Desperate Drug Companies Raising Prices On Drugs Still Under Patent
from the squeezing-every-last-cent dept
In recent weeks, we've discussed how drug companies are freaking out because they can't find anything new to patent, and their popular drugs are about to go off patent. Of course, as we've seen, having a monopoly lets them charge ridiculously high prices, and so the various drug companies (at least those who can't get the FDA to just hand them a new monopoly) are apparently dealing with the first issue by embracing the second one: they're ramping up prices on pretty much anything they still have under patent, with the largest increases being for those drugs that are closest to going off-patent.Talk about a short-term strategy. Historically, it's been shown that when brand name drugs go off patent, they still command a significant premium in price over generic competitors. Yet, if the drug companies keep raising the prices higher and higher, it'll simply drive more people to seek out cheaper alternatives. If the drug companies actually priced the drugs reasonably, and recognized that they already had a strong branding lead (often on the backs of huge marketing campaigns), they'd realize they could keep a decent share of the market, even with somewhat higher prices. But simply trying to squeeze every last penny out of people while the drugs are still under patent seems like a strategy to completely give up once the drugs go off patent.
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Filed Under: patents, pharmaceuticals, prices
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Problem here, i guess, is that they have a captive audience. Some drugs can only be gotten from one place and the competition [other drugs] doesn't do everything that is needed.
hmmm... kind of proves the long running commentary of monopolies of any kind are bad, no?
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Build a business model on artificial scarcity...
Big Pharma, meet Hollywood and the Recording Industry.
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I think the best solution is to regulate them.
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Now it's all about shipping R&D overseas. We'll see how that works. Heck of a lot cheaper, but who cares if they don't deliver results?
Ahh well, I'm sure they will get bailed out in one form or another. Probably with an extension of patents gifted by the govn't.
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Actually, that is exactly what happened. The incentives for executives in the big drug companies is to maximize near-term profits. To further that end, the big pharma companies slashed research funds and put the money into marketing. Consequently they have their gravy-train drugs approaching the departure stations and they don't have new trains ready to take them beyond.
Smaller companies are developing new drugs, and one article I read a while back said that the major companies had been hoping that they could buy up drugs or research from some of the smaller companies, push them through the approval process and then apply their marketing expertise. I suppose this could still happen. Perhaps they are ramping up the prices of existing drugs to fund the purchase of some of the smaller companies.
One other thing is that we assume that the best way to improve health care is to develop new drugs. The drug companies have certainly perpetuated that line of thinking. However, some people in the medical community thing this is the wrong approach to improving long-term health care. New drugs can be useful, but perhaps we are putting too much emphasis on their importance.
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the government that governs best, is the government that shuts itself down cuz they can't pass a budget.
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http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20090807/0312375803.shtml
http://www.techdirt.com/ articles/20100412/0118378969.shtml
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20100407/1902268925.shtml
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The resources for drugs really isn't in the US (manpower) since the sciences aren't quite as simple to get into.
Then you have a lot of people with business degrees, running pharmaceuticals as a Wall Street business not necessarily a service.
I believe there's a lot more problems that need to be aired out before we say it's just Big Pharma's fault (it is, but there are other mitigating factors)
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of course they do it
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One aspect of the article here is the mention that as prices go up consumers seek alternatives that cost less. Does this mean that perhaps these alternatives have been available all along, and that branded drugs are in fact in actual competition will all other drugs having substantially similar pharmacological/physiological efficacy? This would suggest that even "monopolies" are not freee to operate outside of normal competitive forces.
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this explains nearly every corporation that has been shooting itself in the foot left right and center in the last 10-15 years. The 'NOW NOW NOW' business method is only to be used when you have no other choice but the pressure to create short term profits are causing a lot of decisions to be made that are really bad for long term longevity.
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Big Pharma used to do manufacturing really well, out of necessity because the FDA regulated them. Now that's been proven to be a joke, so there's no appreciable benefit to buying Advil over ibuprofen any longer. In fact, if you watch this stuff closely, you'll be smart to buy anything Teva manufacturers, since they seem to be the only outfit that knows how to produce a quality product at the lowest possible cost.
-C
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big pharma cries big, fat, alligator tears...
