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    How NADAC, WAC, and ASP Shape Drug Costs

    How NADAC, WAC, and ASP Shape Drug Costs

    April 20, 2026
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    The Hidden Costs Employers Don’t See in Traditional Health Plans

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    The Impact of COVID-19 on Patient Trust

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    Debunking Myths About GLP-1 Medications

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    Public Perception of Peptide Regulation and Compounding Practices

    Public Perception of Peptide Regulation and Compounding Practices

    April 19, 2026
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    Understanding of Clinical Evidence in Peptide and Hormone Use

    March 30, 2026

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    How NADAC, WAC, and ASP Shape Drug Costs

    How NADAC, WAC, and ASP Shape Drug Costs

    April 20, 2026
    The Hidden Costs Employers Don’t See in Traditional Health Plans

    The Hidden Costs Employers Don’t See in Traditional Health Plans

    March 22, 2026
    The Impact of COVID-19 on Patient Trust

    The Impact of COVID-19 on Patient Trust

    March 3, 2026
    Debunking Myths About GLP-1 Medications

    Debunking Myths About GLP-1 Medications

    February 16, 2026
    The Future of LLMs in Healthcare

    The Future of LLMs in Healthcare

    January 26, 2026
    The Future of Healthcare Consumerism

    The Future of Healthcare Consumerism

    January 22, 2026
  • Surveys

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    Public Perception of Peptide Regulation and Compounding Practices

    Public Perception of Peptide Regulation and Compounding Practices

    April 19, 2026
    Understanding of Clinical Evidence in Peptide and Hormone Use

    Understanding of Clinical Evidence in Peptide and Hormone Use

    March 30, 2026

    Survey Results

    Can you tell when your provider does not trust you?

    Can you tell when your provider does not trust you?

    January 18, 2026
    Do you believe national polls on health issues are accurate

    National health polls: trust in healthcare system accuracy?

    May 8, 2024
    Which health policy issues matter the most to Republican voters in the primaries?

    Which health policy issues matter the most to Republican voters in the primaries?

    May 14, 2024
    How strongly do you believe that you can tell when your provider does not trust you?

    How strongly do you believe that you can tell when your provider does not trust you?

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Home Perspectives

Visibility as Truth

What search engines prioritize versus what medicine measures

Ashley Rodgers by Ashley Rodgers
April 3, 2026
in Perspectives
0

What patients search for is not what clinicians measure. Search queries around GLP-1 therapies reveal an implicit prioritization: speed of weight loss, side effects, cost, and availability. Clinical trials—many reported in https://www.nejm.org—prioritize endpoints such as HbA1c reduction, cardiovascular outcomes, and sustained weight change over defined intervals. The mismatch is structural. Search algorithms amplify what users care about in the moment. Clinical studies capture what regulators require over time. This creates a subtle distortion. Patients encounter a version of GLP-1 therapy optimized for immediacy. The literature presents a version optimized for durability. Neither is incorrect. They are incomplete in different ways. Bias emerges in how these two narratives interact. High-frequency queries train algorithms to surface content that aligns with popular concerns. Over time, less searched dimensions—long-term safety, discontinuation effects, metabolic adaptation—become less visible. There is also a commercial layer. Sponsored content occupies prime search real estate. Clinics and telehealth platforms compete for attention using language that mirrors user queries. The boundary between information and advertisement blurs. The consequence is not misinformation in the traditional sense.

It is selective visibility. Certain truths are easier to find than others. Physicians, operating within this environment, face a recalibrated patient expectation. The consultation begins downstream of the search result. The system has not failed. It has optimized—just not for the same endpoints as medicine. What patients search for is not what clinicians measure. Search queries around GLP-1 therapies reveal an implicit prioritization: speed of weight loss, side effects, cost, and availability. Clinical trials—many reported in https://www.nejm.org—prioritize endpoints such as HbA1c reduction, cardiovascular outcomes, and sustained weight change over defined intervals. The mismatch is structural. Search algorithms amplify what users care about in the moment. Clinical studies capture what regulators require over time. This creates a subtle distortion. Patients encounter a version of GLP-1 therapy optimized for immediacy. The literature presents a version optimized for durability. Neither is incorrect. They are incomplete in different ways. Bias emerges in how these two narratives interact. High-frequency queries train algorithms to surface content that aligns with popular concerns. Over time, less searched dimensions—long-term safety,

discontinuation effects, metabolic adaptation—become less visible. There is also a commercial layer. Sponsored content occupies prime search real estate. Clinics and telehealth platforms compete for attention using language that mirrors user queries. The boundary between information and advertisement blurs. The consequence is not misinformation in the traditional sense. It is selective visibility. Certain truths are easier to find than others. Physicians, operating within this environment, face a recalibrated patient expectation. The consultation begins downstream of the search result. The system has not failed. It has optimized—just not for the same endpoints as medicine. What patients search for is not what clinicians measure. Search queries around GLP-1 therapies reveal an implicit prioritization: speed of weight loss, side effects, cost, and availability. Clinical trials—many reported in https://www.nejm.org—prioritize endpoints such as HbA1c reduction, cardiovascular outcomes, and sustained weight change over defined intervals. The mismatch is structural. Search algorithms amplify what users care about in the moment. Clinical studies capture what regulators require over time. This creates a subtle distortion. Patients encounter a version of GLP-1

