Last June, Pfizer, the lone U.S. manufacturer of the injections, notified the Food and Drug Administration of an “impending stock out” that it anticipated would last a year. The company blamed “an increase in syphilis infection rates as well as competitive shortages.”

Across the country, physicians, clinic staff and public health experts say that the shortage is preventing them from reining in a surge of syphilis and that the federal government is downplaying the crisis. State and local public health authorities, which by law are responsible for controlling the spread of infectious diseases, report delays getting medicine to pregnant people with syphilis. This emergency was predictable: There have been shortages of this drug in eight of the last 20 years.

Yet federal health authorities have not prevented the drug shortages in the past and aren’t doing much to prevent them in the future.

Syphilis, which is typically spread during sex, can be devastating if it goes untreated in pregnancy: About 40% of babies born to women with untreated syphilis can be stillborn or die as newborns, according to the CDC. Infants that survive can suffer from deformed bones, excruciating pain or brain damage, and some struggle to hear, see or breathe. Since this is entirely preventable, a baby born with syphilis is a shameful sign of a failing public health system.

  • varoth
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    49 months ago

    As we’ve seen with COVID, the US doesn’t give a shit about stopping the spread of illnesses, viruses, and diseases. Pfizer and the like don’t give a shit. They will do whatever makes them the most profit. Stopping illnesses, viruses, and diseases doesn’t make as much profit as continuously treating them for decades.

    • @Plague_Doctor
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      59 months ago

      Also sometimes they’ll just give syphilis to an entire town because they feel like it. And not tell them.

    • @afraid_of_zombies
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      49 months ago

      Never going to forgive my local government for opening the bars before they opened the schools.