Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Democrats United States Biotech Businesses The Internet

US Patients Battle EpiPen Prices And Regulations By Shopping Online (cnn.com) 396

"The incredible increase in the cost of EpiPens, auto-injectors that can stop life-threatening emergencies caused by allergic reactions, has hit home on Capitol Hill," reports CNN. Slashdot reader Applehu Akbar reports that the argument "has now turned into civil war in the US Senate": One senator's daughter relies on Epi-Pen, while another senator's daughter is CEO of Mylan, the single company that is licensed to sell these injectors in the US. On the worldwide market there is no monopoly on these devices... Is it finally time to allow Americans to go online and fill their prescriptions on the world market?
Time reports some patients are ordering cheaper EpiPens from Canada and other countries online, "an act that the FDA says is technically illegal and potentially dangerous." But the FDA also has "a backlog of about 4,000 generic drugs" awaiting FDA approval, reports PRI, noting that in the meantime prices have also increased for drugs treating cancer, hepatitis C, and high cholesterol. In Australia, where the drug costs just $38, one news outlet reports that the U.S. "is the only developed nation on Earth which allows pharmaceutical companies to set their own prices."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

US Patients Battle EpiPen Prices And Regulations By Shopping Online

Comments Filter:
  • by pubwvj ( 1045960 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:33PM (#52782301)

    It should be legal to order the same product from another country. They're both made by the same company. Stupid trade protectionism.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Many on the left love protectionism...except when they don't.

      The FDA is no prize -- by being so tightfisted, they prevent politicians from having to explain why a drug hurt people, but this ends up delaying new drugs (and generics, as TFA shows) that trivially causes a lot more harm than they save being overly cautious.

      But you know, a death or two in front of the camera is a tragedy the likes of which 10,000 offscreen because of delayed drugs is not.

      • Yeah, on account of the FDA, I had to wait 16 years for corneal crosslinking to finally become a thing in the US even though it's been in use safely elsewhere for longer than that.

        • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

          > Yeah, on account of the FDA

          There are other things that are common here that aren't done in "more civilized" part of the world. That goes both ways.

          Plus it gets even worse than that. However restrictive and bothersome you might view the FDA, Medicare and Medicaid are even worse.

      • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:21PM (#52782499)

        Many on the left love protectionism...except when they don't.

        Many on the right hate protectionism...except when they don't.

        Corporations just love having unfettered access to other markets for their products. They also love unrestricted access to supplies of (cheaper) materials and labour in other countries; but let their customers demand the same, and all of a sudden the hypocritical bastards lobby for protectionism, and start spreading FUD about the supposed dangers of products from other countries. Their idea of a 'free market' is really a 'captive market' - one that is kept captive by the legislation they buy, the lies they spread, and the dirty deals they strike with their counterparts in other countries.

    • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:01PM (#52782409)

      Your resident crazy libertarian here:

      Indeed there doesn't seem to be any good reason to prevent importing anything from international editions of books (save money for college students) to pharmaceuticals. There may be some merit to that argument for places like Mexico where quality controls are quite poor, however that should be a judgement call left up to the consumer. Likewise, I think the idea of tariffs, embargos, and other forms of mercantilism ultimately cost a domestic economy much more than they supposedly preserve.

      Nevertheless, I don't think that's quite the root of the problem. This isn't, by any definition whatsoever, a free market. This is in fact a government granted monopoly. You cannot have both a free market AND a monopoly in most cases. That said, I don't quite understand why we give i.e. patent holders, copyright holders, etc free reign on how, when, where, and how much they can charge for anything with the sky being the limit. There probably should be some system in place whereby if they opt for government protection, then they must follow certain pricing and trade rules in order to keep that protection.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 27, 2016 @06:02PM (#52782683)

        When my wife was on a particular medication, we used CanadaDrugs dot com to get it vastly cheaper than we could through any USA based pharmacy. The funny thing was, the drug was made in the USA and shipped from a USA warehouse.

        The medication was never outside the US borders at all -- but the only way to get a good price was to order it via an international pharmacy.

