logo
Western Iowa pharmacy cited for numerous violations

Western Iowa pharmacy cited for numerous violations

Yahoo27-03-2025

The Food Land store in Woodbine, Iowa, before a fire that occurred in August 2024. (Photo via Google Earth)
A western Iowa store where a pharmacist was cited last year for incorrectly filling prescriptions for patients is now facing multiple charges from the Iowa Board of Pharmacy.
In 2024, the board alleged that pharmacist Christopher Steele of Underwood incorrectly filled prescriptions for at least four patients in 2023.
The board did not publicly disclose where Steele was working when the drugs were dispensed, the nature of the alleged errors, the types of drugs that were dispensed, or the effect the alleged errors had on the patients. Steele told the Iowa Capital Dispatch the errors occurred at the pharmacy within the Food Land store in Woodbine where he worked.
Earlier this month, the board charged Food Land Pharmacy with 10 separate regulatory violations — an exceptionally large number of violations for a pharmacy of that size.
The charges include failing to follow board rules related to recordkeeping, failing to follow board rules related to temporary pharmacy staff, failing to follow proper procedures related to controlled-substance registrations, failing to follow proper procedures for a change in the pharmacist in charge, failing to follow board rules related to accountability of controlled substances, failing to follow rules related to system security and safeguards, and failing to comply with the required drug utilization review process for a patient.
The nature and timing of the alleged actions that serve as the basis for those charges has not been publicly disclosed by the board. A hearing on the matter is scheduled for May 21, 2025.
Last August, a major fire at Woodbine's Food Land store forced the business to close. Company officials demolished what remained of the building and construction has begun on a new store that is expected to open later this year.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brain-injured woman wandered from Iowa facility before being found at Nebraska truck stop
Brain-injured woman wandered from Iowa facility before being found at Nebraska truck stop

Yahoo

time17 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Brain-injured woman wandered from Iowa facility before being found at Nebraska truck stop

Community NeuroRehab at Glen Oaks is a five-bed residential care facility in Coralville, Iowa. (Photo via Google Earth) A female resident of a Coralville care facility wandered from the home earlier this year and was later found at a Nebraska truck stop 265 miles away. The incident occurred in January at Community NeuroRehab's Glen Oaks facility in Coralville, a state-licensed, five-bed residential care facility for people with mental or developmental disabilities. Newly disclosed state records show that a worker at the facility told state inspectors on May 14, 2025, that she was working the morning shift at 9:40 a.m. on Jan. 2, 2025, when she checked on a resident who was due for her medication. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX The resident, who had previously been diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury, dementia and psychological issues, was not in her room. The worker discovered a bent window screen underneath the bed, and in looking out the window she saw a footprint on top of an air-conditioning unit directly under the window. It was snowing at the time, and the temperature was around 22 degrees. The staff then launched a search for the woman in the community. Shortly after 5 p.m., the resident's mother called the facility to report that her daughter had been found, confused and frightened, 265 miles away at a truck stop in Gretna, Nebraska. According to state inspectors' reports, the woman had 'hitched a ride from a semi-driver who drove her to Nebraska.' In their written report, state inspectors said the woman had 'engaged in some type of sexual activity,' as determined by the medical provider she saw on Jan. 3, 2025, 'resulting in a very traumatic 24 hours.' A review of lab work revealed that testing for sexually transmitted infections was negative, the inspectors reported. A worker at the home allegedly told inspectors she had been trained to check and make sure each resident was present at the beginning of her shift but acknowledged she had not done so on Jan. 2, 2025. Inspectors concluded the resident had walked 2.3 miles through a mostly residential neighborhood to an interstate highway and then hitched a ride where she appeared to have been picked up by the driver of a semi-truck. The Iowa Department of Inspections, Appeals and Licensing recently fined Community NeuroRehab $3,000 for resident-safety violations related to the incident. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Footage Shows Chinese Ships Near US Ally's Disputed Island Base
Footage Shows Chinese Ships Near US Ally's Disputed Island Base

