The pharmaceutical giants’ tactic of paying other
companies to delay the introduction of
generic drugs into the market costs patients an estimated $3.5 billion a year.
The brand-name drugs rake in much more money when there
are no equivalent generics on the market.
I sometimes get generic equivalents for some of my
prescription drugs through Canada because they have been kept off the market in
the United States. The cost through Canada has been as much as one-fourth the tab
for the same brand-name drug in the
United States.
According to the attached article in the September 2012
issue of the AARP Bulletin, one federal appeals court ruled the pay-to-delay
strategy anti-competitive. Since three other appeals courts have ruled them
legal, the issue probably will wind up in the U.S. Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, you’ll continue to pay more for brand-name
drugs because the pharmacy giants are paying other companies to keep the
generic equivalent off the market.
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