      • by AthanasiusKircher ( 1333179 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @06:21PM (#52782745)

        This isn't, by any definition whatsoever, a free market. This is in fact a government granted monopoly. You cannot have both a free market AND a monopoly in most cases. That said, I don't quite understand why we give i.e. patent holders, copyright holders, etc free reign on how, when, where, and how much they can charge for anything with the sky being the limit.

        Since there seems to be a lot of confusion in the media about the real issue here, the EpiPen problem (1) has nothing to do with drug patents, and (2) has relatively little to do with patent protection in general.

        Just to be clear, the drug here (epinephrine) has been around for many decades and is patent-free. You can easily get a dose of it for a few cents: hospitals directly inject the generic all the time. And the EpiPen is basically out of patent protection. There apparently is still an active patent for some aspect of the device, but the manufacturer settled a lawsuit already that would allow generic manufacture.

        So what's the real problem here? There are two. The first is the FDA. Epipens fall under the category of both "drugs" and "medical devices" for approval purposes, and the byzantine set of processes necessary for approval take forever. They also require standards for effectiveness that are probably impossible to meet in this case, because of the high rate of EpiPen (and generic autoinjector) user error. There were supposedly 26 incidents of "incorrect dosage" from Auvi-Q before the recall, but none were actually confirmed and the devices involved did not seem to be malfunctioning. So why the wrong dose?

        This is the dirty secret of this whole autoinjector business -- people actually screw up using them quite a bit. (The second issue.) The most common user errors: (1) forget to take safety cap off, (2) use wrong end, (3) don't inject for adequate time (usually recommended for 10 seconds). You introduce a slightly different procedure (with another cap, oh gosh!) and that makes alternatives like Adrenaclick even more likely to be misused.

        This whole discussion in the media, to my mind, has been highjacked by people who want to draw attention to the high prices of drugs in the U.S. And that's a very noble goal, because it is ridiculous.

        But in this particular case, there is a simple, viable, CHEAP alternative -- a syringe with epinephrine. The primary objections are that people could draw up the wrong dose in a panic or whatever -- but this is solved simply. Have your syringe prefilled by a doctor, nurse, or pharmacist. You'll also hear misinformed doctors saying, "But it isn't guaranteed to be sterile" or "it will degrade." Again, we have research on this issue -- see here [nih.gov] and here [nih.gov]. Basically, as long as the syringe is stored in darkness (e.g., in a simple tube or something), it's sterile and stable for at least 3 months.

        And guess what -- you don't have any of those annoying problems with people screwing up using their autoinjectors. (1) forgot to take safety cap off? Nope -- you actually see the drug go in, so if there's some sort of safety put on the needle to prevent accidental discharge, it'll be clear if you didn't take it off. (2) Used the wrong end? Nope -- even a 4-year-old knows which end of the syringe has to go in. (3) Don't inject long enough? Nope -- again, you see the stuff go in. You push the needle until the pre-measured dose is completely out.

        Giving yourself or someone else an injection is not rocket science, and with pre-filled syringes it's probably less error-prone than "autoinjectors." And here's the best part: the total cost is probably about $5 for one (including the syringe and the pre-filling to correct dose). If you were willing to buy syringes and a larger bottle of epinephrine yourself, you could make it even cheaper, but we're already down to $20/year with replacements every

        • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @09:53PM (#52783445)

          Since there seems to be a lot of confusion in the media about the real issue here, the EpiPen problem (1) has nothing to do with drug patents, and (2) has relatively little to do with patent protection in general.

          IIRC doesn't the patent in this case apply specifically to the mechanism? And yes, epinephrine, for those who don't know, is commonly called adrenaline, which is the name brand of synthetic (but is chemically identical to the endogenous source, and thus no different from it) epinephrine.

          And indeed, in many cases when there's a drug monopoly, it doesn't involve a patent. Because I have stage 4 CKD, I have problems with gout. The only medication that effectively treats it in my case is a drug called colchicine. That particular drug has been in use for a few centuries now, but a company presently has market exclusivity. Why? Well, when the Food and Drug Act was passed in 1934, any drug made from that point forward had have its efficacy proven before it could be prescribed, however old medications were "grandfathered in" until a few decades ago (I don't remember the exact year) when the FDA said they needed to pass scientific scrutiny, go through clinical trials, etc, to have their efficacy empirically proven. Colchicine was one of these drugs, and before this happened it was about 10 cents a pill, until the company that put it through its paces was granted market exclusivity as part of their efforts to prove that it works. They then trademarked it under the name Colcrys and raised the price to about $6 per pill.

