Tornado damage to Pfizer plant will probably create long-term shortages of some drugs hospitals need
The Hindu
After a tornado damaged a Pfizer factory in North Carolina, experts fear it could put further strain on U.S. hospital drug supplies. The factory produces 25% of Pfizer's sterile injectable medicines, used in surgeries and intensive care units.
The fallout from a Pfizer factory being damaged by a tornado could put even more pressure on already-strained drug supplies at U.S. hospitals, experts say.
Wednesday’s tornado touched down near Rocky Mount, North Carolina, and ripped up the roof of a Pfizer factory that makes nearly 25% of Pfizer’s sterile injectable medicines used in U.S. hospitals, according to the drugmaker.
Pfizer said all employees were safely evacuated and accounted for, and no serious injuries were reported. The drugmaker is still assessing damage.
Here’s a closer look at the possible effects.
The North Carolina plant produces drugs that are injected or through an IV.
The plant makes drugs for anesthesia, medicines that treat infections and drugs needed for surgeries. The latter are used in surgeries or intensive care units for patients who are placed on ventilators, said Mike Ganio, who studies drug shortages at the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.
The Pfizer site does not make or store the company’s COVID-19 vaccine or treatments Comirnaty and Paxlovid.