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US Drugmaker Raises Price of Vitamins By More Than 800% (ft.com)

David Crow, reporting for the Financial Times: A US drugmaker is charging almost $300 for a bottle of prescription vitamins that can be bought online for less than $5, in the latest attempt at price gouging in the world's largest healthcare market. Avondale Pharmaceuticals raised the price of Niacor, a prescription-only version of niacin, by 809 per cent last month, taking a bottle of 100 tablets from $32.46 to $295 (Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; alternative source), according to figures seen by the Financial Times. Although niacin, a type of vitamin B3, is available in over-the-counter forms for less than $5 per 100 tablets, some doctors still prefer to use the version approved by the US Food and Drug Administration to treat high cholesterol. Avondale, a secretive Alabama-based company, put the price of Niacor up shortly after acquiring the rights to the medicine in a so-called "buy-and-raise" deal -- a strategy made famous by Martin Shkreli, the disgraced biotech entrepreneur.

275 comments

  1. blame government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Goverment regulations cause this problem. Now that we are getting rid of NObamacare, this problem will go away. GUARANTEED.

    1. Re:blame government by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 5, Informative

      Goverment regulations cause this problem. Now that we are getting rid of NObamacare, this problem will go away. GUARANTEED.

      This new administration could have been an opportunity to bring open-market forces to medicine. But so far, I see no indication of this happening. If anything, the swamp is getting deeper.

    2. Re:blame government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Looks like there is competition at $5 online. So this is a non story.

    3. Re:blame government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      My, my, are you STUPID. The company wouldnt be rising prices if they knew they couldnt get away with it

    4. Re:blame government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The new administration tried to repeal ACA, a first step to "bringing open-market forces to medicine" but failed. They'll keep trying.

    5. Re:blame government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are getting away with it because of the FDA.

    6. Re:blame government by mnemotronic · · Score: 2, Funny

      ... If anything, the swamp is getting deeper.

      The current approach to "draining the swamp" is to hire the alligators or appoint them to cabinet positions.

      --
      The Russians have won. They have made the world a cesspool of distrust, greed, fear and hate.
    7. Re:blame government by hawguy · · Score: 2

      Looks like there is competition at $5 online. So this is a non story.

      Where is this FDB approved Niacin supplement available online?

      Doctors prescribe the prescription version when a person's health is on the line since they can be assured that it contains the labeled amount of Niacin, while OTC products are not well regulated and can contain varying amounts of the vitamins as well as other fillers.

    8. Re: blame government by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      This government dislikes regulation. There are probably a number of reasons why, but they were put in place to prevent corporations screwing over the little guy.

      We are back to allowing the super rich to profit even more and not supporting our fellow man. IMHO you shouldnâ(TM)t run a country as a corporation, but as a family. A profitable government is not one acting in the best interests of it people.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    9. Re:blame government by Joce640k · · Score: 2

      My, my, are you STUPID. The company wouldnt be rising prices if they knew they couldnt get away with it

      Not only that, demand will go up because people will demand the "$300 good stuff" not the "$5 garbage".

      --
      No sig today...
    10. Re:blame government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that we are getting rid of NObamacare, this problem will go away

      Yep. People won't have insurance and won't be able to afford to going to the doctor uninsured. No doctor visit means no prescription. No prescription means nobody buys overpriced pills. Problem solved! Just like that time the cost of gas got a bit high. I just sent my car hurtling over a cliff. Problem solved!

    11. Re:blame government by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      The current approach to "draining the swamp" is to hire the alligators or appoint them to cabinet positions.

      o no, they ARE draining the swamp, it's just they ever specified which swamp and where it was being drained to.

      Turns out it's being drained right into DC.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    12. Re:blame government by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Because there was absolutely no abuse happening before the ACA was introduced, of course. Obama just arbitrarily decided to stake his reputation on regulating an industry that was perfectly functional before he got involved. Makes perfect sense! Just like Net Neutrality where regulations were introduced for the sole purpose of breaking a perfectly functional ISP market!

      I really don't get how people can be that dumb. Politicians don't just pick a perfectly functional market one day and introduce legislation to fuck it up for no reason. They introduce legislation to try and fix a problem they identify. Now you might not agree with their fix, and their fix may not even work, but claiming that there was no problem at all and they were just breaking the market.. out of spite I guess..? takes stupidity to an unusual degree. Or at least it would have been an unusual degree before Trump started using exactly that argument as his rhetoric. Now its just common place stupidity I guess.