          And again, there is no intellectual property involved here, just the FDA granting market exclusivity. And to a point, I agree with this; they put in the effort to make sure that a drug that's actually by all definitions of the word toxic (it comes from a highly toxic plant) actually works and won't kill you, which isn't a cheap thing to do, they should be able to see a return on investment. But allowing them to raise the price of a drug that is super cheap to produce to a price that's just flat out extortion is ridiculous.

          About the only rationale I can figure for avoiding the syringe issue is people's fear of needles

          Actually believe it or not I'm less scared of a syringe than an autoinjector. Why? Because in the Army we were issued an autoinjector in case of exposure to some kind of gas (I don't remember which one) which you were supposed to inject into the muscle in your butt cheek. The scary part was how I saw one of these stick right through a 2x4 piece of wood. Imagine if you accidentally stuck your hip bone or your hand...oww...I'll stick with the syringe, thanks.

        • There's also no reason that autoinjectors could not be modified to have some of the useful properties of regular syringes. For example, if part of the case of the autoinjector were transparent, users would be able to see how much of the drug remained just as with a syringe and thereby avoid partial doses.
    • <quote><p>It should be legal to order the same product from another country. They're both made by the same company. Stupid trade protectionism.</p></quote>

      Actually, they're not, they are all made under license by someone other than Mylan.

      The Canadian EpiPen, for example, is manufactured and sold by Pfizer. It's the same everywhere else. Only in the US are they made by Mylan.
    • While they are making this legal, how about funding the FDA so that it can get through its backlog of generics waiting for approval?

      All this "small government" claptrap is really "dysfunctional government". Guess who benefits from a dysfunctional government?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    As long as it doesn't interfere with some rich and powerful company!

  • Free Market, unless you want to buy medicine, then we don't let you. Funny how, in this, like so many other issues, the "conservatives" are against a free market, and the "liberals" are for the free market.
    • Re:Free market (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:48PM (#52782359)

      You're aware that the senator whose daughter is CEO of Mylan is a Democrat, right? Greed isn't a left nor right issue. It's not a conservative nor liberal issue, it's a people issue.

    • Exhibit A: Comcast.

    • Re:Free market (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:49PM (#52782369) Journal
      This is not a free market. In a free market you'd be free to buy from overseas companies.
    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      Funny how, in this, like so many other issues, the "conservatives" are against a free market, and the "liberals" are for the free market.

      So Republicans are fighting for price controls and the Democrats are letting the market set the price?

      I think you and I have different definitions of what a "Free Market" looks like...

    • Re:Free market (Score:4, Insightful)

      by _Sharp'r_ ( 649297 ) <sharper@booksund ... .com minus punct> on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:56PM (#52782391) Homepage Journal

      Yeah, the Obama FDA, that hotbed of conservative activism!

      Also, since when was price fixing by governments a "free market" solution?

      You make it sounds like the Democrats are in favor of free trade from online pharmacies, when a quick Google search [google.com] and clicking on the first link [cnet.com]is enough to dispel that.

      I'm not saying there aren't government-lovers on both sides in this area, but to cast it as 'the "conservatives" are against a free market, and the "liberals" are for the free market.' when it's more the opposite is quite a stretch there...

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        Price fixing happens for most monopolies, a free market wouldn't allow for many monopolies on high margin products. A truly free market wouldn't have licenses, FDA, copyright or patents. Price fixing protects the poor from abuse by government granted monopolies.

    • Both conservatives and liberals love their broad, simple talking points - but, in the end, there are lots of things that don't fit neatly into just one box. Many, many issues in life are just inherently complex. So, when there's conflict, a person has to weigh which conflicting principle Is more important to them.

      Plus it's only natural that we are predisposed to be more sympathetic towards a position which either impacts us directly or affects someone we care about.

