA statement on excluding GLP-1s from bulk compounding: https://fllw.me/491oGl3FDA Law Blog on the state of peptide compounding: https://fllw.me/4cpFF2C (part 1), https://fllw.me/4nxd13G (part 2)Is It Legit? to find a state-licensed compounding pharmacy: https://a4pc.org/isitlegitJoin APC! https://a4pc.org/join
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Birth Rights, Medical Bills & Legal Advocacy with Andi Orwoll, Esq. | MaternalRx 04.06.2026 37minBirth Rights, Medical Bills & Maternal Advocacy with Andi Orwoll, EsqIn this powerful episode of MaternalRx, Dr. Danielle Plummer sits down with Nevada attorney and founder of Your Legal Doula, Andi Orwoll, to discuss the often-overlooked legal and financial realities families face during pregnancy, birth, and postpartum recovery.From navigating IVF paperwork and unexpected C-sections to battling insurance denials and understanding birth rights, Andi shares how her own journey into motherhood inspired her to create a legal advocacy practice specifically for pregnant and postpartum families.This conversation explores the intersection of maternal health, patient advocacy, legal protections, informed consent, workplace rights, and the emotional toll of navigating the U.S. healthcare system during one of life’s most vulnerable seasons.In this episode, we discuss:- Why birth rights matter- The legal gaps in maternal healthcare- Insurance denials and surprise medical bills- IVF, fertility care, and the hidden administrative burden- Informed consent and patient advocacy during labor- The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA)- The midwifery model of care vs. traditional obstetric care- Maternal mental load and postpartum vulnerability- Why tracking medical records, bills, and receipts matters- Navigating medical bills and insurance appealsKey Takeaways:“Policy never overrides your rights.”Andi explains how many patients are intimidated in medical settings and may not realize they have the legal right to informed consent, respectful care, and bodily autonomy during pregnancy and birth.Birth experiences matter.Even when outcomes are medically positive, the emotional and psychological experience of birth can have lasting effects. Advocacy, education, and support can profoundly shape those experiences.The paperwork burden is real.Pregnancy often comes with overwhelming administrative tasks: insurance appeals, billing disputes, maternity leave paperwork, provider reimbursements, and more — all during an emotionally and physically vulnerable time.Midwives, doulas, OBs, pharmacists, and lawyers all have a role.Maternal healthcare works best when it’s collaborative. This episode highlights the importance of interdisciplinary support systems for pregnant families.Track everything.One of the biggest practical pearls from this episode: keep copies of:- Medical bills- Insurance explanations of benefits (EOBs)- Receipts- Appointment dates- Correspondence with insurance companies- Workplace accommodation requestsDocumentation can make all the difference if problems arise later.About the Guest:Andi Orwoll is a Nevada-licensed attorney and founder of Your Legal Doula, a legal advocacy practice focused on supporting families navigating pregnancy, birth, postpartum recovery, workplace accommodations, and healthcare systems in the United States.Inspired by her own experience with IVF, an unexpected hospital birth, and overwhelming postpartum paperwork, Andi created Your Legal Doula to help families understand their rights and confidently advocate for themselves during pregnancy and birth.* Follow Andi:- https://yourlegaldoula.com/- Instagram @yourlegaldoulaAbout the Host:Danielle Plummer is a pharmacist, antepartum doula, and founder of Obstet-Rx. Through education, advocacy, and pharmacogenetics, she helps women navigate hyperemesis gravidarum and manage medications through complex pregnancy-related conditions.* Follow Danielle:- www.HGPharmacist.com- linkedin.com/in/daniellerplummerMemorable Quotes“We are not playing. We are here to have the birth experience that we want.”“Policy never overrides your rights.”“The most important work you are doing during your perinatal season should not be paperwork.”“The way we are treated during birth matters.”Resources Mentionedhttps://yourlegaldoula.com/https://hgpharmacist.com/Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (EEOC): www.eeoc.gov/Disclaimer:This podcast episode is intended for educational and informati
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Why the Pharmacy Supply Chain Breaks — and What Leaders Must Do About It | Executive Dose 03.06.2026 38minA leadership-level discussion on why drug shortages and supply instability continue to challenge pharmacy, and what executives must understand about operations, compliance, sourcing, and strategy to build a more durable supply chain.
