Close Menu
  • Business
  • Black Business
  • SMALL BUSINESS
  • BANK/FRAUD FINANCIAL CRIMES
  • Celebrities
  • CRYPTO
  • DEBT
  • Entrepreneur
  • ESTATE PLANNING
  • FRANCHISE
  • Gossip
  • GLOBAL ECONOMY
  • Music
  • MUTUAL FUNDS
  • Political
  • Pop Culture
  • PERSONAL FINANCE
  • Wall street
  • Privacy Policy
  • Business News Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Terms and Condition
What's Hot

Pusha T Announces Big Baby News–But Fans Question THIS

Cardi Blasts Offset After He Trolls Her, Calling Her Baby ‘His’

Howard Hotties Who Turned Heads At Homecoming 2025

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Pusha T Announces Big Baby News–But Fans Question THIS
  • Cardi Blasts Offset After He Trolls Her, Calling Her Baby ‘His’
  • Howard Hotties Who Turned Heads At Homecoming 2025
  • #RHOP Ashley Says She’s At Peace After Apologizing To Wendy
  • Are Connecticut Towing Companies Selling Junk Cars or Undervaluing Cars to Sell Them Faster? — ProPublica
  • Skegee Stunners Slaying & Parlaying At Tuskegee’s Homecoming
  • Owner of Black-Owned Dessert Food Truck Launches 2026 Scholarship Program
  • Podcaster Rory Farrell Blased Over Anti-Black & Offensive Tweets
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
THE MIRROR OF MEDIA
  • Home
  • Accounting
  • Banking
  • Business
  • Political
  • Crypto
  • Real Estate
  • Ecommerce
  • Entrepreneur
  • Investment
  • More
    • Music
    • Gossip
    • Pop Culture
    • Wall street
    • IPO’S
    • Mortgage/Loans
    • Venture Capitalists/Angel Investors
THE MIRROR OF MEDIA
You are at:Home»Political»What Happened When We Tried to Find the Factory That Made Atorvastatin — ProPublica
Political

What Happened When We Tried to Find the Factory That Made Atorvastatin — ProPublica

adminBy adminNo Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email


ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.

ProPublica wanted to know something simple: Where a widely used generic drug was made and whether that factory had any quality problems. Instead, we found ourselves navigating a labyrinth of company names and complex databases that few regular consumers would even know exist.

And even after all that detective work, we hit a dead end.

Atorvastatin is a generic drug that treats high cholesterol and prevents heart attacks and strokes. It’s one of the most commonly prescribed medications in the United States, and many manufacturers make it.

We started with a label on a patient’s pill bottle. It shows the name of what appears to be the drug’s manufacturer: Quallent. The only addresses on the label are in Ohio and New Jersey and are for Express Scripts, a company that manages prescription benefits for insurers and employers.


Credit:
Myriam Wares for ProPublica

So we went to DailyMed, an online database with labeling information for drugs. There we found 21 pages of atorvastatin generics. We looked for Quallent and found two listings for the company.

Both showed that Quallent, based in the Cayman Islands, was just the packager of the drug. So what company manufactured it?

One label noted that Quallent sourced its pills from a drugmaker in India, another said they came from a company headquartered in Canada. Nothing on the pill bottle told us which of the two made the pills. So we looked at the markings on our patient’s atorvastatin tablets and compared them to the pill descriptions in DailyMed. Turns out the ones in our bottle were manufactured by the Canadian company Apotex.

We were lucky to be able to find even this much. The information on DailyMed included the name of the drug’s manufacturer. That’s often not the case. DailyMed also provided a partial address in Toronto, home to the global headquarters of Apotex as well as several of its plants. But the information didn’t specifically tell us if the drug is actually made at a Toronto factory.

To learn more, we scrolled to the bottom of the DailyMed page to find what’s known as the ANDA number, which is assigned when a company applies for approval to make a drug. We took that number and went to another database called the Orange Book, where all drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration are listed.


Credit:
Myriam Wares for ProPublica

We put in our ANDA number and we were able to confirm that Apotex was the manufacturer and also learn that the company received approval to start making atorvastatin in 2012, which would guide our search for FDA inspection reports about the factory.

But alas the Orange Book doesn’t tell us where Apotex makes the drug. The company’s website says it has factories in Canada, Mexico and India, but it doesn’t say which drugs are made where.

If any consumer got this far, we’d be impressed. But here’s where the search got really complicated.