    • Even if you are allowed to buy from overseas, you are not, strictly speaking, operating in a free market. You are relying on 'anti free-market' government measures and protections in the target jurisdiction. Carry idea of free market to it's ultimate logical conclusion, medicine from overseas will still be expensive if certain people had their way and this loophole would definitely be closed to you. Using Australia as an example, it is actually illegal to export government priced/subsidised medicines from

    • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

      That's all fun until people start dying.

  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:47PM (#52782351)

    Ban drug ad's like most developed nations do!

    • But my erection only lasted three hours!

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:06PM (#52782439)

      I left the US right about when they were starting to be allowed. Now when I go back it's pretty disconcerting, bordering on revolting, to see how much tv space is taken up with drug ads.

      There is no reason for drug ads. Period. Drugs should be allowed by efficacy and safety, priced honsetly and prescribed by qualified unbiased doctors for the conditions they treat best. None of that is true in the modern US of A

    • While your point is valid, it's entirely unrelated to the issue at hand.

      No one is going out and buying an EpiPen because they saw an advert for one. This is fundamental life saving medicine.

      The problem is that a single company has a monopoly on that medicine

      That's the issue we should be addressing. Letting a company maintain an iron grip on life saving medicines.

  • by glomph ( 2644 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:47PM (#52782353) Homepage Journal

    My Telmisartan (technically generic now, but Big Pharma is delaying it) is 6x cheaper overseas. Fuck the corporate kleptocracy and their politcal enablers with a rusty rake.

  • by laughingskeptic ( 1004414 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:48PM (#52782355)
    They even had a state website that pointed directly to Canadian pharmacies for several years: http://www.amednews.com/articl... [amednews.com] . I used their list to choose my Canadian pharmacy and still use them when it makes financial sense.
  • Is it finally time to allow Americans to go online and fill their prescriptions on the world market?

    What prevents an American from buying EpiPens (or any pharmaceutical) on the international market [webmd.com]?

  • LMGTFY (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Tailhook ( 98486 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:53PM (#52782377)

    Someone look up the D's and R's please. Since they were omitted I'm betting the father of the CEO is a (D).

    • Re:LMGTFY (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Knetzar ( 698216 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:13PM (#52782467)

      Good catch.

      From the article: One Democratic senator whose daughter has allergies has called for action and another Democratic senator's daughter is CEO of the company responsible for the price hike.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:53PM (#52782381)

    This is similar to the price hike for asthma inhalers [motherjones.com].
    The excuse was to eliminate CFCs and save the ozone layer.
    There is not even an attempt at government control.

  • by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:56PM (#52782389) Journal

    And still insufficient demand for universal health care. And don't blame the politicians. With the upcoming 95% reelection rate (and 100% republican/democrat monolith), there is no incentive for them to change anything. The only issue monopolizing the media is *he who shall not be named*

    • the right wing in our nation spent billions wining local elections so they could take the state senates and then gerrymandered their way into the national house & senate. Progressives won the popular vote in the last 3 elections but still lost because of this. If nothing else that's why I want Hilary. She's likely to stack the Supreme court with left leaning candidates that'll shut gerrymandering down. Trump/Pence will do the opposite. Imagine a court with 3 Clarence Thomases on it...
  • by ITRambo ( 1467509 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @04:56PM (#52782393)
    Epi-pen dosage is 0.3 mg of epinephrine. One dose from a Primatene mist inhaler releases 0.22 mg of epinephrine, exactly the same active ingredient as an Epi-pen. There are over 60 doses per Primatene mist inhaler. at a cost of about 50 cents per dose. Several years ago Primatene Mist was removed from the market. Our health care system is now fully controlled by corporations that don't give a rat's ass if we live or die as long as their profits continue to skyrocket, at any cost. Health insurance companies could fight back. But they don't appear to care, as they just raise their rates to cover the excessive and escalating cost of life saving prescription drugs. Having asthma, and having worked with suppliers of delivery mechanisms during my career, I estimate the cost of goods sold per Epi-pen is about $2 to $3 each. Any figures beyond that are profit. Any higher CGS presented by Mylan, should they choose to do so, are likely accounting techniques where they move ongoing R&D costs onto old and fully paid for products. The retail price of Mylan's Epi-pen is legalized theft such that Al Capone would be proud.
    • by Dorianny ( 1847922 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:13PM (#52782463) Journal
      The biggest problem is that Medicare the largest insurer in the country is bared from both negotiating prices with Drug manufacturers as well as weighing its cost when considering approval of medication
      • No the biggest problem is that apparently your drug prices are set by negotiations between two parties who wish to part you with your money and then divide up the results. This is ludicrous. I actually heard from an American that after going to get healthcare (nondescript because Americans don't like sharing what was wrong with them) she got a bill, forwarded it to her insurance company and then they argued and negotiated the price.

