The FDA has issued 30 warning letters to telehealth companies over misleading claims about compounded GLP-1 drugs.
Regulators say some companies implied their compounded products were equivalent to FDA-approved medications or obscured where the drugs were made.
The action is part of a broader crackdown on misleading direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising launched last September.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued warning letters to 30 telehealth companies for making false or misleading claims about compounded GLP-1 drugs promoted on their websites.
The agency said the companies marketed compounded versions of GLP-1 medications in ways that suggested the products were the same as FDA-approved drugs or failed to clearly disclose where the medications were produced.
Its a new era. We are paying close attention to misleading claims being made by telehealth and pharma companies across all media platformsand taking swift action, said FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary.
Makary said compounded drugs can play an important role in addressing shortages or meeting specific patient needs, but warned that compounders should not attempt to bypass the FDAs drug approval process.
Second wave of actions
The warning letters mark the second wave of enforcement actions targeting telehealth companies since the FDA launched a broader effort last September to police misleading direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising.
Over the past six months, the agency said it has sent thousands of warning letters to pharmaceutical and telehealth companies directing them to remove misleading advertisements more than were sent during the entire previous decade.
According to the FDA, the most common violations involved claims that compounded GLP-1 products were the same as FDA-approved medications. Other companies promoted drugs using their own brand names or trademarks without clarifying that a separate pharmacy actually compounded the medications.
The FDA emphasized that compounded drugs are not FDA-approved, meaning the agency does not review them for safety, effectiveness or quality before they are sold. The agency also noted that compounded drugs are not equivalent to generic drugs, which must undergo FDA review and approval.
The warning letters require the companies to correct the violations and remove misleading claims from their marketing materials. Failure to comply could result in further regulatory action, the agency said.
Don't stop at the first search result: Before making financial decisions, experts say students should check reviews, recurring complaints, and company responses.
Read the fine print: Review leases, bank accounts, and job offers carefully to spot hidden fees and potential .
Pause before you commit: A few minutes of research can help students avoid , costly mistakes, and buyer's remorse.
For many incoming college students, back-to-school season is about more than buying dorm supplies and textbooks.
It is also the first time they may be making bigger real-world decisions on their own. Opening a bank account. Signing an apartment lease. Applying for a part-time job. Buying used furniture from a website they have never used before.
And increasingly, many students are making those decisions after a quick online search or an AI-generated summary. That can be a useful starting point. But it should be just that a place to start.
ConsumerAffairs spoke with online trust expert Taylor Cunningham, vice president of U.S. Marketing at Trustpilot, who said, AI search summaries and top search results are actually great for a quick overview and are a great starting point but they shouldnt be the end of the process.
Her advice comes as millions of students prepare for college life and the major financial choices that often come with it.
Why the first search result is not enough
Growing up in a digital age, students today are used to fast answers. That works fine when they are comparing dorm lamps or looking up a campus map. But it can be risky when they are choosing a bank, signing a lease, accepting a job offer, or hiring a service.
A top search result does not automatically mean a company has great customer service. An AI summary may leave out complaints about hidden fees, bad cancellation policies, slow refunds, or poor support.
Cunningham said students should treat search results as step one, not the final answer. To protect yourself, keep going past the initial AI snapshot, she said.
One smart move is to use AI for a second round of research. Instead of only asking for best student checking accounts or best moving companies near me, students can ask more specific questions like:
What red flags come up in reviews for this company?
What complaints do customers have about this bank?
Are there common issues with hidden fees or cancellations?
That extra step can reveal problems that a polished company website may not mention.
Use reviews to spot patterns, not just ratings
One mistake students make is looking only at the star rating and ignoring the details within the reviews.
A company with a decent overall rating may still have repeated complaints about one specific issue. Maybe customers love the product but hate the return process. Maybe the bank has good app reviews but repeated complaints about account fees. Maybe the apartment complex looks nice online but has a pattern of maintenance problems.
Reviews are most useful when students look for patterns.
