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Rogaine
to be sold in stores
WASHINGTON (AP) February 13,
1996
Balding Americans will be able to buy the
hair-growth drug Rogaine by spring without stopping to see a doctor first.
The Food and Drug Administration decided Monday that Rogaine can be sold in
drugstores alongside shampoos and hair colorings, making it the only medically
proven drug to fight baldness available without a prescription.
But while the move means people can buy a little hope against hair loss for
about $30 a month, the FDA warned that not everybody should.
Some 40 million men and 20 million women suffer hair loss, most the hereditary
form commonly known as male pattern balding. This is the only hair loss helped
by Rogaine, which has been sold by prescription since 1988.
Even for those people, however, Rogaine doesn't always work, said FDA
spokeswoman Ivy Kupec. It helps about 25 percent of men and 20 percent of women
to gradually grow back moderate amounts of hair, mostly on the top of the head
Copyright 1996, Student Publications Inc. All rights reserved. This document
may be distributed electronically, provided it is distributed in its entirety
and includes this notice. However, it cannot be reprinted without the express
written permission of Student Publications Inc., Kansas State University
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Inhouse Pharmacy (UK)
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