        This is medical. Why is the price negotiable at all? As someone who has neve

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:15PM (#52782473) Homepage Journal

      Well, it's the very fact that the alternative is, possibly, death that makes it possible for a company to do this. This thing occupies a peculiar corner case where the demand is modest, but inelastic.

      This means a monopolist can milk the market by raising the price to insane levels, but because the market is small no competitor wants to enter it. Were the market to become competitive it is so small that the newly entered competitors wouldn't make much off their efforts. This is contrasted with statins, which are blockbuster drugs. You don't need a very large slice of that pie for the slice to be very large indeed.

      The same thing happened last year with Duraprim. If you have toxoplasmosis, you absolutely have to have it. But how many people get toxoplasmosis?

    • by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:58PM (#52782655)

      Several years ago Primatene Mist was removed from the market. Our health care system is now fully controlled by corporations that don't give a rat's ass if we live or die as long as their profits continue to skyrocket, at any cost.

      Primatene Mist was banned by the FDA in 2011 because it contained CFCs.

      http://hubpages.com/health/Wha... [hubpages.com]

      Do you have evidence that Primatene wanted the FDA to pull their product off the market?

      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        We have a Pharma CEO with a father that's a Senator. We have a set of conditions that seem terribly beneficial to a particular corporation. We have that corporation and it's CEO profiteering and acting like an old school robber baron.

        Follow the money.

        It looks as corrupt as hell.

        Yeah, CFCs are a nice excuse to create a monopoly out of thin air.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Quite the contrary. The Mob was pretty hard core, but they always had their limits. For example, they wouldn't be at all OK with endangering the lives of children.

    • I estimate the cost of goods sold per Epi-pen is about $2 to $3 each. Any figures beyond that are profit. Any higher CGS presented by Mylan, should they choose to do so, are likely accounting techniques where they move ongoing R&D costs onto old and fully paid for products. The retail price of Mylan's Epi-pen is legalized theft such that Al Capone would be proud.

      Al Capone and his bootleggers were largely in favor of prohibition ($$$) and opposed to its repeal. They were also (violently) opposed to their

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Epipen has no domestic competitors because the FDA (government) says so. It can't be bought from abroad because the government (FDA) says so. The solution isn't to mandate pricing, it is to streamline the process of delivering a well understood drug (adrenaline) at a well known dose, in an exactly known situation. It would be trivial to bring generic competitors to market if this were a reasonably governed area, and there would be no price gouging allowed because they couldn't sell it at even what the price

  • by Kobun ( 668169 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:05PM (#52782431)
    But why in the FUCK are companies being granted effective monopolies on generic drugs?!?!

    Nice to know our 'representatives' don't feel the need to hide it anymore. They've been in bed with the drug companies for a long time. But seriously, this takes it to the level of Muppets-style puppetry. No one believe that Kermit is a real frog; we all know that he's got an arm buried up his backside. Do you think Congress gets a bulk discount on shoulder length calving gloves and jugs of lube?
    • The drug is generic, but the delivery mechanism isn't. The EpiPen is is a specialised injector designed so that a person can use it safely upon themself, with one hand, and minimal training, possibly while writhing in pain. The FDA has only approved one such injector, and it is patented.