Before committing to a company, students should check third-party review sites and pay attention to both positive and negative feedback.
Cunningham specifically recommends looking at review recency, review variety, and the topics that keep showing up. A lack of recent reviews can be a warning sign. So can a page that has only glowing feedback and no critical reviews at all.
Students should also compare the four- and five-star reviews with the one- and two-star reviews. If the same complaints show up repeatedly, there is a good chance future customers may run into the same issue.
Watch how the company responds
Reviews do not just show what customers are currently saying. They also show how a business handles problems and that matters a lot.
For example, if a company ignores complaints, gives canned responses, or becomes defensive, students should definitely pay attention. A business that handles public complaints poorly may not be much better when a customer needs help privately.
On the other hand, a company that responds clearly, fixes issues, and explains next steps will almost always be easier to deal with if something goes wrong.
This is especially important for students dealing with housing, banking, travel, tutoring companies, online sellers, and job platforms.
Red flags before signing a lease
An apartment lease may be the first legal contract many students ever sign, even if its with a parent as a co-signer. That makes it one of the biggest opportunities for costly mistakes.
Before signing, students should read the full agreement and make sure they understand:
The exact start and end date
Monthly rent
Security deposit rules
Late fees
Parking fees
Utility responsibilities
Maintenance procedures
Guest policies
Early termination rules
Automatic renewal clauses
Students should also look for vague language around fees. Things like administrative fee, processing fee, convenience fee, and move-out fee can add up quickly.
Also, dont let anyone rush you into a decision. If a business tries to rush or pressure you into signing quickly, take it as a major warning sign, Cunningham said.
Parents can help by asking students to send over the lease before signing. Students can also use AI as a second set of eyes to scan for confusing terms.
Be careful with student bank accounts
Many students open their first checking or savings account during college. Banks are known to advertise student-friendly accounts, but be sure to pay attention to the fine print.
Before opening an account, students should check for:
Monthly maintenance fees
Minimum balance requirements
Overdraft and ATM fees
Direct deposit requirements
Account closure fees
Promotional terms that expire
If a bank advertises a sign-up bonus, students should make sure they understand exactly how to qualify and when the bonus will be paid.
You should also ask what happens after you are no longer a student. Its not uncommon for a free student account to convert into a paid account later.
Job offers need a scam check
College students looking for part-time work can be especially vulnerable to job .
Red flags include jobs that promise oddly high pay that doesnt match the workload, asking applicants to pay upfront for training, communicates only through text message, or tells you that youll get paid before any work is done.
Also, students should be careful with jobs that ask for personal information too early in the process. A legitimate employer may need your Social Security number after hiring, but be cautious if youre asked for sensitive information before an interview or formal offer.
Before accepting a job, the smart thing to do is look up the company, read reviews, check the official website, and confirm that the person contacting you actually works there and is who they say they are.
The parent pro tip: Teach the pause
Parents do not need to make every decision for their college student. In fact, its better if you dont, as it teaches some responsibility.
But parents can absolutely teach this simple rule: Always take the time to pause when money, contracts, or personal information is involved.
This means before signing, buying, applying, or sharing any sensitive details, students should ask themselves these questions:
Who is behind this company?
What do recent reviews say?
Are there repeated complaints?
What happens if I cancel?
Are all promises written down?
Am I being rushed?
That short pause to do a little research can protect your wallet and help you avoid , hidden fees, or purchases you'll later regret.
An experimental targeted drug nearly doubled median survival for people with previously treated metastatic pancreatic cancer.
The phase three clinical trial compared the daily pill with standard chemotherapy in nearly 500 patients worldwide.
Researchers say the findings could lead to a new treatment option for patients with few effective alternatives.
Pancreatic cancer is one of the most difficult cancers to treat, especially after it has spread to other parts of the body and stopped responding to initial therapy. For many patients in that situation, treatment options are limited and survival has historically remained short.
Now, a large international clinical trial is offering new hope with an experimental targeted drug that significantly outperformed standard chemotherapy.
