BOOTS UK LIMITED
Industry Context
This company is tracked across risk categories, including those related to its sector (e.g., Pharmaceutical Preparations, Drugs, Drug Proprietaries, and Druggists' Sundries, Miscellaneous General Merchandise Stores, Drug Stores and Proprietary Stores), including supply chain integrity, ESG practices, labor disputes, and regulatory compliance.
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Recent Articles about BOOTS UK LIMITED
Live alerts from global media, monitored by Business Radar
2024-09-16 (chemistanddruggist.co.uk)
Boots parent company pays $107m settlement over prescription ‘fraud’
Two Walgreens whistleblowers will receive multimillion-dollar rewards for alerting the US government to the pharmacy chain’s “false” prescription claims, the US justice department has revealed.
Read more2024-09-16 (chemistanddruggist.co.uk)
Boots parent company pays $107m settlement over prescription ‘fraud’
Two Walgreens whistleblowers will receive multimillion-dollar rewards for alerting the US government to the pharmacy chain’s “false” prescription claims, the US justice department has revealed.
Read more2024-09-16 (chemistanddruggist.co.uk)
Boots parent company pays $107m settlement over prescription ‘fraud’
Two Walgreens whistleblowers will receive multimillion-dollar rewards for alerting the US government to the pharmacy chain’s “false” prescription claims, the US justice department has revealed.
Read more2024-07-12 (chemistanddruggist.co.uk)
RPS launches call for evidence on P-med self-selection amid controversy
The Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPS) has announced a call for evidence on the self-selection of Pharmacy medicines (P-meds) to help it “consider” its position on the matter.
Read more(lexpress.fr)
the poor people's store in original version thank you crazy georges popular and effective
Crazy George's? Don't know. "At Euston station, a hub for British commuters, the brand's notoriety is rather low. However, it has around sixty stores in Great Britain. In France, it was enough to open a single point sales (in Bobigny) to become famous overnight and trigger a scandal: Lionel Jospin himself got involved, denouncing this form of distribution of furniture and household appliances where "the poor will have to pay twice as much as the rich". We know the principle: installment sales, paid weekly, with interest rates reaching almost 30 across the Channel. Not content to drive on the left, to adore the lamb with mint and pink jelly, are the English giving us further proof of their cynicism?
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