      • Invented in the mid 1970s [wikipedia.org], any patent on it expired in the mid 90s at the latest. It's 20 years past that. Oh, and it was invented for the US Military (meaning it probably had Government investment to create it - meaning it is open technology now).
        • Yes, and the the FDA has only approved on such injector. Those 1970's designs are no longer approved. Only the latest revision, which is patented. This is a common practice in medicine: Companies introduce a new variation, which needs a specific recent patent, just so they can discontinue the previous version and so prevent it going generic.

        • Invented in the mid 1970s, any patent on it expired in the mid 90s at the latest

          Which brings us right back to the FDA only having approved one such product. The patent (and its expiration) is mostly irrelevant. Given that an EpiPen is frequently used in a life-or-death situation, no other manufacturer wants to assume the product liability associated with such a device unless the can shield themselves with the "FDA-approved" label. And the FDA is glacially slow at approving these things; so slow that man

  • by Etcetera ( 14711 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:12PM (#52782457) Homepage

    Arguably "the same drug" will be the same everywhere, but if you're ordering online drugs from somewhere outside the FDA inspection regime, you don't know what your chances are that it's in fact actually "the same drug". Really, you don't know what you're getting.

    That's still a possibility here, of course, but when a US producer commits fraud you'd better believe you'll have an army of lawyers beating down your door to help sue them into oblivion for it. Random Joe Bob's Discount Drug Shack operating in Singapore? Good luck.

    Secondly, the FDA approval process itself. For better or for worse, having a complex medical trial and many layers of approval is probably better that not having it, in terms of protecting US consumers from unsafe foods and drugs. There's a fast-track process for promising drugs and devices to prevent dangerous conditions, and there registered experimental treatments, but all other things being equal, I'd prefer to know that some basic level of testing was done.

    Drug IP process. People in other countries like to point out that they can purchase drugs for $20 that are charged higher processes here. You can thank us (the American Consumer) for that. Not everyone gets to be a marginal consumer.. and part of the reason we're paying full price for drugs is so that the market incentive allows those drugs to be developed in the first place. Without market incentive, you're only going to proceed in research as fast as centrally-planned authorities dictate you will. Or you're a charity, funded by donations.

    None of those things directly deal with device IP, but to be honest cases like this (where someone is being an abject douchebag) are rare, and tend to get discovered, highlighted, and corrected through social pressure. (EMT's have been talking about the cost of EpiPens for years, and there were already initiatives under way to allow EMT's to inject Epi directly: http://thesouthern.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/new-state-law-will-allow-emts-to-inject-epinephrine/article_42dbddd9-a035-509b-b99a-7f720c7411b0.html [thesouthern.com]

    The measure, sponsored by state Sen. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, and signed into law by Gov. Bruce Rauner late last week, comes as the maker of the EpiPen is facing increased scrutiny from the federal government over dramatic price increases for the lifesaving drug. The cost of a two-dose package of EpiPens, made by pharmaceutical company Mylan, jumped from less than $100 nine years ago to more than $600 in May, The Associated Press reported Wednesday.

    While the timing is a coincidence, Rose said recent attention from Congress has attracted the public eye to an issue that was first brought to him by a rural fire protection district he represents.

    If there's a justifiable reason for a price hike, it'll become public as well. Often there is. E.g., a critical component has restricted availability.

    • Are you actually suggesting that Canada doesn't monitor and approve their drugs? How about England? Americans should be able to buy legal drugs over the internet from any country with an equivalent drug control system.
    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Canada isn't some third world mud hole. They have a regulatory process as well. I have every confidence in the drugs sold there. Same for the EU.

      The FDA has gone well past the sweet spot and is now killing people rather than saving them. Their desire to have their asses kissed has gotten to the point that they are 're-evaluating' drugs with centuries of proven safety just because they pre-dated their authority. The result is that the prices jump by a factor of 100.(Yes, literally the price is now 100 TIMES

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @07:29PM (#52782987)

      Random Joe Bob's Discount Drug Shack operating in Singapore? Good luck.

      Random Joe would be bound by the inspection rules of the Singapore Health Sciences Authority (HSA) which serve a similar purpose as the FDA as well as be registered with the Singapore Pharmacy Council (SPC). Now if these sound like shady organisations it's because the FDA has a formed a joined working group with the HSA to ensure that all drugs available in Singapore and the USA meet the requirements of both countries as required by the trade agreement that is in place. i.e. Your government's agency charged with protecting you think that their government's agency charged with protecting them are equally capable and do the same job.