The medication, called daraxonrasib, works differently from traditional chemotherapy. Instead of attacking rapidly growing cells, it targets the RAS signaling pathway, which drives the growth of more than 90% of pancreatic cancers.
According to researchers, the study marks the first time a phase three trial has shown such a substantial survival benefit over chemotherapy for patients with previously treated metastatic pancreatic cancer.
For years weve made incremental gains in treating pancreatic cancer, researcher Dr. Zev Wainberg said in a news release.
Now, for the first time, we have demonstrated that targeted inhibition of RAS using an oral inhibitor is changing the landscape of this terrible disease. Seeing this magnitude of benefit in a randomized phase three study is very encouraging for all patients with advanced pancreatic cancer and is a paradigm shift in this deadly disease.
The study
The phase three trial enrolled 479 adults with metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma whose cancer had continued growing after one previous course of chemotherapy.
Participants were randomly assigned to receive either a 300-milligram daily dose of daraxonrasib or one of several commonly used chemotherapy treatments selected by their physician.
Researchers followed patients to compare how long they lived overall, how long their cancer remained under control, how their tumors responded to treatment, and how the therapies affected quality of life.
They also monitored side effects throughout the study. Because the trial randomly assigned participants to one treatment or the other, researchers were able to directly compare outcomes between the two groups.
The results
The results were striking. Patients who received daraxonrasib had a median overall survival of 13.2 months, compared with 6.7 months for those treated with chemotherapy.
The drug also delayed disease progression for longer and produced higher tumor response rates.
Patients taking daraxonrasib generally maintained their quality of life for a longer period, although side effects were common. The most frequently reported side effects included rash, diarrhea, and nausea, while serious treatment-related side effects occurred less often than with chemotherapy.
For consumers, these findings represent an encouraging step forward rather than an immediate change in care. Daraxonrasib remains an experimental treatment, but the results suggest it could become a valuable option for patients whose metastatic pancreatic cancer has progressed after initial chemotherapy.
While additional regulatory review is still needed before the drug becomes widely available, the study offers new optimism for a disease that has long had few effective treatment options.
Were this drug to be approved by the FDA, it would mark a dramatic shift in how pancreatic cancer is treated, researcher Brian Wolpin said in a news release.
A new Insurify analysis found that Florida, Louisiana, and North Carolina are home to many of the nation's least insurable counties, where homeowners face the highest insurance costs and risks.
The rankings are based on factors including natural disaster risk, home age, property values, and local insurance premiums, all of which influence how expensive and difficult it is to insure a home.
Experts say homeowners can help lower their insurance costs by weather-proofing their homes, shopping around for coverage regularly, and asking insurers about available discounts.
Home insurance has become more expensive and in some parts of the country, it's also becoming much harder to get.
As extreme weather events grow more frequent and costly, insurers are raising rates, limiting coverage, or pulling out of high-risk areas altogether. A new home insurance risk index from Insurify highlights the counties where homeowners are facing the greatest insurance burden, with many of the hardest-hit areas concentrated in Florida, Louisiana, and North Carolina.
To better understand what's driving these trends and what they could mean for homeowners, ConsumerAffairs spoke with Insurify Senior Economic Analyst Matt Brannon about why some counties are becoming increasingly difficult to insure and how climate risk is reshaping the home insurance market.
Identifying risk
Insurify's Home Insurance Risk Index scored more than 3,100 U.S. counties based on factors that influence how difficult and expensive it is to insure a home.
First we look at natural-hazard and extreme-weather risk, Brannon said. Counties with more vulnerability to natural disasters (e.g., wildfires, earthquakes, flooding, hail, etc.) are more prone to frequent and costly insurance claims.
The second factor assessed is the age of a county's housing stock. Because of outdated building codes, worn-down materials, and a lack of regular upkeep, older properties are more susceptible to damage from severe weather. We also look at the number of residential structures in a county and the ratio of residential to commercial structures.
