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Government Bans Generic Rescue Inhalers

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Government Bans Generic Rescue Inhalers

BALTIMORE (WJZ) ― If you're one of the 40 million people in the country who suffers from a respiratory disorder like asthma, there's a change in your medication you need to know about.

Healthwatch reporter Kellye Lynn says it's a decision that affects medications known as rescue inhalers.

Starting this month, generic rescue inhalers are no longer available.

Whether he's involved in a challenging match or coaching on the sidelines, Ray Gordon is a fanatic for fencing.

"I just enjoy the thrill of the fight," said Gordon.

But there's an entirely different opponent in Gordon's life--asthma.

"I can get tight, and it can get hard to breathe," said Gordon.

When that happens, Gordon turns to the drug Albuterol, also known as a rescue inhaler.

"The rescue inhaler is immediate acting when someone is short of breath. They can take a puff or two, and it will open up their airways quickly," said Dr. Albert Polito, pulmonologist Mercy Medical Center.

It's fast acting, but since generic rescue inhalers can be harmful to the environment, the government is now banning their sale.

"They had to change the propellent in the inhaler, the substance that allows it to make a nice spray that will go into lungs so that it was not harmful to ozone layer," said Polito.

Polito explains brand name versions use environmentally friendly HFA propellants instead of destructive CFCs. They're now the only rescue inhaler available.

"I like that it's green and not putting CFCs in the environment, but part of the green is the money that it costs to buy it," said Gordon.

Expect to pay more for the brand name medications, and there are other changes.

Prime the pump to ensure you've got the right dose. That means give it another pump before you use it, and expect a change when you inhale.

"The forcefulness of the spray is not quite as aggressive as it hits the side of the throat and the sides of the mouth," said Polito.

So even though these name brand medications may feel a little different, Polito stresses that your rescue inhaler will still come to your rescue.

The more environmentally friendly inhalers may also have to be cleaned more frequently than the generic ones.

(© MMIX, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)

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