1. big pharma spends FAR MORE on 'marketing' (read: lies, propaganda, and bribes) than they do on real R&D... (*AND* a LOT of 'R&D' money is marketing bullshit: 'research' on color and shape of the pills, etc...)
2. NOT to mention, a LOT of the real research and clinical trials are done by 'our' public universities and med schools, which use labs, facilities, grad students, profs, etc that WE pay for/subsidize... *then*, big pharma funds a portion of 'their study', which they maintain complete control over, and deep six anything which doesn't agree with their claims... (as well as enforcing gag orders on all participating researchers...)
3. i could go on, but i'm typing with one wing in a sling, and its taking me ten minutes to type what would take less than a minute...
art guerrilla
aka ann archy
eof
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But if there were "normal competitive forces" in play we would not see "prices go up consumers seek alternatives that cost less." Your arguments seem to contradict each other and do suggest that at least in the company's own mindset they are working in a monopoly environment.
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Brand Name Edge?!?!?
The Parmacy Requirement is simply that if a Generic is available it must be used to fill the prescription. So by the very nature of the Patents expiring they are essentially dead in the water because of these requirements.
So "Big Pharma" companies have a finite life to their products essentially, that life expires as soon as a generic is made available.
Maybe you would like your paycheck based on something like this too little mikee?
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See a problem with that?
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We need expensive drugs!
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Even when generics having substantially similar pharmacological/physiological effect are available, it is not at all unusual for them to be dismissed in favor of the branded drug.
Experience informs me that in the majority of cases a generic is perfectly acceptable. Unfortunately, generics are oftentimes overlooked because a strong trademark associated with a drug still under patent co-opts a generic lacking same.
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IBM's MRSA-Fighting Nanotechnology Caps Century of Healthcare Innovation
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There are times when it seems that looking at pens in an office gives more information than can be found in the PDR.
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Drug companies are not interested in saving lives, or improving health
Cancer cures? Not going to happen, not ever. Not in my lifetime, and not in my great grandchildren's lifetimes. Not in Methuselah's lifetime. If they ever did come up with a cure, then the moment you're cured, they lose a customer. No, they'd rather come up with a pill that has more side effects than a cyanide, arsenic and plutonium cocktail, but extends your life's misery another couple of months, until you bleed to death out your bunghole from the toxicity, or die of a stroke from the incessant screaming in pain it caused. Means nothing to their executives, believe me. I can speak to this authoritatively, as a result of my personal medical experiences, and the ones I will surely undergo in the future. I know others who have gone before me, and what they went through. I do not look forward to that future.
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Re: Brand Name Edge?!?!?
As for that, there's a ridiculous solution to that last question: innovate.
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Re: Brand Name Edge?!?!?
Again, just ignore the ten-year-old...
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Many of the drug shortages we've seen have been due to production stoppage because of quality control problems in their off-shore plants.
Of course this hasn't bothered them at all because ... quite fortuitously, when there is a problem with production, supply diminishes, and then prices go up.
The drug company is happy so long as they can get the supply restored in a few months, but at a new higher market price point.
--> Poor quality with high prices is a classic characteristics of a market with insufficient competition.
In the face of this however, the FDA is not only standing by, -- as has been discussed her for the past couple of weeks, they are actually pursuing policies that further decrease competition.
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Drug companies have not been able to distribute pens or other gifts with advertising in physician's offices since January 1, 2009. There are a few of these pens still around, but they are dwindling away.
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Some pharmacies will even try to call physician offices and falsely claim that a given patient's insurance company doesn't cover name-brand X so they can redirect the doctor to authorize a similar drug which has a generic version.
This is absolutely true!
I'm not sure where you are writing from -- I assume the US. Your statement is actually no longer true in the US because the Insurance industry is now firmly in the driver's seat on the name-brand versus generic battle. Over the past 3-5 years, insurance companies have been able to redirect physicians and their patients to generics by just resolutely refusing to pay for branded drugs. The Big Pharma firms have no-one to blame but themselves since they have been so busy in futile searches for billion dollar block-busters that many potentially useful, but smaller niche drugs have gone undeveloped. With pipe-lines empty, and no new drugs to offer new and innovative treatment options, Pharma is in no position to ask the insurance industry to pay for branded medication.
The result is that in most regions of the US, generic drugs now constitute the vast majority of all prescriptions.
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