Bristol-Myers Squibb ( ), colloquially referred to as BMS, is a pharmaceutical corporation, formed by a 1989 merger between pharmaceutical companies Bristol-Myers Company, founded in 1887 by William McLaren Bristol and John Ripley Myers in Clinton, NY (both were graduates of Hamilton College), and Squibb Corporation. The New York City-based company's Chairman and CEO was most recently Peter R. Dolan. Dolan was fired in September 2006 for his handling of a patent dispute over the drug Plavix, and was replaced with interim CEO James Cornelius until a new CEO is found. BMS' primary R&D sites are located in New Jersey and Connecticut, with other sites around the US, in Ireland and in other countries.
BMS is a Fortune 500 Company (#129 in 2007 list).
Bristol-Myers Squibb manufactures prescription pharmaceuticals, over-the-counter drugs and health care products in several therapeutic areas. It is also the parent company of Mead Johnson which manufactures nutritional products such as Enfamil baby formulas and infant vitamin supplements like Tri-Vi-Sol and ConvaTec, a world leader in Ostomy and wound care products. Bristol-Myers Squibb has a mission to "Extend and Enhance Human Life" and works to provide help for areas of unmet medical need.