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Transparency, Auditing, and the PBM Shell Game | PBM Reform Podcast 02.06.2026 48minIn this episode of the PBM Reform Podcast, host Greg Reybold, Vice President and General Counsel at APCI, welcomes Josh Golden, Senior Vice President of Strategy at Judi Health and a nationally recognized voice in Pharmacy Benefit Manager reform. With more than 20 years of healthcare consulting experience, Golden brings deep expertise in vendor procurement, contract negotiation, plan design, and benefit strategy for large employers, government entities, and unions. Together, Reybold and Golden examine the financial models behind today’s PBM industry and why true transparency remains so difficult for employers, plan sponsors, patients, and pharmacies. The conversation explores how current PBM arrangements often benefit the PBMs more than the employers paying for coverage or the patients relying on their prescription benefits. Golden explains why auditing PBM contracts, rebate structures, spread pricing, administrative fees, pharmacy networks, and formulary decisions is essential to understanding the real economics of prescription drug benefits. This episode also addresses a growing concern in healthcare: PBM steering behavior. Are patients being quietly pushed toward specific formularies, specific pharmacies, and restricted networks that operate like closed networks without being clearly disclosed? Reybold and Golden discuss how this behavior can limit patient choice, disadvantage independent pharmacies, and distort the stated goal of lowering drug costs. The discussion also tackles the role of federal reform efforts, including whether the Appropriations Act represents meaningful PBM accountability or whether it risks becoming another layer in the broader shell game surrounding PBM reform. Finally, the episode asks one of the most important questions in pharmacy policy today: should PBMs own pharmacies? If vertical integration is promoted as a way to lower drug costs, where is the proof — and who actually benefits? Transparency, Auditing, and the PBM Shell Game | PBM Reform
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YARAL Pharma’s Bold Approach to the U.S. Generics Market | Yaral Pharma 01.06.2026 34minThis is a corporate-focused, conversational interview between Pharmacy Podcast Network Host, Todd Eury and Stephen Beckman, CEO of YARAL Pharma. The discussion explores YARAL Pharma’s unique approach to the U.S. generics market, its commitment to innovation and accessibility, and the company’s philosophy of “Doing Things Differently” by redefining what it means to be a generics partner. Stephen Beckman also shares insights into YARAL’s growth and key milestones since launching its first product in 2023, including the expansion of its product portfolio, investment in business development, and focus on building a strong company culture. Learn more at YARALPharma.com
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Health Security, Specialty Care & the OTC Products Patients Trust | TWIRx 29.05.2026 1t 11minOn this episode of This Week in Pharmacy, we examine three major forces shaping healthcare today: the global impact of conflict on health security, the continued evolution of personalized specialty pharmacy care, and the over-the-counter products patients rely on most. We open the show with Aman Gupta, Managing Partner, Asia-Pacific at SPAG FINN Partners, and contributor author at MedikaLife. Aman joins TWIRx to discuss his latest MedikaLife article, which argues that global conflict is quietly undermining health security by redirecting funding, attention, and infrastructure away from healthcare and toward defense priorities. As military spending rises, health systems—especially in low- and middle-income countries—face growing pressure from shrinking access, rising costs, workforce shortages, disrupted supply chains, weakened disease surveillance, and reduced emergency preparedness. Conflicts in Ukraine, Gaza, and Sudan demonstrate how attacks on healthcare systems, displacement, malnutrition, and shortages of essential medicines can rapidly turn health access into a survival issue. Aman urges policymakers to treat health as strategic security infrastructure, not as a secondary social expense. TWIRx also gives a special shout out to the Indian Pharmaceutical Association, recognizing its continued leadership and advocacy for the pharmacy profession. Next, we welcome Dr. Chris Antypas, PharmD, with Perigon Pharmacy 360, for a discussion on how specialty pharmacy is becoming increasingly personalized. As complex therapies continue to advance, pharmacists are playing a critical role in ensuring medications and treatment plans are customized to optimize patient care. We explore how technology, workflow processes, clinical expertise, and pharmacists who deeply understand specific disease states are essential to successful specialty pharmacy outcomes. To wrap up the episode, returning guest Shanley Chien Pierce, Senior Editor, Health at U.S. News & World Report, joins us to review the latest OTC medicine and health product evaluations. Top-rated products include Children’s Delsym for coughs, Unisom for sleep, and Pedialyte for electrolytes, along with skincare favorites such as La Roche-Posay for retinol and Aquaphor for lip balm. For the full list covering more than 128 categories, visit the U.S. News Best OTC Medicine & Health Products rankings. Sponsored by Perigon Pharmacy 360 Listen & Subscribe Stay connected with This Week in Pharmacy and the Pharmacy Podcast Network for conversations with pharmacy leaders, healthcare innovators, policy experts, and industry voices shaping the future of care.