Additionally, we examine the countys median home value, as insurers generally charge higher premiums for more expensive homes, since they are more costly for the insurer to afford to replace. Finally, we incorporated average annual home insurance premiums by county, which capture risk factors that physical hazard models dont fully reflect. Factors like local litigation and claims environments, crime rates, rebuilding cost inflation, and insurance market dynamics all play a part in determining how risky it is to insure a home.
Which areas have the greatest risk?
Monroe County, Florida, home to the Florida Keys, ranked as the least insurable county in the country with a score of 99.5 out of 100. Homeowners there pay an average of $22,436 per year for insurance nearly eight times the national average.
Overall, 19 of the 20 least insurable counties are located along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts, where hurricanes, storm surge, and high winds create significant risks. Jackson County, Oklahoma, was the only non-coastal county to make the top 20, largely because of its exposure to tornadoes and hail.
The report also found that Louisiana is home to three of the five least insurable counties, while California stands out on the West Coast because of wildfire risk, with Los Angeles and Santa Cruz counties both receiving scores above 95.
More broadly, the analysis found that densely-populated counties tend to have higher insurance risk scores than more rural areas, highlighting how a combination of climate threats, home values, and rebuilding costs is making insurance more expensive and in some cases, harder to obtain for millions of homeowners.
Can you lower your risk?
Because the highest risks are found in areas with extreme weather, Brannon recommends homeowners take the necessary precautions to weather-proof their homes as much as possible.
Upgrade to impact-rated windows and doors, install hurricane shutters, and consider a more wind-resistant roof, he suggested. While home hardening measures can be costly, several coastal states provide assistance programs. For example, Louisiana contains four of the nation's ten least insurable counties. Homeowners in these areas can apply for the Fortify Homes grant, which offers grants of up to $10,000 for roofing improvements.
Some insurers will even give discounts to homeowners who make these improvements. In Florida, state law requires insurers to give discounts to homeowners in risky areas who make certain weather-resistant improvements.
Do your homework
While homeowners living in these high-risk areas are likely to going to bear the brunt of higher insurance premiums, Brannon says that taking the time to do your homework and see what offers exist can potentially help you save.
The very best way to save money on home insurance is to compare rates, he said. Many people think insurance is a set it and forget it situation, but it shouldnt be. Rates can be volatile, and business strategies vary by insurer. So the company that gave you the best rate five years ago may not be the company offering the best rates for your property today.
We recommend reviewing every six months to make sure you have an affordable and adequate policy. You can also look into bundling coverage. Finally, ask your insurance agent about ways to save. They are the experts who are there to help you.
California ranks No. 1: Heavy traffic, long commutes, and poor roads make it America's most stressful state for drivers.
Stress goes beyond traffic: Crashes, potholes, aggressive drivers, bad weather, and costly repairs all add to the daily commute.
Drive smarter: Leave early, use navigation apps, keep up with maintenance, and consider a dash cam or adaptive cruise control.
If it feels like driving has become more stressful lately, you're not imagining it.
A new study from Nicolet Law ranked the states where driving is most stressful, looking at everything from traffic congestion and commute times to road conditions, crash rates, and even weather-related disruptions.
The results may not surprise many drivers. California topped the list as the most stressful state for motorists, followed by Mississippi, Texas, Louisiana, and New Jersey.
Researchers found that California roads carry nearly 20,000 vehicles per lane each day far more than most states. Drivers also contend with long commutes and some of the country's worst road conditions.
Mississippi ranked second, largely because it had the highest fatal crash rate in the nation. Texas came in third due to a combination of dangerous weather, heavy traffic, and above-average crash rates.
Meanwhile, New Jersey earned a spot in the top five thanks to the longest average commute times in the country, with many workers spending more than an hour each day traveling to and from work.
Why driving feels more stressful
Traffic is only part of the problem. Many drivers are dealing with the following factors that can make every trip more frustrating:
Congested roads
Aggressive driving
Rising repair costs
Potholes and poor pavement
Longer commutes
Weather-related delays
Increased accident risks
Even short daily trips can feel slightly mentally draining when you repeatedly face crowded roads that are in poor condition.