therapy optimized for immediacy. The literature presents a version optimized for durability. Neither is incorrect. They are incomplete in different ways. Bias emerges in how these two narratives interact. High-frequency queries train algorithms to surface content that aligns with popular concerns. Over time, less searched dimensions—long-term safety, discontinuation effects, metabolic adaptation—become less visible. There is also a commercial layer. Sponsored content occupies prime search real estate. Clinics and telehealth platforms compete for attention using language that mirrors user queries. The boundary between information and advertisement blurs. The consequence is not misinformation in the traditional sense. It is selective visibility. Certain truths are easier to find than others. Physicians, operating within this environment, face a recalibrated patient expectation. The consultation begins downstream of the search result. The system has not failed. It has optimized—just not for the same endpoints as medicine. What patients search for is not what clinicians measure. Search queries around GLP-1 therapies reveal an implicit prioritization: speed of weight loss, side effects, cost, and availability. Clinical trials—many reported in https://www.nejm.org—prioritize

endpoints such as HbA1c reduction, cardiovascular outcomes, and sustained weight change over defined intervals. The mismatch is structural. Search algorithms amplify what users care about in the moment. Clinical studies capture what regulators require over time. This creates a subtle distortion. Patients encounter a version of GLP-1 therapy optimized for immediacy. The literature presents a version optimized for durability. Neither is incorrect. They are incomplete in different ways. Bias emerges in how these two narratives interact. High-frequency queries train algorithms to surface content that aligns with popular concerns. Over time, less searched dimensions—long-term safety, discontinuation effects, metabolic adaptation—become less visible. There is also a commercial layer. Sponsored content occupies prime search real estate. Clinics and telehealth platforms compete for attention using language that mirrors user queries. The boundary between information and advertisement blurs. The consequence is not misinformation in the traditional sense. It is selective visibility. Certain truths are easier to find than others. Physicians, operating within this environment, face a recalibrated patient expectation. The consultation begins downstream of the search result.

The system has not failed. It has optimized—just not for the same endpoints as medicine. What patients search for is not what clinicians measure. Search queries around GLP-1 therapies reveal an implicit prioritization: speed of weight loss, side effects, cost, and availability. Clinical trials—many reported in https://www.nejm.org—prioritize endpoints such as HbA1c reduction, cardiovascular outcomes, and sustained weight change over defined intervals. The mismatch is structural. Search algorithms amplify what users care about in the moment. Clinical studies capture what regulators require over time. This creates a subtle distortion. Patients encounter a version of GLP-1 therapy optimized for immediacy. The literature presents a version optimized for durability. Neither is incorrect. They are incomplete in different ways. Bias emerges in how these two narratives interact. High-frequency queries train algorithms to surface content that aligns with popular concerns. Over time, less searched dimensions—long-term safety, discontinuation effects, metabolic adaptation—become less visible. There is also a commercial layer. Sponsored content occupies prime search real estate. Clinics and telehealth platforms compete for attention using language that mirrors user

queries. The boundary between information and advertisement blurs. The consequence is not misinformation in the traditional sense. It is selective visibility. Certain truths are easier to find than others. Physicians, operating within this environment, face a recalibrated patient expectation. The consultation begins downstream of the search result. The system has not failed. It has optimized—just not for the same endpoints as medicine. What patients search for is not what clinicians measure. Search queries around GLP-1 therapies reveal an implicit prioritization: speed of weight loss, side effects, cost, and availability. Clinical trials—many reported in https://www.nejm.org—prioritize endpoints such as HbA1c reduction, cardiovascular outcomes, and sustained weight change over defined intervals. The mismatch is structural. Search algorithms amplify what users care about in the moment. Clinical studies capture what regulators require over time. This creates a subtle distortion. Patients encounter a version of GLP-1 therapy optimized for immediacy. The literature presents a version optimized for durability. Neither is incorrect. They are incomplete in different ways. Bias emerges in how these two narratives interact. High-frequency queries

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Ashley Rodgers

Ashley Rodgers

Ashley Rodgers is a writer specializing in health, wellness, and policy, bringing a thoughtful and evidence-based voice to critical issues.

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Videos

summary

An in-depth exploration of drug pricing, including key databases like NADAC, WAC, and ASP, and how they influence the pharmaceutical supply chain, policy, and patient advocacy. The episode also introduces MedPricer's innovative pricing intelligence platform, offering valuable insights for healthcare professionals, policymakers, and patients.

Chapters

00:00 Understanding Drug Pricing Dynamics
03:52 Exploring the Drug Pricing Database
10:07 Patient Advocacy and Drug Pricing
13:56 Market Intelligence in Drug Pricing
How NADAC, WAC, and ASP Shape Drug CostsDaily Remedy
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Policy Shift in Peptide Regulation

Clinical Reads

FDA Evaluation of Certain Bulk Drug Substances in Compounding: Clinical Interpretation

FDA Evaluation of Certain Bulk Drug Substances in Compounding: Clinical Interpretation

by Daily Remedy
April 19, 2026
0

Clinicians increasingly encounter patients using or requesting peptide-based therapies sourced through compounding pharmacies. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has identified a subset of bulk drug substances, including certain peptides, that may present significant safety risks when used in compounded formulations. The clinical question is whether these regulatory signals reflect meaningful patient-level risk and how they should influence prescribing behavior. This matters because compounded peptides often sit outside traditional approval pathways, creating uncertainty around quality, dosing consistency, and safety. Understanding...

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