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Navigating the Pharmacy Industry's Political Landscape | Cardinal Health™ Counter Talk™ Podcast 29.05.2026 34minOn this episode of the Counter Talk™ Podcast, host Jason Callori sits down with Bryan Lowe, Director of Government Relations at Cardinal Health, for a deep dive into the political landscape of 2026. As state legislators begin a new legislative session, Jason and Bryan dive into state-level priorities, anticipated challenges and the key issues already dominating the agenda, including PBM reform, state budgets, and evolving scope of practice discussions. Tune in for essential insights into the legislative year ahead!
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Asembia's Specialty Pharmacy Summit Rewind 2026 | 5/6 28.05.2026 56minThis is the Pharmacy Podcast Network's ASEMBIA 2026 rewind! We're dedicated to bringing you inside coverage of the pharmacy nation's biggest events with on the street style interviews with keynote speakers, attendees, exhibitors, and recurring guests who make each year special. This is part five of our six part series! We'd like to thank PantherX Rare for sponsoring this episode! On this episode we interview: Katie DiLorenzo, PharmD SVP - PantherRxAustin Russian - PantherRxAutumn Santeler - Polar Tech IndustriesBen Heiser - Lumicera Health ServicesCaroline Girardeau, PharmD, MBA ACHCChris Stewart - PetauriNatalie Bedford - McKesson
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Marketing That Moves the Needle with Bruce Kneeland, Independent Pharmacy Marketing Specialist | The Bottom Line Podcast 27.05.2026 32minWhat's the difference between marketing and advertising and why does it matter for your pharmacy? In this episode of the Bottom Line Pharmacy Podcast, Austin Murray sits down with Bruce Kneeland, longtime independent pharmacy advocate and host of the Pharmacy Crossroads podcast, for a candid conversation about what it really takes to grow an independent pharmacy in today's competitive landscape.Bruce shares his fascinating journey from a chance job posting at BYU that landed him in Fargo, North Dakota, to senior roles at Health Mart, AmerisourceBergen, and eventually becoming a consultant and road-tripper who has visited pharmacies coast to coast.In this episode, Bruce and Austin cover:- Marketing vs. advertising and why confusing the two is costing pharmacies patients- The word-of-mouth myth and why relying on it alone is "killing you slowly"- Messaging that connects how to talk about complex services like compounding in language patients actually understand- The B2B opportunity and why your real customer for compounding and specialty services might be the prescriber, not the patientAnd more!
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Asembia's Specialty Pharmacy Summit 2026 Rewind | Part 4/6 26.05.2026 1t 1minThis is the Pharmacy Podcast Network's ASEMBIA 2026 rewind! We're dedicated to bringing you inside coverage of the pharmacy nation's biggest events with on the street style interviews with keynote speakers, attendees, exhibitors, and recurring guests who make each year special. This is part four of our six part series! We'd like to thank JB Consulting for sponsoring this episode! On this episode we interview: Shaun Jensen - JB Consulting GroupLindsay Greenleaf - ADVIMagnar Kvilhaug - Odin Pharmacy Innovations LLCMarina Allen - RxAccess PartnersMatt Hare - CoverMyMedsRichard Brook - Better Health WorldwideValerie Mondelli and Colin Banas - DrFirst
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Does Pharmacy Have an Identity Crisis? | TWIRx 22.05.2026 1t 36minOn this episode of This Week in Pharmacy, we examine two major forces reshaping the profession: the unfinished business of pharmacist provider status and the legal landscape around direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical distribution. In part one, Erik Abel, PharmD, MBA, discusses his May 2026 analysis, “So Pharmacists Want to Be a Provider: Where the Profession Lost Its Way and Perhaps a Path to Get Back.” Abel argues that pharmacy’s provider-status challenge is not a lack of clinical evidence, but a lack of operational infrastructure: credentialing, payer contracting, revenue cycle management, interoperability, and scalable business models. In part two, Darshan Kulkarni, PharmD, Esq., joins the show to discuss direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical distribution, legal risk, regulatory scrutiny, telehealth-linked prescribing, manufacturer strategy, and what pharmacists need to understand as drug distribution moves closer to the patient. This week in pharmacy news, Pittsburgh-area pharmacies continue to face uneven access to Adderall and other ADHD medications, years after the FDA first identified shortages in 2022. Patients are still calling multiple pharmacies, switching medications, rationing doses, or going without treatment as availability varies by dosage, formulation, manufacturer, and wholesaler. Pharmacists are also using medication therapy management to protect older adults from preventable medication-related harm. MTM reviews can identify risky prescriptions and OTC products, including diphenhydramine, duplicate therapies, drug interactions, and long-term proton pump inhibitor use that may need reassessment. In 340B news, CVS Health is facing federal lawsuits from major health systems alleging CVS Specialty and WellPartner improperly retained approximately $250 million in savings that should have gone back to covered entities. The litigation adds pressure to debates over PBM integration, contract pharmacy arrangements, and 340B transparency. On Capitol Hill, lawmakers are pressing the Department of Defense to commit to annual audits of the TRICARE pharmacy contract as concerns continue around PBM conflicts of interest, reimbursement practices, network adequacy, and access for independent and community pharmacies.
