ON
← Back to feed
United StatesPolitics6 days ago

STAT+: Amid confusion over Pfizer’s emergency penicillin program, newborn is diagnosed with preventable syphilis

A newborn in Gila County, Arizona, was diagnosed with syphilis after his mother was unable to receive timely penicillin treatment due to a nationwide shortage of the drug Bicillin L-A. The article details the confusion surrounding Pfizer's emergency penicillin program and highlights the challenges faced by healthcare providers in accessing the medication.

By Eric Boodman

June 15, 2026

For this story, Boodman obtained email chains between Pfizer and health officials and conducted interviews with 10 state health departments, eight local health agencies, six health system pharmacists, and former and current CDC officials, as well as infectious disease specialists, OB-GYNs, and representatives of Pfizer and Cost Plus Drugs, among other sources.

The request was an emergency. In late March, a woman in Gila County, Arizona, was diagnosed with syphilis, and she was pregnant. She needed an injection of penicillin — if possible, 30 days before delivery — but the bacteria corkscrewing through her body increased her risk of delivering early. Without timely treatment, her pregnancy could end in miscarriage, stillbirth, or infant death, and if the infant survived, the child might live with bone deformities, brain damage, blindness, and deafness, among other complications.

All of that could be prevented with one of the oldest antibiotics in the book — specifically, an injectable form of penicillin sold under the brand name Bicillin L-A.

It was the only treatment approved in the United States for syphilis during pregnancy, and there’d been a national shortage since July 2025. But Pfizer, the only company that sells it, had a protocol in place for exactly this scenario: an emergency request system “to be used for confirmed congenital and risk of congenital syphilis patients only.”

That was what was unfolding in Gila County — and on Friday, March 27, public health officials submitted a request. Pfizer confirmed receipt the next Monday, according to emails obtained by STAT. But over a week after that, on April 7, the medication still hadn’t arrived.

“What can be done to get bicillin for this patient ASAP? These are the kind of delays that make the emergency request line not a viable option for public health response,” a leader at the National Coalition of STD Directors wrote to a Pfizer representative, stepping in to help secure the drug.

“Did they submit a medical request form first? I checked with Customer Service and they can’t locate. If we can get this medical request we will get it processed,” the Pfizer representative wrote back that same day.

But by the time this exchange was taking place, it was already too late. “Mom has delivered and we have missed our opportunity to prevent congenital syphilis,” wrote an official at the Arizona Department of Health Services, adding, “Yes, the county completed the medical request form.”

It was the outcome everyone was trying to avert. In February, the National Coalition of STD Directors had asked Pfizer to donate a fraction of its Bicillin L-A reserves to state health departments, so they’d have it on hand as a backstop in case this kind of emergency arose. But Pfizer hadn’t — and in early June, nearly four months after the coalition’s proposal, the company said it was still evaluating the idea of proactively sending out doses. This case in Arizona was a realization of the fears that had spurred the suggestion in the first place.

STAT+ Exclusive Story

Already have an account? Log in

This article is exclusive to STAT+ subscribers

Unlock this article — plus in-depth analysis, newsletters, premium events, and news alerts.

Already have an account? Log in

View All Plans

To read the rest of this story subscribe to STAT+.

Subscribe

Read the full article at STAT News
Source document: Email chains between Pfizer and health officials

1 reports

STAT NewsIndependentCenter6 days ago
STAT+: Amid confusion over Pfizer’s emergency penicillin program, newborn is diagnosed with preventable syphilis

A newborn in Gila County, Arizona, was diagnosed with syphilis after his mother was unable to receive timely penicillin treatment due to a nationwide shortage of the drug Bicillin L-A. The article details the confusion surrounding Pfizer's emergency penicillin program and highlights the challenges faced by healthcare providers in accessing the medication.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual account of the situation without overtly favoring any particular political perspective. It includes multiple perspectives, including those from health officials, pharmacists, and Pfizer representatives, and does not employ loaded language or one-sided sourcing.

Official sources cited

  • organisation Email chains between Pfizer and health officials
  • organisation Interviews with state health departments
  • organisation Interviews with local health agencies
  • organisation Interviews with health system pharmacists
  • organisation Interviews with CDC officials
  • organisation Interviews with infectious disease specialists

Go to the primary sources (6)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • organisationEmail chains between Pfizer and health officials
  • organisationInterviews with state health departments
  • organisationInterviews with local health agencies
  • organisationInterviews with health system pharmacists
  • organisationInterviews with CDC officials
  • organisationInterviews with infectious disease specialists