Drug Shortages Drop 23%, but Stay a Systemic Problem
The number of prescription drug shortages in the U.S. dropped 23% last year, but a new analysis covered by STAT News cautions that the improvement masks a deeper, structural weakness in the country's medicine supply.
The headline decline is real, yet the analysis points to troubling signs underneath it. Shortages are persisting longer, and many of the drugs in short supply are low-margin generics and sterile injectables that hospitals depend on every day. Those products are made by a thin set of manufacturers with little financial incentive to expand capacity or maintain backup production, which means a single plant disruption can ripple across the system.
For hospitals and pharmacies, that translates into ongoing scrambles to source critical drugs, ration supply, or switch to costlier alternatives. According to STAT News, the data suggest the problem is systemic rather than cyclical, so a one-year dip in shortage counts should not be read as a durable fix. Expect continued pressure on procurement teams and renewed policy debate over how to stabilize fragile supply chains.
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