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Asembia's Specialty Pharmacy Summit 2026 Rewind | 3/6 20.05.2026 57minThis is the Pharmacy Podcast Network's ASEMBIA 2026 rewind! We're dedicated to bringing you inside coverage of the pharmacy nation's biggest events with on the street style interviews with keynote speakers, attendees, exhibitors, and recurring guests who make each year special. This is part three of our six part series! We'd like to thank Pergion Pharmacy 360 for sponsoring this episode! Chris Antypas PharmD - Perigon Pharmacy 360Chris Corsi - CassianRxChristen Roy - InovalonRobert Ojeda - K&B Pharmacy Associates
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The Truth About Unexplained Infertility with Nick Dorsey | The Holistic Pharmacy Podcast 18.05.2026 52minToday’s guest and I fundamentally agree on the basic premise of the body’s innate wisdom and capacity to heal, especially when we view it in a broader ecological context. According to him, infertility doesn't mean the body is broken; it's actually making intelligent, adaptive, and protective decisions made by the 4 foundational systems of the body that created life in the first place based on environmental conditions, resources, safety, and energy. Nick Dorsey, FDN-P, is a systems-based fertility and health educator, biochemist, and former chemistry educator who helps couples understand why fertility shuts down even when labs look normal and they're doing all the right things. With a Master's in biochemistry and over a decade teaching chemistry, physics, and environmental science, he translates complex biology into a clear understanding of how the body makes decisions. Nick’s research and experience supports that the body isn't broken, it's adapting intelligently to depletion, toxicity, and chronic stress, and symptoms like inflammation, fatigue, anxiety, gut dysfunction, and unexplained infertility are protective signals from a system in survival mode.Nick teaches health through the Four Pillars of biological readiness: the microbiome as the environmental interface, mitochondria as energy and resource allocators, minerals as the electrical and enzymatic stabilizers of physiology, and the nervous system as the regulator of safety and coherence. Rather than chasing symptoms, his work restores these systems so the body can repair, regulate, and reproduce when conditions are biologically appropriate. Functional labs reveal patterns of adaptation that explain why the body is saying not now, and what it needs next.Nick works with individuals and couples through high-touch, data-informed programs, with a long-term commitment to healthy pregnancies, births, and families across generations. He's a father of two with another on the way, both born at home, and long before biochemistry he spent most of his life teaching, coaching, and supporting children, including leading a youth ministry for kids with disabilities. Connect with Nick via:Email: Nick@functionalchemistry.com IG: @FunctionalChemistryYT: @FunctionalChemistry10
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Asembia's Specialty Pharmacy Summit 2026 Rewind | Part 2/6 16.05.2026 55minThis is the Pharmacy Podcast Network's ASEMBIA 2026 rewind!We're dedicated to bringing you inside coverage of the pharmacy nation's biggest events with on the street style interviews with keynote speakers, attendees, exhibitors, and recurring guests who make each year special. This is part two of our six part series! We'd like to thank Nested Knowledge for sponsoring this episode! On this episode we interview: Keith Kallmes - Nested Knowledge Hannah Baxter and Andrew Rouff, MMIT - The Dedham Group Heather Bonome - URAC Jeremy Richardson - Gifthealth Joe DePinto - McKesson Johny Kello - MatchRx Shawn Griffin - URAC
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U.S. Supreme Court and Generic Drugs | TWIRx 15.05.2026 21minThis week, This Week in Pharmacy examines several stories shaping the business, clinical, and legal future of pharmacy practice. In TWIRx News from Pharmacy Times from Megan Maroney, PharmD, BCPP, FAAPP, focused on antidepressant use, withdrawal concerns, deprescribing, and shared decision-making. The key takeaway: patients should never stop antidepressants abruptly. Pharmacists can play a vital role in reducing stigma, educating patients, and supporting safe conversations about tapering, side effects, and long-term treatment. In health technology news, FDB research presented at the 2026 AMIA Amplify Informatics Conference found that