Newsweek

time3 days ago

  • Newsweek

Footage Shows Chinese Ships Near US Ally's Disputed Island Base

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Philippines has released footage showing Chinese maritime forces operating near its largest outpost in the South China Sea's disputed Spratly Islands archipelago. Newsweek has contacted the Chinese Foreign Ministry and Philippine military for comment via written requests. Why It Matters China claims sovereignty over most of the South China Sea, citing "historical rights," which puts it at odds with the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, Taiwan and Indonesia. In 2016, an arbitral tribunal in the Hague dismissed the sweeping claims featured in China's "nine-dashed line" map as incompatible with maritime law. Beijing rejected the decision. The Philippines has mounted a stiff challenge to expanding Chinese activities in its exclusive economic zone. The resulting standoffs between Chinese and Philippine government vessels have raised concerns that Manila's Mutual Defense Treaty with Washington could pull the U.S. into a conflict with its East Asian rival. WATCH: A China Coast Guard ship, several Chinese maritime militia vessels, and a PLA Navy warship seen from Pag-asa Island. | via Patrick de Jesus — PTVph (@PTVph) June 3, 2025 What To Know On Wednesday, the People's Television Network, a Philippine state-owned broadcaster, released footage showing Chinese vessels operating off the coast of Thitu Island, well within the 12-nautical-mile (13.8-mile) territorial sea claimed by Manila. The ships included a Chinese coast guard cutter, a People's Liberation Army Navy warship and what appeared to be two vessels from China's so-called Maritime Militia. The agency did not specify when the footage was taken. Administered by the Philippines since 1971, Thitu is the largest of the Spratly Islands under the country's control and hosts a small permanent population. This photograph captured by Airbus in June 2023 and provided by Google Earth shows the Philippine-control Thitu Island in the South China Sea's contested Spratly Islands archipelago. This photograph captured by Airbus in June 2023 and provided by Google Earth shows the Philippine-control Thitu Island in the South China Sea's contested Spratly Islands archipelago. Google Earth/Airbus The island is also home to a small coast guard station, military garrison and airstrip, modest yet vital assets for maintaining Manila's force posture in the area. This is especially necessary given the proximity of China's more heavily militarized artificial islands. The waters around Thitu, and a nearby cluster of sandbars known as Sandy Cay, have at times become a flashpoint in the South China Sea dispute. In late May, Manila released video showing a Chinese coast guard ship using a water cannon against a Philippine fisheries bureau vessel. The Chinese ship also "sideswiped" the smaller craft and damaged its bow, according to Philippine authorities. What People Are Saying Major General Meng Xiangqing, a professor at China's National Defense University of the People's Liberation Army, said on Sunday at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore: "It must be pointed out that the Philippines has always been the provocateur and China's actions have been legitimate responses. Here, I solemnly warn the Philippine side: The South China Sea is not a place where the Philippines can act recklessly." Gilberto Teodoro, the Philippine secretary of defense, told Newsweek on Sunday: "Unfortunately, they [China] are the cause of instability here. Nobody denies it. Nobody supports their nine-dash line here, and I made that clear in my condemnation—and a lot of people condemn their behavior because no right-minded person would agree with what they're doing here in the South China Sea." What Happens Next The Philippines is expanding infrastructure on Thitu Island, including a recently completed extension of its airstrip to 1.5 kilometers (0.93 miles)—long enough to accommodate light transport aircraft and some fighter jets. A sheltered port is also in the works, which would enhance the operational range of Philippine maritime forces in surrounding waters.

Iowa health care center ends gender-affirming care for adult transgender patients
Iowa health care center ends gender-affirming care for adult transgender patients

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Iowa health care center ends gender-affirming care for adult transgender patients

