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  2. Walgreens Boots Alliance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walgreens_Boots_Alliance

    Walgreens had previously purchased 45% of the company for $4.0 billion and 83.4 million common shares in August 2012 with an option to purchase the remaining shares within three years. [4] Walgreens became a subsidiary of the newly created company after the transactions were completed. [5]

  3. GI cocktail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GI_cocktail

    The GI cocktail is a mixture of a viscous anesthetic, an antacid, and an anticholinergic. [1] [2] Common viscous anesthetics use are viscous lidocaine or xylocaine.Common antacids used are magnesium hydroxide, aluminum hydroxide, or simethicone (more commonly known as Mylanta or Maalox). [3]

  4. Walgreens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walgreens

    One Walgreens pharmacy in Fort Myers, Florida, ordered 95,800 pills in 2009, but by 2011, this number had jumped to 2.2 million pills in one year. Another example was a Walgreens pharmacy in Hudson, Florida, a town of 34,000 people near Clearwater, that purchased 2.2 million pills in 2011, the DEA said.

  5. Superdrug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superdrug

    Superdrug trades from nearly nine hundred shops across the United Kingdom and Ireland, and also serves Denmark, Finland and Sweden online. The company employs over 14,000. Besides offering health and beauty products online and in shops, there are pharmacies with consultation rooms in over 220 shops, and a further 19 contain nurse clinics.

  6. Talk:Gaviscon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Gaviscon

    Here are links to possibly useful sources of information about Gaviscon. PubMed provides review articles from the past five years (limit to free review articles ) The TRIP database provides clinical publications about evidence-based medicine .

  7. Boots (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boots_(company)

    An advertisement for Boots from 1911. Boots was established in 1849, by John Boot. [7] After his father's death in 1860, Jesse Boot, aged 10, helped his mother run the family's herbal medicine shop in Nottingham, [8] which was incorporated as Boot and Co. Ltd in 1883, becoming Boots Pure Drug Company Ltd in 1888.

  8. Eno (drug) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eno_(drug)

    Eno was first marketed by James Crossley Eno (1827–1915). [4] Legend has it that his idea for the product arose while he was working at the pharmacy of an infirmary in Newcastle, Britain, with Dennis Embleton; Embleton often prescribed an effervescent drink made by mixing sodium bicarbonate and citric acid in water, and Eno adopted this beverage. [5]

  9. Rabeprazole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabeprazole

    Rabeprazole, sold under the brand name Aciphex, among others, is a medication that decreases stomach acid. [6] It is used to treat peptic ulcer disease, gastroesophageal reflux disease, and excess stomach acid production such as in Zollinger–Ellison syndrome. [6]