patient-specific, risk-based medication guidance reduced pharmacy alert volume by 70% in a high-volume community pharmacy setting. The model consolidates alerts into one actionable message tied to the patient’s most relevant risk, helping reduce alert fatigue and improve workflow. Finally, we review a federal court ruling in Eli Lilly’s lawsuit against Houston-based Empower Pharmacy over compounded tirzepatide versions of Mounjaro and Zepbound. The judge dismissed key federal trademark and Texas unfair competition claims, while allowing other state claims to continue.Andy Crawford, with Keysource is back on TWIRx talking about the U.S. Supreme Court taking up Hikma Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. v. Amarin Pharma Inc., a case that could significantly affect generic drug competition. At issue is whether Hikma’s marketing materials and public communications around its generic version of Amarin’s fish oil-based cardiovascular drug improperly promoted a still-patented use. Hikma and the broader generic industry argue the case is about protecting “skinny label” rules, which allow generics to carve out patented indications while still bringing lower-cost medications to market. For pharmacists, the decision could influence generic availability, substitution confidence, pricing pressure, and how manufacturers communicate with providers and pharmacies. Thanks to our sponsors, CassianRx and IPC, for supporting independent pharmacy, innovation, and the future of patient-centered care.
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Asembia’s Specialty Pharmacy Summit 2026 Rewind | Part 1/6 14.05.2026 59minThis is the Pharmacy Podcast Network's ASEMBIA 2026 rewind! We're dedicated to bringing you inside coverage of the pharmacy nation's biggest events with on the street style interviews with keynote speakers, attendees, exhibitors, and recurring guests who make each year special. This is part one of our six part series! We'd like to thank Clearway Health for sponsoring this episode! On this episode we interview: Allison Arant - Clearway Health Jennifer Noonan - Accessia Health Aleata Postell - CenterWell Derek Dennis, PharmD - Clearway Health Dr. Shafaat Pirani, PharmD, BCGP - Wellgistics Health Meghna Misra - Claritas Rx
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Leadership Under Pressure in Community Pharmacy | Executive Dose 13.05.2026 39minIn this episode of Executive Dose, Marc Essensa, CEO at IPC, joins the conversation to discuss what leadership looks like inside community pharmacy during one of the most pressured moments in the profession. The episode explores how vision, strategy, ethics, and creative thinking can help independent pharmacies not only survive, but compete and grow. Marc and Stephen examine the realities facing pharmacy owners today, including reimbursement pressure, shrinking margins, labor challenges, operational overload, and the emotional toll of pharmacy closures. The discussion moves beyond day-to-day survival and focuses on what separates leaders who react from those who lead with clarity and discipline. The episode also highlights the importance of building a business model that can compete, using partnerships, technology, operational efficiency, and new service models to create long-term value. Marc also speaks to the role of business ethics and trust, emphasizing that in community pharmacy, leadership character is not optional — it is part of the business strategy. Key Topics Leadership under pressure in community pharmacy How pharmacy owners can lead with vision during uncertainty Strategic mistakes that weaken independent pharmacies Operational efficiency, differentiation, and growth opportunities The role of IPC in helping pharmacies compete Why ethics, transparency, and trust matter in pharmacy leadership Creativity, courage, and innovation in the future of community pharmacy
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Building a Diverse Content Strategy That Works| Marketing Vitals 12.05.2026 31minA strong marketing strategy depends on the variety and relevance of your content. In this episode, we dive into what a diverse content strategy is, why it matters, and how it can elevate your marketing efforts. We’ll highlight the key benefits of producing varied content, common pitfalls to avoid, and practical tips for integrating different content types across your channels. Tune in to learn how to engage your audience more effectively, strengthen your online presence, and make your marketing work harder for you.