      I'm glad you chose Singapore. It shows both your prejudices against the east as well as your complete ignorance of the pharmaceutical industry outside of the USA where, not only are the drugs of comparable quality but people are less likely to die as they can afford them too.

  • A 1 ml ampule of epinephrine costs about $5. An insulin syringe about 25 cents. That is enough for three normal epi-pen doses - more than enough for any emergency. Sensitive hikers carry this. Folks working around bees and wasps too. If your doctor won't prescribe it, find a doctor who will. Of course you will have to learn to break the top off the ampule and fill the syringe up, getting rid of little bubbles. The rest is the the same. The only reason epi-pens are an issue is because many, perhaps mos
  • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Saturday August 27, 2016 @05:27PM (#52782521)

    >"the U.S. "is the only developed nation on Earth which allows pharmaceutical companies to set their own prices."

    There is nothing inherently wrong with a free market..... as long as the market really is free and isn't being controlled by unregulated monopolies. That is what we are seeing happen with things like the Epi-Pen. And in cases where patents are creating artificial monopolies, we have to examine if there should be regulation (as we rightfully regulate all other monopolies).

    As for the backlog at the FDA for generics- that is just inexcusable.

    Oh, and yes, I am one of the people that must have an Epi-Pen or risk losing my life if I accidentally eat a nut (which happened once and nearly did so). So yes, I have a horse in this race...

  • The cost to the NHS is ~£26 each. You can buy them from registered UK online pharmacies for ~£45 each. Given that the £ has devalued rather more than somewhat against the US $, this may give you some sense of scale as to just much of a ripoff the price of $300 each is. It also makes rather a nonsense of the 8% profit margin mentioned in the article although - to be fair - it isn't made clear as to whether this is the overall margin for the company or the pens.
    • by nnull ( 1148259 )
      8% margin, I'd rather shut down my business. Enjoy having nothing!
      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        There is a government supplier of Epipens. The tech was originally developed for the military. So they have their own license. Epipens made for the Army are $50.

        The private market supplier isn't just making a slight bit more profit. They're making 10x for a product that has been around for about 20 years already (if not longer).

        This is more like aspirin than Gleevec.

    • by gb7djk ( 857694 ) *
      You may find this manufacturer's comparison page [emerade-bausch.co.uk] useful.
  • How about taking care of Mylan first instead of letting them off the hook?

  • There are other epinephrine auto-injectors on the market in the US, cleared by the FDA. A simple Google search will show Adrenaclick at the top of page 1 (FDA cleared, available, and cheaper than EpiPen). It's not hard to find.

    The problem here is that people want an "EpiPen", which is a BRAND, not a drug. These guys do not have a monopoly on epinephrine auto-injectors (the thing people need), they have a trademark on "EpiPen" (their product name), which is totally reasonable.

    This is not an FDA issue, a g

  • "is the only developed nation on Earth which allows pharmaceutical companies to set their own prices."

    this statement is simply not true. Even in Australia they set their own prices and drugs not listed as being subsidised by government can truly have insane prices. The only thing we have is the government rejects drugs for the program subsidies if the pharma companies aren't reasonable in price. Being a government subsidised drug is far more beneficial than a limited market at high prices in most circumstances.

  • It seems Big Pharm companies are taking turns on who is going to be in the spotlight this week for their unregulated ability to gouge the shit out of folks who need the medications just to survive.

    What needs to happen is the whole fucking industry needs to be regulated with price caps on everything they sell. If they give any shit about it, simply open up the overseas markets and tell Big Pharm to go screw themselves.

    I know someone who was just informed their cancer treatment is going to cost $240,000. T

  • What is not fine is to give a very long monopoly to only one company to make them... without competition the price will not naturally fall.

    You have to allow some time let companies have some profits on research, but how long has the Epi-Pen been around? Long enough there should be more than one company making hem now.

Decaffeinated coffee? Just Say No.

Working...