U.S. Emergency Departments Face Serious Drug Shortages

Jesse Pines posing for a portrait and wearing a grey jacket and green tie

WASHINGTON (Jan. 4, 2016) — A new study reveals that drug shortages affecting emergency care have skyrocketed in the United States in recent years. While the prevalence of such shortages fell from 2002 to 2007; the number of shortages sharply increased by 373% (from 26 to 123) from 2008 to 2014.

These medications are approved, but for various reasons manufacturers cannot meet demands or have stopped making the drugs.

“Many of those medications are for life-threatening conditions, and for some drugs no substitute is available,” said Dr. Jess Pines, senior author of the Academic Emergency Medicine study. “This means that in some cases, emergency department physicians may not have the medications they need to help people who are in serious need of them.”

###

This Press Releases posted courtesy of Wiley. For additional material, please visit the Wiley Press Releases.

Latest News

A new research study led by Pedro Gazzinelli Guimaraes, PhD, assistant professor of microbiology, immunology, and tropical medicine, titled “Unraveling the Hidden Regulator: Deciphering Endogenous Retroelement Control of Allergic Type 2 Immune Response,” seeks to understand how dormant viruses in…
George Washington University (GW) School of Medicine and Health Sciences faculty members Andrea A. Anderson, MD, MEd ’23, and Wanda K. Nicholson, MD, MPH, MBA, along with GW Law Dean and Harold H. Green Professor of Law Dayna Bowen Matthew, JD, PhD, were among the 90 regular members and 10…
The George Washington University’s 8th Annual Cardiovascular Symposium, organized by the GW Heart & Vascular Institute, took place on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025 at the American College of Cardiology Heart House in Washington, DC.