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The New Science of Aging Well with Dr. Sofia Din | The Holistic Pharmacy Podcast 11.05.2026 58minToday’s guest on the podcast shares how to proactively preserve both one’s health span and “beauty span”: the visible vitality, confidence, and connection to self over time. We got into some juicy and controversial topics around aging and the beauty industry, as well sustainability.My guest asserts that aging is not a passive process, it is something we can actively manage. Her mission is to help people understand that beauty, energy, and longevity are interconnected. When you support the body at a cellular and hormonal level, you don’t just look better, you function better.Dr. Sofia Din is a board-certified Family Physician with over 25 years of medical experience and advanced training in Geriatrics. She began her career in hospital medicine and long-term care, where she served as a Medical Director, before shifting her focus from disease management to proactive longevity and anti-aging medicine.She is the Medical Director of Juvanni Medical P.C. in Westchester, New York, where she integrates aesthetics, hormonal health, and advanced non-surgical technologies to help patients navigate menopause, andropause, metabolic slowdown, and chronic skin failure.Dr. Din is also the author of Do We Really Need Botox? and the host of the podcast Bathroom Diaries, where she explores the science, psychology, and cultural dimensions of aging, beauty, and self-perception.Connect with Sofia via:— Juvanni Med Spa:Email: juvannimedspa@gmail.com Website: Botox Guru at Juvanni Med SpaFB: Juvanni Med SpaIG: @drjuvanniYT: @DrJuvanniTwitter/X: @JuvanniMedSpaLinked In: Juvanni Medical— Dr. Sofia Din:FB: Sofia DinIG: @therealdrjuvanniYT: @DrJuvanniTikTok: @botoxguruLinked In: Sofia DinPodcast (Spotify): Bathroom Diaries w. Dr. Sofia Din— Minerva Life:YT: @minervalife6529TikTok: @sofiadinmdVisit https://marinabuksov.com for more holistic content. Music from https://www.purple-planet.com. Disclaimer: Statements herein have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Products listed are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any diseases.
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Expanding Long-Term Care Pharmacy at Home, Delivery Logistics, AI, and Healthcare Misinformation | TWIRx 08.05.2026 54minSponsored by Rx4RouteThis Week in Pharmacy returns with a timely two-part episode focused on pharmacy operations, medication access, and the growing responsibility of healthcare communicators in the age of AI.In our first segment, we welcome Joseph Dymowski, PharmD, CEO of Centennial Pharmacy Services, and Doniyor Sattarov, Vice President of Operations at Rx4Route, for a conversation about expanding long-term care pharmacy at home. As more patients age in place, pharmacies must rethink delivery, logistics, documentation, and patient communication as essential parts of care.Delivery is no longer just a convenience. It is a critical extension of pharmacy services. Reliable routing, real-time tracking, and proof of delivery help pharmacies improve adherence, reduce operational friction, and build stronger trust with patients, caregivers, and providers.Expanding LTC pharmacy-at-home services, building scalable delivery workflows, improving route efficiency, using delivery technology to support compliance, and why logistics may become a major competitive advantage for pharmacies.This episode is sponsored by Rx4Route, pharmacy delivery software designed to help pharmacies streamline delivery operations, optimize routes, track orders, and improve proof-of-delivery workflows.In our second segment, we speak with **Vincent Grippi, CEO of Grippi Media, about the dangers of AI-generated misinformation and the higher standard required in healthcare communications. As AI becomes more common in content creation, communications professionals must protect accuracy, credibility, and patient trust.In healthcare, misinformation can influence clinical understanding, damage reputations, and create confusion across the industry. That is why content for healthcare professionals must be reviewed, verified, and guided by human judgment.AI misinformation in healthcare, responsible content development, source verification, editorial review, subject-matter expertise, and how communicators can use AI without sacrificing trust.This episode connects two critical forms of trust in pharmacy: operational trust at the patient’s door and informational trust across every communication channel.Featured Guests:Joseph Dymowski, PharmD— CEO, Centennial Pharmacy ServicesDoniyor Sattarov— Vice President of Operations, Rx4RouteVincent Grippi— CEO, Grippi Media
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