cvs health
- Goodwill is the home of CVS Health's new "mock pharmacy" training program for in store pharmacy technicians. The first class is graduating Thursday.
- CVS placed containers for the disposal of unused prescription drugs in 750 stores, including 19 in Maryland, to help fight the opioid overdose epidemic. CVS Health has also donated disposal kiosks to Maryland police departments in Hampstead, Ellicott City and Rising Sun.
- The firm last has released what it believes is breakthrough technology designed to save time pharmacists while improving dispensing accuracy. The "FlavorMaster," billed as the first fully automated device of its kind, can add flavor as well as water to reconstitute powdered medicine.
- Following the retirement of Laurel city administrator Kristie Mills, director of emergency operations Marty Flemion has taken the reins of his former coworker.
- County officials should be wary of imposing restrictive zoning laws on where medical marijuana dispensaries can open and how they can operate
- After more than four decades as an anchor in Baltimore's gay community and the Mount Vernon business district, The Hippo will close its doors this fall.
- The Baltimore CVS stores burned and looted by rioters last week will be rebuilt, CVS Health formally announced Wednesday.
- CVS Health said Monday it remains committed to Baltimore and plans to rebuild as the city launched a new website designed to help businesses reopen.
- Residents whose pharmacies were damaged in recent protests can call 311 to learn where they can have their prescriptions, city health officials said.
- A 51-year-old man was found dead in the cab of a tractor trailer, about a block away from where a crowd of police, protesters and reporters gathered just before the citywide curfew went into effect Thursday night, police said.
- Leonard Pitts Jr. sets out to answer the question of what we can do to stem police violence against unarmed black men.
- This isn't the first time rioting has rocked Baltimore. In early April 1968, the city exploded in a rampage of rock-throwing, arson and looting following the slaying of civil rights leader Martin Luther King.
- Two Baltimore men are charged with theft and theft scheme for allegedly stealing $1,700 in merchandise from multiple stores in Westminster last month.
- Natural Product Solutions' small office/warehouse in Timonium hardly suggests the dietary supplement company's national reach, or the bigger things to come in 2015: agreements that could double their range, and a new spokeswoman who is a brand name in sex and relationship advice.
- As Gov.-elect Larry Hogan reiterated a pledge to declare a "state of emergency" to combat the spike in heroin-related deaths, state officials said Tuesday they have gotten pharmacies to agree to keep the powerful overdose antidote naloxone in stock at about 140 locations in 22 counties.
- CVS pharmacy, Chick-fil-A and Nalley Fresh will open new stores at the Inner Harbor, joning Shake Shack and M&T Bank in a ground floor retail expansion at 400 East Pratt Street, the building's brokerage firm said today.
- Unfortunately, most of us don't have the additional 20 to 40 hours a week necessary for scouting, sorting, and clipping hundreds of coupons. However, that doesn't mean that you can't be a savvy shopper. So where do you start? If you want to become an amazing couponer the first thing need you need to do is to build your coupon supply.
- U.S. companies that move their headquarters abroad to avoid taxes should no longer have a say in government operations.
- Doctor-administered drugs aren't driving higher workers compensation costs
- A group of 28 U.S. attorneys general is urging chief executive officers of five major retailers, including Walmart, to stop selling tobacco products.
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- CVS halt of tobacco sales is a publicity stunt
- Drug store's choice was not directed by altruism but by profit
- A vehicle crashed into a CVS pharmacy in downtown Baltimore Friday morning, injuring at least three people.
- CVS/Caremark's decision not to sell tobacco helps send the message that smoking is not an accepted social norm.
- Furnture Solution in Arnold is closing after four years because of owner's retirement
- As local governments and insurers seek to cut millions of dollars from the program that pays workers who are injured on the job, they're targeting physician-dispensed drugs. Some governments in Maryland are simply refusing to pay the bills, and statewide legislation that would limit the doctors' practice known as "repackaging" has been prepared for the 2014 General Assembly.
- Even though retail development has largely passed Odenton by in favor of Hanover and Crofton, the area could support more grocery stores and restaurants, according to a new study.
- A former Edgewood woman is charged with more than 40 counts of prescription fraud after allegedly using another woman's identity and posing as a doctor to get her prescriptions, according to a statement of charges.