iPLEDGE hurdles block some inmates from receiving isotretinoin in jails, prisons

Incarcerated people in U.S. jails and prisons have limited access to regular isotretinoin therapy for conditions like severe acne conglobata or treatment-resistant dissecting cellulitis, researchers reported.
“The United States has about 2 million people in jail or prison at any point,” Joerg Albrecht, MD, PhD, a dermatologist for Cook County Health, which serves the Cook County Jail in Chicago, told Healio. “That is not a small number, so there are certain responsibilities that come with that.”
The iPLEDGE Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy program, run by a private group and overseen by








