7 min

In the news.. Insulin pen shortage, Omnipod 5 update, once-weekly insulin approved in Canada, and more‪!‬ Diabetes Connections | Type 1 Diabetes

    • Medicine

It’s In the News! A look at the top diabetes stories and headlines happening now. Top stories this week: South Africa runs out of insulin pens - and why this could happen anywhere, once-weekly insulin is approved in Canada, update on Omnipod 5 with Dexcom G7 rollout, more older people are getting type 1 but more people are living longer with it, CGM at the Olympcs and more!
Find out more about Moms' Night Out 
Please visit our Sponsors & Partners - they help make the show possible!
Learn more about Gvoke Glucagon Gvoke HypoPen® (glucagon injection): Glucagon Injection For Very Low Blood Sugar (gvokeglucagon.com)
Omnipod - Simplify Life
Learn about Dexcom 
Edgepark Medical Supplies
Check out VIVI Cap to protect your insulin from extreme temperatures
Learn more about AG1 from Athletic Greens 
Drive research that matters through the T1D Exchange
The best way to keep up with Stacey and the show is by signing up for our weekly newsletter:
Sign up for our newsletter here
Here's where to find us:
Facebook (Group)
Facebook (Page)
Instagram
Twitter
Check out Stacey's books!
Learn more about everything at our home page www.diabetes-connections.com 
Reach out with questions or comments: info@diabetes-connections.com
Episode transcription with links:
 
Hello and welcome to Diabetes Connections In the News! I’m Stacey Simms and every other Friday I bring you a short episode with the top diabetes stories and headlines happening now.
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In the news is brought to you by Edgepark simplify your diabetes journey with Edgepark
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Quick note – the American Diabetes Association Scientific Sessions is this weekend. That means new research studies will be released, technology announced, and likely lots of news will be made. I’m recording this before the conference starts – if there’s enough going on we may have an additional In the News next week.
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Our top story right now…
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No more insulin pens for South Africa.. .as the pharmaceutical industry shifts production priorities to blockbuster weight-loss drugs. Novo Nordisk, the company that has supplied South Africa with human insulin in pens for a decade, opted not to renew its contract, which expired last month. No other company has bid on the contract — to supply 14 million pens for the next three years, at about $2 per pen.
Novo Nordisk’s  drugs Ozempic and Wegovy, which are widely prescribed in the U.S. for weight loss, are sold in single-use pens produced by many of the same contracted manufacturers who make the multidose insulin pens. A month’s supply of Ozempic in the United States costs about $1,000, far more than insulin.
Novo Nordisk dominates the global market for insulin in pens and has supplied South Africa since 2014. Eli Lilly, the other major producer, has indicated in recent months that it is struggling to keep up with the significant demand for its weight-loss drug Zepbound.
Novo Nordisk is continuing to supply human insulin in vials to South Africa, where more than four million people live with diabetes, but pens are considered much easier to use and more precise.
The vial system was phased out for most South Africans in 2014. But recently, South Africa’s National Department of Health instructed clinicians that they should teach patients how to use vials and syringes of insulin instead of pens.
I posted about this already and said this is a canary in the coal mine and everyone going to ADA should be asking Novo and Lilly about this. GLP medications are fantastic but insulin cannot be left behind.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/19/health/insulin-pens-south-africa-ozempic-wegovy.html
XX
Once a week basal insulin – for type 1 and type 2 – comes to Canada. Novo Nordisk announced that it’s version of insulin icodec will be available starting June 30th. They are calling it.. Awiqli – I promise I didn’t make that up.  Canada is the first country to get the product.
Awiqli works as a ti

It’s In the News! A look at the top diabetes stories and headlines happening now. Top stories this week: South Africa runs out of insulin pens - and why this could happen anywhere, once-weekly insulin is approved in Canada, update on Omnipod 5 with Dexcom G7 rollout, more older people are getting type 1 but more people are living longer with it, CGM at the Olympcs and more!
Find out more about Moms' Night Out 
Please visit our Sponsors & Partners - they help make the show possible!
Learn more about Gvoke Glucagon Gvoke HypoPen® (glucagon injection): Glucagon Injection For Very Low Blood Sugar (gvokeglucagon.com)
Omnipod - Simplify Life
Learn about Dexcom 
Edgepark Medical Supplies
Check out VIVI Cap to protect your insulin from extreme temperatures
Learn more about AG1 from Athletic Greens 
Drive research that matters through the T1D Exchange
The best way to keep up with Stacey and the show is by signing up for our weekly newsletter:
Sign up for our newsletter here
Here's where to find us:
Facebook (Group)
Facebook (Page)
Instagram
Twitter
Check out Stacey's books!
Learn more about everything at our home page www.diabetes-connections.com 
Reach out with questions or comments: info@diabetes-connections.com
Episode transcription with links:
 
Hello and welcome to Diabetes Connections In the News! I’m Stacey Simms and every other Friday I bring you a short episode with the top diabetes stories and headlines happening now.
XX
In the news is brought to you by Edgepark simplify your diabetes journey with Edgepark
XX
Quick note – the American Diabetes Association Scientific Sessions is this weekend. That means new research studies will be released, technology announced, and likely lots of news will be made. I’m recording this before the conference starts – if there’s enough going on we may have an additional In the News next week.
XX
Our top story right now…
XX
No more insulin pens for South Africa.. .as the pharmaceutical industry shifts production priorities to blockbuster weight-loss drugs. Novo Nordisk, the company that has supplied South Africa with human insulin in pens for a decade, opted not to renew its contract, which expired last month. No other company has bid on the contract — to supply 14 million pens for the next three years, at about $2 per pen.
Novo Nordisk’s  drugs Ozempic and Wegovy, which are widely prescribed in the U.S. for weight loss, are sold in single-use pens produced by many of the same contracted manufacturers who make the multidose insulin pens. A month’s supply of Ozempic in the United States costs about $1,000, far more than insulin.
Novo Nordisk dominates the global market for insulin in pens and has supplied South Africa since 2014. Eli Lilly, the other major producer, has indicated in recent months that it is struggling to keep up with the significant demand for its weight-loss drug Zepbound.
Novo Nordisk is continuing to supply human insulin in vials to South Africa, where more than four million people live with diabetes, but pens are considered much easier to use and more precise.
The vial system was phased out for most South Africans in 2014. But recently, South Africa’s National Department of Health instructed clinicians that they should teach patients how to use vials and syringes of insulin instead of pens.
I posted about this already and said this is a canary in the coal mine and everyone going to ADA should be asking Novo and Lilly about this. GLP medications are fantastic but insulin cannot be left behind.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/19/health/insulin-pens-south-africa-ozempic-wegovy.html
XX
Once a week basal insulin – for type 1 and type 2 – comes to Canada. Novo Nordisk announced that it’s version of insulin icodec will be available starting June 30th. They are calling it.. Awiqli – I promise I didn’t make that up.  Canada is the first country to get the product.
Awiqli works as a ti

7 min