And that is not to mention the possible financial impacts. Poor road conditions can contribute to tire damage, suspension repairs, wheel alignments, and other costly vehicle maintenance issues.
How drivers can reduce stress behind the wheel
While you can't eliminate traffic, there are several ways to make driving safer and less stressful.
Give yourself extra time: One of the biggest causes of driving stress is feeling rushed. Leaving just 10 to 15 minutes earlier can reduce the temptation to speed, weave through traffic, or make risky decisions.
Use navigation apps even on familiar routes: Apps like Google Maps and Waze can alert you to accidents, construction zones, road closures, and traffic backups and then reroute you to a faster way to get to where youre going.
Watch for potholes after storms: Potholes tend to rear their ugly head after a big rain and youll inevitably hit one. When you do, be sure to pay attention to signs of damage such as your steering pulling to one side, any weird tire vibrations, or any new suspension noises. By catching problems early, you can often prevent more expensive repairs down the road.
Take advantage of adaptive cruise control: If your vehicle has adaptive cruise control, consider using it during longer highway commutes. Many drivers find it reduces fatigue by helping maintain safe following distances by automatically braking and accelerating to keep you in the flow of traffic.
Consider a dash cam: A dash cam won't reduce commute time, but it can provide valuable evidence if you're involved in a crash or insurance dispute. Many quality models now cost less than $100.
Don't overlook vehicle maintenance: Stressful driving conditions become even worse when your vehicle isn't operating properly. Before summer road trips or long commutes, get in the habit of routinely checking tire pressure, windshield wipers, and fluid levels.
The spring home-selling season ended on a subdued note as fewer homeowners put their properties on the market, reflecting caution among both buyers and sellers.
High mortgage rates, record home prices, and economic uncertainty are discouraging new listings, even as buyers gain more negotiating power.
Housing experts say the slowdown could keep inventory from rising as quickly as expected, limiting relief for prospective buyers despite softer demand.
Record-high home prices that have risen much faster than the rate of inflation is one reason that its hard to buy a home. But inventory levels is another.
When home sales slow, you might think the selection would improve, but that hasnt happened this spring. The data show that homeowners increasingly decided against listing their homes amid stubbornly high borrowing costs and lingering economic uncertainty.
A new report from Redfin found that the pace of new home listings slowed significantly heading into summer, suggesting many would-be sellers are choosing to wait rather than enter a market where buyers remain cautious. The slowdown comes even as the median U.S. home sale price has climbed to a record high, a combination that has left both sides of the market reluctant to make a move.
Sluggish sales in 2026
The spring market is typically the busiest time of year for residential real estate, but 2026 has been marked by sluggish sales activity. Elevated mortgage rates continue to make monthly payments difficult for many prospective buyers, while homeowners who locked in ultra-low mortgage rates during the pandemic remain hesitant to trade them for loans carrying much higher interest rates.
"Homeowners are sitting on the sidelines because buyers are sitting on the sidelines," Redfin said in its analysis, noting that many sellers are unwilling to test the market if they believe they may have to negotiate on price or offer concessions.
The cooling in new listings follows several weeks of weakening demand indicators. Pending home sales have softened, mortgage purchase applications have eased, and buyer activity has remained below historical norms despite modest improvements in home touring activity.
Still, there are more sellers than buyers
The result is a market that is offering buyers more leverage than they have enjoyed in years.
Redfin estimates there are substantially more sellers than buyers nationwide, forcing many homeowners to compete by offering concessions such as paying closing costs, covering repairs, or buying down buyers' mortgage interest rates. A separate Redfin analysis found nearly half of recent home sales included some form of seller concession.
Fewer homeowners appear willing to list their properties. Many remain reluctant to sell because doing so would require purchasing another home at today's higher financing costs.
Others are concerned that economic uncertainty could make it harder to achieve their desired sale price.
That dynamic has prevented the large increase in housing inventory many economists expected earlier this year. While active listings have risen compared with last year, the decline in new listings could slow further inventory gains during the summer selling season.
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