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Gilead’s Remdesivir Will Be Distributed By State Health Departments

The US Department of Health has now announced the allocation plan for Gilead’s (GILD) Covid-19 treatment remdesivir, revealing that states rather than federal government will be in charge of distribution.

The donated doses of the treatment, which received an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) from the FDA on May 1, will be used to treat hospitalized COVID-19 patients in areas of the country hardest hit by the pandemic.

Gilead plans to supply 607,000 vials of the experimental drug over the next six weeks to treat an estimated 78,000 hospitalized COVID-19 patients. The donation to the US is part of 1.5 million vials of remdesivir the company is donating worldwide.

Beginning on May 7, the process began to deliver cases of the drug to Connecticut (30 cases), Illinois (140 cases), Iowa (10 cases), Maryland (30 cases), Michigan (40 cases) and New Jersey (110 cases). Each case contains 40 vials of the donated drug.

“State health departments will distribute the doses to appropriate hospitals in their states because state and local health departments have the greatest insight into community-level needs in the COVID-19 response, including appropriate distribution of a treatment in limited supply” the US Department of Health stated.

Candidates for the donated doses must be patients on ventilators or on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation or who require supplemental oxygen due to room-air blood oxygen levels at or below 94%.

In addition to the donated doses, remdesivir also is available in the U.S. through clinical trials.

The National Institutes of Health and Gilead worked together to conduct a randomized controlled clinical trial of the investigational drug in hospitalized patients. Preliminary results suggested that remdesivir was associated with faster recovery, although the data was not sufficient to determine if the drug was associated with lower mortality.

TipRanks data shows that out of the 28 analysts covering Gilead in the past three months, 15 are now sidelined with a Hold rating on the stock, 8 say Buy and 5 say Sell, adding up to a Hold consensus rating. The $79.39 average price target suggests analysts see limited upside potential in the shares in the coming 12 months- given that shares are currently rallying 19% year-to-date. (See Gilead stock analysis on TipRanks)

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Harriet Lefton
Harriet Lefton, originally from the UK, began her career as a journalist specialising in the niche world of metal markets. She graduated from the University of Cambridge before becoming a qualified UK lawyer. Now she has turned her attention to the world of financial blogging, covering US stocks, analysts and all manner of things finance-related.

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