CVS Pharmacy is expanding its Spoken Rx audio prescription labels to be available in all its pharmacies, after a trial run last year. The feature, developed as part of a collaboration with the ...
Following a trial in 2020 involving 1,700 locations across the US, CVS is expanding the availability of its Spoken Rx audio prescription labels to all 10,000 of its pharmacies nationwide. The ...
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Click to share on X (Opens in new window) Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Click to print (Opens in new window) (NAPSI)—There is ...
CVS Pharmacy, the retail division of CVS Health is offering Spoken Rx, its proprietary audio prescription label solution, in all its nearly 10,000 pharmacy locations nationwide, including more than ...
CVS Pharmacy has developed Spoken Rx, a new feature on its app that can read prescription labels outloud for visually impaired patients. By the end of 2020, 1,500 CVS Pharmacy locations will have ...
New changes to your prescriptions are coming to local pharmacies. The United States Pharmacopeia has come up with several different standards to apply to new labels to help keep patients from mistakes ...
Big Y Pharmacies in Longmeadow, Mass., and Rocky Hill, Conn., are among those adding large print and electronic “talking” labels to medications for the visually impaired. “We wanted to provide this as ...
OMAHA, Neb. -- Not all customers at Kohll's Pharmacy read their prescription bottles to learn about their medication. Some listen to them. Pill bottles that can communicate have hit the shelves at the ...
Patients with limited English proficiency at UCHealth may have access to prescription medication labels in their primary language. UCHealth launched a program in February that translates prescription ...
When you take a prescription medication, there may be warnings on the label that caution users about possible harmful side effects. Do we read them? Apparently, many of us never even see them. A study ...
Small print and poor printing on prescription labels handed out by pharmacists may be misread and may lead to errors in taking medication, according to new research. By simply following recommended ...
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