Nurses star in J&J’s campaign centered on the importance of nurses who are increasingly stressed, burnt out and quitting the profession (via Johnson & Johnson)
In the early days of the pandemic, people cheered for nurses – delivering food, writing thank you notes and ringing bells nightly to show their appreciation. But something shifted this summer, and now Johnson & Johnson wants to remind people of the gratitude that nurses still deserve.
Call it politics or pandemic weariness or the result of almost two years of a deadly pandemic, but nurses today face threats and mistreatment from patients and their angry family members. And nurses are leaving the profession in record numbers.
J&J’s new ad campaign ‘Nurses Rise to the Challenge Every Day’ launches online and in local newspapers on Sunday, aiming to shine a positive spotlight on the profession. It also includes J&J doubling down on its education, fellowships, scholarships and programs to support nurses.
In the campaign video ad, close-up shots reveal tired nurses in scrubs and as they wearily remove masks, a scroll reads: ‘You give 100% of yourself, then somehow find 50% more.’
At the heart of the campaign are the many roles that nurses take on: scientist, pioneer, healer and rock star in the video ad, while the print ad lists dozens more including teacher, therapist, cheerleader, entrepreneur, influencer, dot-connector and mind reader. Social media posts have a similar theme with ‘Nurses are’ in attention-getting red letters, while the roles scroll and change in the gif animation.
‘When you fast forward to where we are now and look around online, pretty much all you see is stress, burnout and turnover – at upwards of 20% per year,’ said Lynda Benton, senior director of global community impact strategic initiatives for J&J Nursing.
She added, ‘It’s an important step to take to reaffirm our commitment to the profession, but also go back and put a positive message out there. People cannot forget how important nurses are to the healthcare system. If you don’t have nurses, the system falls apart.’
Nurses are already leaving, though. Recent statistics from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that nursing and residential care facilities lost 11,000 jobs in November. The same report shows 450,000 healthcare jobs lost since February 2020.
And if they’re not outright leaving, they are thinking about it. Among 6,600 critical care numbers, 66% have considered leaving their jobs because of the pandemic, a survey from the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses found this year. Almost all of them (92%) believe the pandemic will shorten nurses’ careers. The nursing group launched its own campaign, ‘Hear Us Out,’ in September to give a realistic window into their frontline reality and urge people to get vaccinated.
As part of the effort, J&J is asking nurses to tell their stories online and partnering with ‘The Drew Barrymore Show,’ planning to include some of them in upcoming nurses-themed episode.
While oncology researchers have long pursued the potential of cellular immunotherapies for the treatment of cancer, it was unclear whether these therapies would ever reach patients due to the complexity of manufacturing and costs of development. Fortunately, the recent successful development and regulatory approval of chimeric antigen receptor-engineered T (CAR-T) cells have demonstrated the significant benefit of these therapies to patients.
The former CFO of Immunomedics, who helped steer the company to its $21 billion buyout by Gilead last year, has been charged with insider trading, the Department of Justice announced Thursday.
Usama Malik tipped off his then-girlfriend and four others that a Phase III study for Trodelvy would be stopped early four days before Immunomedics publicly announced the result in April 2020, DoJ alleged in its complaint. The individuals then purchased Immunomedics shares, selling them after the news broke and Immunomedics’ stock price doubled.
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Merck’s new antiviral molnupiravir (Quality Stock Arts / Shutterstock)
After South African scientists reported a new Covid-19 variant — dubbed Omicron by the WHO — scientists became concerned about how effective vaccines and monoclonal antibodies might be against it, which has more than 30 mutations in the spike protein.
‘I think it is super worrisome,’ Dartmouth professor and Adagio co-founder and CEO Tillman Gerngross told Endpoints News this weekend. Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel echoed similar concerns, telling the Financial Times that experts warned him, ‘This is not going to be good.’
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The safety problems that continue to plague the JAK class as new data highlight some severe side effects are casting a large shadow over AbbVie’s Rinvoq.
As a result of a recent readout highlighting major adverse cardiac events (MACE), malignancy, mortality and thrombosis with Xeljanz a couple of months ago, AbbVie put out a notice late Friday afternoon that it is adding the new class risks to its label for their rival drug.
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Common performs onstage, December 2020 (Getty Images)
Healthcare screenings and clinical trial enrollment were battered by the pandemic. But the well-known celebrity-backed Stand Up To Cancer non-profit, along with pharma and advocacy partners, has been working to reverse that and make up lost ground, by stepping up awareness campaigns.
Twelve campaigns launched in 2020 and another five in 2021 amplify the need for cancer screening and care, especially for underserved communities. While pharma companies have long been donors to the cancer research group, Covid brought new support — and increased awareness efforts.
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Discovery Life Sciences has acquired what claims to be the Maryland-based host of the world’s largest hepatocyte inventory, known as IVAL, to help researchers select more effective and safer drug candidates in the future.
The combined companies will now serve a wider range of drug research and development scientists, according to Albert Li, who founded IVAL in 2004 and is set to join the Discovery leadership team as the CSO of pharmacology and toxicology.
Three top biopharma companies are seeking more details from the FDA on how the agency conducts its benefit-risk assessments for new drugs and biologics.
While Pfizer, Amgen and Janssen praised the agency for further spelling out its thinking on the subject in a new draft guidance, including a discussion of patient experience data as part of the assessment, the companies said the FDA could’ve included more specifics in the 20-page draft document.
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China’s National Reimbursement Drug List (NRDL) is a crystal clear example of the country’s bargaining power in the biotech and pharma market, as more firms have reportedly agreed to cut their prices for 67 new medicines to be included in its national medical insurance coverage starting in January.
Being on the list is lucrative. Essentially, if a biotech or pharma company gets on this list, they’re covered by the biggest insurance network in the country. Given China’s vast population, the Chinese government has significant leverage to decide which medicines can make a profit. While domestic drugmakers are quite willing to play that game, cutting prices significantly in exchange for getting on the list, international companies don’t do it as often.
Researchers may be nearing an answer for the mysterious and life-threatening blood clots that appeared on very rare occasions in people who received the J&J or AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine.
The new work builds on an early hypothesis researchers in Norway put forward last spring, when the cases first cropped up. They proposed the events were similar to blood clots that can occur in a small subset of patients who receive heparin, one of the most commonly used blood thinners.
https://endpts.com/thankful-for-nurses-johnson-johnsons-new-campaign-aims-to-reset-pandemic-clock-back-to-gratitude/