Even with our ANDA number and the name Apotex, we could not find the specific factory where our atorvastatin was made. The FDA has that information — it’s on the applications that companies turn in when they apply for new drug approvals — but the agency hasn’t made those addresses available to the public.


Credit:
Myriam Wares for ProPublica

Last year, we filed a Freedom of Information Act request for those locations. Months passed and we eventually sued the FDA in federal court. Finally, the agency gave us some of the addresses, but not a complete list.

In the case of our atorvastatin, no luck. The agency didn’t give us that factory’s details, saying it held back addresses for drugmakers that hired other companies — contract manufacturers — to make their medications. So even though we had information that the public doesn’t have, we were still stuck.

Is Your Medication Made in a Contaminated Factory? The FDA Won’t Tell You.

We went to a private firm called Redica Systems and paid to use a database of reports written by FDA inspectors after visits to drug factories. We could see inspections for various Apotex factories in Canada and India that described problems over the years in the way drugs were made. The FDA, however, blacked out the names of the medications on those reports.

That’s where we hit a final dead end. After all that, we still don’t know where our atorvastatin was manufactured and whether the factory had a troubled record.


Credit:
Myriam Wares for ProPublica

We reached out to Apotex to see if we could learn more but never heard back. On its website, the company says, “Patient safety and regulatory compliance guide every stage of our manufacturing process.”

Though the FDA has held back factory information for decades, agency officials recently asked Congress for the authority to require that manufacturers disclose where drugs are made on the labels of pill bottles.

Brandon Roberts of ProPublica contributed research.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
Previous ArticleTesco, Sainsbury’s and Asda warn Rachel Reeves that tax rises could push up food prices
Next Article Keke Palmer Facing Backlash Over Southern Fried Rice Series
admin
  • Website
  • Facebook

The most informative business website online.

Related Posts

Are Connecticut Towing Companies Selling Junk Cars or Undervaluing Cars to Sell Them Faster? — ProPublica

Jeffrey Epstein and the American Empire

Shelby and Eli Steele on Victim Politics in 2025

Comments are closed.

Don't Miss
Gossip

Pusha T Announces Big Baby News–But Fans Question THIS

After reuniting with his brother Malice, returning to music, and snagging a Grammy nomination, Pusha…

Cardi Blasts Offset After He Trolls Her, Calling Her Baby ‘His’

Howard Hotties Who Turned Heads At Homecoming 2025

#RHOP Ashley Says She’s At Peace After Apologizing To Wendy

Are Connecticut Towing Companies Selling Junk Cars or Undervaluing Cars to Sell Them Faster? — ProPublica

Skegee Stunners Slaying & Parlaying At Tuskegee’s Homecoming

Owner of Black-Owned Dessert Food Truck Launches 2026 Scholarship Program

Podcaster Rory Farrell Blased Over Anti-Black & Offensive Tweets

Drew Sidora Shuts Down Shamea & Kelli At BravoCon 2025

“Blowing Bubba” Reference In Jeffrey Epstein Emails Explained

Texas Trooper Sent Home For Shoulder Check On Nyck Harbor

Jeffrey Epstein and the American Empire

PHL holds naval drills with US, Japan 

Travis Scott Unveils New Air Jordan 1, Hypebeasts Are Ready

Valve Announces Next-Gen Steam Machine & Other New Hardware

About Us
About Us

LewLewBiz delivers practical insights on entrepreneurship, finance, and business operations. Explore expert advice on payroll, landlord strategies, and industry news to empower your financial decisions and business growth.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: lewlewmedia@gmail.com
Contact: lewlewmedia@info.com

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

Pusha T Announces Big Baby News–But Fans Question THIS

Cardi Blasts Offset After He Trolls Her, Calling Her Baby ‘His’

Howard Hotties Who Turned Heads At Homecoming 2025

Most Popular

Pawan Kalyan’s OG Crosses $2 Million Pre-sales in North America

Jeremy Renner Allegedly Sent Unwanted Nudes To Yi Zhou

Building permit approvals inch up in May

© 2025 lewlewmedia since 2016
  • Business
  • Black Business
  • SMALL BUSINESS
  • BANK/FRAUD FINANCIAL CRIMES
  • Celebrities
  • CRYPTO
  • DEBT
  • Entrepreneur
  • ESTATE PLANNING
  • FRANCHISE
  • Gossip
  • GLOBAL ECONOMY
  • Music
  • MUTUAL FUNDS
  • Political
  • Pop Culture
  • PERSONAL FINANCE
  • Wall street
  • Privacy Policy
  • Business News Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Terms and Condition

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.