For a nation on the edge, antacids becoming harder to find
First it was toilet paper. Then it was meat.
Now, it’s antacids. People searching online or in stores for over-thecounter tummy soothers are finding they can’t easily buy antacid medications like Tums, Pepcid and its generic version, famotidine, in parts of the country.
few weeks ago, Wegmans Food Markets took the step of limiting shoppers to two packets of famotidine products per trip.
During a pandemic that has seen bursts of hoarding, this may be the most unexpected.
Americans are stressed. They’re concerned about the rising number of coronavirus cases. They worry about their jobs. Remote learning is a nightmare, and grocery shopping is no walk in the park. Not to mention the elections. And now, here come the holidays.
The result is that some people are dealing with “Pandemic Stomach,” acid-churning episodes that are resulting in the increased demand for over-the-counter and prescription antacids.
And antacids also have been popular with those who’ve yet to have any indigestion or heartburn.
People began stocking up on them after preliminary studies suggested famotidine could reduce the symptoms of coronavirus. Another buying wave hit this fall when President Donald Trump was treated for coronavirus and White House officials said that he was on famotidine, along with zinc and vitamin D.
For those in need of relief, the shortages are maddening.
When Maia Callahan,
24, a recent early education graduate who’s teaching families and tutoring remotely in Greenfield, Mass., tried to drop her usual order of Pepcid into her online Stop & Shop cart in early September, it kept saying the product was out of stock.
“I thought, OK, I’ll put an order in through Amazon,” said Callahan, who has an autoimmune disorder and has taken medication to treat her heartburn since she was 17. “That was the worst. One of the heartburn medications was three times the price it usually was. I wound up taking Tums for two weeks.” Physicians said that when quarantines were lifted this spring, they started to notice more patients reporting symptoms of heartburn and acid reflux.
“I think part of it is the stress of everything going on in the world,” said Lauren Bleich, a gastroenterologist in Acton, Mass., about 25 miles northwest of Boston, who said she has seen a 25 percent increase in patients reporting heartburn and similar symptoms.
But she also said the coronavirus, which has uprooted people’s normal lives and forced many to work from home, has led to many “dietary indiscretions,” which are triggering these symptoms.
“We’re more lax than we used to be with alcohol or sweets or our comfort food,” Bleich said. “And then there’s the lack of activity or exercise. Weight gain definitely contributes to heartburn and acid reflux.”
Another culprit appeared in early November.
“We had a lot of people with upset stomachs, heartburn and indigestion around the election,” she said.
Dr. Atul Maini, medical director for the Heartburn Center at St. Joseph’s Health in Syracuse, N.Y., said that while the specialized center hasn’t seen an increase in patients, it has noticed a big difference among the patients it has treated since coronavirus quarantines were lifted.
“The patients coming in with heartburn symptoms were now extremely anxious and depressed,” he said. “Something else had changed.”
Companies that make over-the-counter medications are trying to meet demand.
“We are aware that there may be pockets of supply constraints,” a spokeswoman for GlaxoSmithKline, which manufactures Tums, said.
For some antacids, though, the spike in demand can be tied to various preliminary studies that suggest famotidine, the key ingredient in Pepcid, may reduce coronavirus symptoms.
Still, the medical community is cautious about the early results. In late June, the Infectious Diseases Society of America recommended against the use of famotidine unless in the context of a clinical trial because of insufficient data.