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New ‘discreet’ Viagra Launched ending Embarrassment Of Blue Pill
The makers of Viagra are set to introduce a brand-new ‘discrete’ form of the drug that will replace the iconic – and quickly recognisable – little blue tablet.
The distinct diamond-shaped tablets might quickly be replaced by a pink, rectangle-shaped ‘wafer’ that dissolves on the tongue, meaning it does not require to be taken with water.
About half of men over 40 suffer erectile dysfunction in the UK and last year there was a record 4.57 million prescriptions for Viagra on the NHS.
The drug first came to the marketplace in the 1990s after being created by the American pharmaceutical company Pfizer.
It was very first developed in the 1980s as a heart disease medication, however trial individuals noticed it had an unusual adverse effects – .
Now, Pfizer spin-off Viatris, which owns the Viagra name and brand name, has requested a trademark in the UK for the brand-new kind of the drug, Viagra ODF.
Viatris has currently introduced the Viagra ODF in Canada and advertised it as being ‘thin and discreet’ which might be more effective for lots of customers.
The unique tablets – which can cause embarrassment for some patients – has actually been transformed and a new dissolvable type may be available to Brits in the next 5 years. Stock image
‘Tablets are not constantly tolerable to patients and likewise sometimes the size of tablets may put clients off having them,’ Thorrun Govind, pharmacist and health professional, informed The Telegraph.
She added: ‘Some men might still be finding the idea of having Viagr humiliating, however I would hope that guys’s health and discussions about sexual health have actually moved on considering that Viagra was first formulated.’
Ms Govind thinks this new style is a ‘positive action forward’.
The new dissolvable medication is thought to likely pertained to the UK imminently.
Rebecca Anderson-Smith, partner and chartered trade mark attorney at Mewburn Ellis, told the paper that the trademark application is a ‘great indication’ it will be readily available within the next five years.
She explained trade mark registrations can be cancelled if they are not used for a continuous duration of five years or more after registration. As a result, it seems Viatris plans to release the item within the next few years.
However, giving a hallmark would not guarantee the ODF could be sold and it would have to be approved by the Medicines & Healthcare products Regulatory Agency initially.
It’s expected to cost the same as the tablet version and to be offered in the very same doses.
An overall of 4.57 million prescriptions for sildenafil, more frequently understood by the brand name Viagra, and other kinds of impotency drugs offered under the trademark name Cialis and Levitra, were dished out by the health service in 2023
This follows dodgy Viagra was found to be Britain’s most significant fake drug after more than ₤ 6.2 million of fake blue pill were taken by UK regulators in 2023.
More materials of the erectile dysfunction drug were found than knock-off variations of painkillers like morphine.
Health authorities said online sellers flouting guidelines were behind the fake supplies with the majority of being imported from nations like India without a proper licence.
Data, from UK regulator The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), show 2.6 million doses of sildenafil, the generic name for the medication best called Viagra, were taken last year.
Another half-million doses of tadalafil, another erectile dysfunction drug sold under the brand name Cialis worth ₤ 1.2 million were also seized.
While all medications bring possible negative effects drugs from undependable sources might either not work or carry extra active ingredients or pollutants like heavy metals or other drugs that could be harmful.