Primary Health Care in Iowa has ended hormone replacement therapy for adult transgender patients, according to several sources. (Photo by Zach Sommers for Iowa Capital Dispatch) A federally funded health care center in central Iowa has terminated core care for its transgender patients for fear of losing federal funding, four sources have confirmed. In a letter sent to transgender patients receiving hormone replacement therapy, and obtained by the Iowa Capital Dispatch, Primary Health Care stated in February it would no longer provide hormone replacement therapy care '(d)ue to a recent Executive Order restricting use of federal grant funds from being used for gender-affirming care.' PHC in the letter told patients that should the health center be 'out of compliance' with the order, it would risk losing 'critical' and 'significant' funding. A former PHC employee, who spoke with the Iowa Capital Dispatch on the condition of anonymity, said PHC's executive team told employees the health center risked 'losing millions of dollars in federal grant funding for the homeless support services' if it continued gender-affirming care. The Iowa Capital Dispatch granted anonymity because the former employee feared potential repercussions from PHC. A transgender advocate and another person with knowledge of the change, both of whom spoke to Iowa Capital Dispatch on the condition they not be identified, also confirmed that PHC had ended gender-affirming care. Primary Health Care is a federally qualified health center, which means it receives funding from the federal government through the Health Resources and Services Administration under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. FQHCs were created in the early 1990s to serve as safety net providers. They care for underserved populations. PHC is one of 14 in the state. Representatives of Primary Health Care and Iowa Primary Care Association, which provides broad support for Iowa's FQHCs, did not respond to repeated questions that were posed to executives, board members, and physicians during multiple weeks of outreach. The former employee said staff at PHC were 'begging' the executive team to figure out different funding methods for the clinic in order to keep providing gender-affirming care. 'The basis of Primary Health Care and the Project is the queer community … and how could we possibly continue to be that if we're telling part of that population that (they) don't belong (at PHC)?' the former employee said. Only one other federally qualified health center in Iowa responded when asked whether other care centers were following PHC's lead in terminating care for transgender patients. Chad Wolbers, chief executive officer at Crescent Community Health Center in Dubuque, said that's not happening at his health centers. When asked if Crescent Community currently has transgender patients, Wolbers said, 'Yes we do. We take care of all that present to us in need of care.' A principal with FQHC Associates, a consulting firm for FQHCs nationally, acknowledged the confusion over federally funded health care centers' ability to provide gender-affirming care to patients. Steve Weinman pointed to two executive orders President Donald Trump signed in the early days of his administration. One executive order deals with stopping transition care for children and teenagers through 18 years of age. The other executive order, which Trump signed the day he took office, is meant to 'defend women's rights' and 'recognize women are biologically female, and men are biologically male.' In doing so, the Trump administration takes aim at gender ideology and the 'false claim' of being able to change one's sex. Through that lens, the executive order directs agencies to 'end the Federal funding of gender ideology' and that 'Federal funds shall not be used to promote gender ideology.' The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services told the Iowa Capital Dispatch that less than two weeks after the signing of that executive order, the Health Resources and Services Administration sent an email to its federal funds recipients that they must stop their programs related to 'gender ideology' for 'people aged 19 and younger.' Five days later, HRSA sent another email to tell recipients its previous 'notification had been rescinded.' HHS told the Iowa Capital Dispatch that 'Health centers continue to provide care to Americans who face challenges in accessing quality healthcare.' When asked why PHC still moved to stop gender-affirming care when the federal agency told FQHCs to ignore its previous mandate, the former employee at PHC said that's 'the big question, and that's what staff wanted to know. Why? Nothing is law…The only thing that we were being told is that they were scared to lose the federal funding that they had. Which, the amount of federal funding that they get for homeless support is a huge chunk.' State Rep. Aime Wichtendahl, a Democrat of Hiawatha and the first transgender legislator elected to Iowa's Legislature, said PHC's decision to terminate hormone replacement therapy care is 'deeply disappointing.' She said 'an executive order is not law. It is not force of law. And what the Trump administration is doing, withholding federal funds, is a violation of both the law and funds that Congress has appropriated. 'If the federal pressure has been removed, then they should immediately restore services and health care to trans patients. There is no justification for cutting off access to health care,' Wichtendahl said. One patient who said she received hormone replacement therapy care at PHC's University Avenue location said she felt 'like all hell was breaking loose' when she learned about PHC's decision. 'It felt like the sanctuary that I had was kind of just crumbling beneath me. It was quite heart wrenching because I do love going to my doctor.' The patient requested to remain anonymous. She said her provider at PHC was also emotional about the decision to terminate hormone replacement care. The former employee echoed that and said, 'everyone seemed to be pretty emotional about the decision that had been made.' Not only was PHC stopping gender-affirming care, but the former employee claimed staff also had to remove or cross-out pronouns on their ID badges and business cards. The messaging around PHC's decision to end gender-affirming care was carefully managed, according to the former employee. The executive team at PHC handed staff a script with suggested responses to likely questions that patients or people wanting to establish care may ask. There were at least six potential questions and corresponding answers, according to a staff handout the Iowa Capital Dispatch reviewed. PHC's decision, made at the same time as Republican legislative efforts to roll back gender identity protections in the Iowa Civil Rights Act weighed heavily on both the former employee and the patient. 'It's such a common thing for trans people to not get ample HRT care, as well as HIV care. Not having good resources for that, it just really sucks,' said the patient. Wichtendahl said now is the time for the transgender community to make its voices heard 'and say you're not taking away our health care.' 'We will make that demand that they restore those services,' she said. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store