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A new survey shows 10% of travelers have had medicine confiscated and more than 50% said that increased their anxiety during a trip.
In the United States, a boxed warning (sometimes "black box warning", colloquially) is a type of warning that appears near the beginning of the package insert for certain prescription drugs, so called because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration specifies that it is formatted with a 'box' or border around the text [1] to emphasize its ...
The co-packaged medication is not authorized or suggested for the pre-exposure or post-exposure prevention of COVID‑19. [12] [14] [30] In the European Union, the co-packaged medication is indicated for the treatment of COVID‑19 in adults who do not require supplemental oxygen and who are at increased risk for progressing to severe COVID ...
Unused airsickness bags of Thai Airways and Lufthansa with clips to close bags after use.. A sickness bag (also known as a sick sack, airsick bag, airsickness bag, emesis bag, sick bag, barf bag, vomit bag, throw up bag, disposal bag, waste bag, doggie bag, sickness sack or motion sickness bag) is a small bag commonly provided to passengers on board airplanes and boats to collect and contain ...
Window seats are more isolated and are furthest away from the aisle, where passengers and crew often walk by and can more easily spread germs. (Getty Images) (MediaProduction via Getty Images)
Aviation Drug-Trafficking Control Act of 1984; Long title: An Act to amend the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 to provide for the revocation of the airman certificates and for additional penalties for the transportation by aircraft of controlled substances, and for other purposes.
A flight crew discovered its plane had missing window panes after takeoff. Officials believe the windows were damaged by heat from filming lights. Airplane crew discovered missing window panes ...
Along with her husband and fellow researcher, Steven Woloshin, she started a company that is creating “drug facts boxes” for different medications. The idea is to translate the gobbledygook that appears in prescription package inserts or those fine-print full-page magazine ads into language that average consumers can understand.