EpiPen example of how drug firms stick it to the public
The soaring cost of EpiPens, used by those allergic to bee
stings, peanuts and some medicines, capsulizes the greed of pharmaceutical
companies capitalizing on the desperation of America’s afflicted.
First synthesized in 1904, epinephrine, aka adrenaline, is now a
dirt cheap generic. If your doctor prescribed it, you could buy a pre-loaded
syringe of epinephrine for under $20.
But the more foolproof delivery device — the pen in EpiPen — was
patented in 1977, meaning that Mylan, the U.S. marketer, and Pfizer, the
manufacturer, have a license to gouge.
EpiPens used to be cheap — just $35.59 wholesale in 1986. Now
it’s $360 to $435 retail. In Canada it’s $94.
The delivery system was developed on the taxpayers’ dime by
military/NASA engineer Sheldon Kaplan (who never got a penny in
royalties) to inject atropine to counter battlefield nerve gas. Minor
modifications suited it to epinephrine.
With little or no research and development costs, EpiPen brought
Mylan $640 million in 2012, The New York
Times reported.
This is the company founded by the late Mike Pushkar, whose name
is on West Virginia University’s football stadium in Morgantown because he
donated $20 million to the athletic department, from money gouged from
desperate patients.
To read In These Times senior editor
Terry Allen’s story, click on http://billmoyers.com/2014/08/05/sticker-shock-how-big-pharma-gauges-the-american-public/
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