    13. Re:blame government by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      They are pumping the swamp. But have you even been in a swamp. You can pump the swamp all day long, but shit flows in as fast as you pump it out. All we are doing is rotating the festering assholes in the swamp.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    14. Re:blame government by show+me+altoids · · Score: 2

      Thanks to wonderful Utah Senator Orrin Hatch(R)

      --
      I feel sorry for people that don't drink, because when they get up in the morning, that's as good as they're gonna feel
    15. Re:blame government by Rhipf · · Score: 1

      Looks like there is competition at $5 online. So this is a non story.

      Where is this FDB approved Niacin supplement available online?

      Doctors prescribe the prescription version when a person's health is on the line since they can be assured that it contains the labeled amount of Niacin, while OTC products are not well regulated and can contain varying amounts of the vitamins as well as other fillers.

      Where is the FDB Niacin supplement available offline? :-P

      It is the FDA that approves these things.

    16. Re: blame government by kenh · · Score: 1

      THe FDA does not set drug prices.

      --
      Ken
    17. Re: blame government by kenh · · Score: 1

      BS.

      Every subsidy Obama had in place when he walked out of office last January remains in-place after the current administration repealed the Individual mandate...

      People that want insurance and can afford it will still get coverage on exchange, and they will still get any subsidies they are entitled to, that hasn't changed. What has changed is that people that don't want coverage don't have to buy it, and people without compliant coverage won't be paying a fine to subsidise the premiums paid by those with compliant coverage.

      Allowing consumers the ability to choose to enroll in coverage or not is how you get to 13 Million that will CHOOSE to forgo coverage.

      If premiums go up it will be because the monies that were collected in fines from the uninsured AND the loss of the premiums from all those healthy, young people that feel they don't need coverage.

      Repealing the individual mandates gives consumers the ability to opt-out and not be forced to subsidize everyone else's premiums.

      --
      Ken
    18. Re: blame government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone else is forced to subsidize care for people who forego insurance, when they have a catastrophic injury or illness and can't afford to pay for their care. Providers write off the cost and make up for it by charging everyone else more. How is that better than forcing young, healthy people to subsidize premiums by either paying the penalty or buying coverage they are unlikely to need?

      Trump expressed admiration for Australia's system. Australia spends less than half what the US does per capita and gets comparable or better health outcomes. Australia's Medicare covers everyone, but everyone still has the option of private insurance, with subsidies helping those with lower income afford private insurance and a surcharge (penalty!) for those with higher income who decline private insurance.

      There is no reason we can't have such a system in the US, but the Republicans are more interested in borrowing another trillion dollars to pay for tax cuts for the wealthy, and increasing the already obscene level of military spending. Their next plan is to cut spending on social programs, which will likely exacerbate the problems of the US health care system.

    19. Re: blame government by kenh · · Score: 1

      the Republicans are more interested in borrowing another trillion dollars to pay for tax cuts for the wealthy

      The previous administration borrowed over $1TN/year in average for each of the previous 8 years and never cut taxes. The current administration signed into law a $1TN increase in the debt over the next TEN YEARS.

      --
      Ken
    20. Re: blame government by kenh · · Score: 1

      The people that pay the fines have their fines going towards subsidizing other people's premiums, and when the uninsured fine payers get sick they rely on charity care (something cut by PPACA, since 'everyone will be insured') OR they pay for their care out of pocket.

      Imagine the healthcare market was like a movie theater, and imagine the theater charged every patron that did not buy food at the concession stand a 'fine' to make popcorn, candy and snacks for more affordable for those that do buy them from the concession stand. That is essentially what the individual mandate was/is.

      --
      Ken
  2. Just put a bullet in that CEO's head as a warning. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After a few dozen fall that way they'll start to catch on.

  3. Collectors prices. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A US drugmaker is charging almost $300 for a bottle of prescription vitamins that can be bought online for less than $5, in the latest attempt at price gouging in the world's largest healthcare market.

    Maybe they're buying them from Amazon and passing the savings on to you?

  4. Merry Grinchmas from Big Pharma!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    There is a special place in hell for people like this. This isn't Capitalism this is unethical behavior, and exploitation pure and simple. EpiPen the sequel anyone?

    Maybe CVS et. al. that brought affordable solutions to consumers could help but this just needs investigation.

    EpiPen from 2016....

    http://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/2016/08/24/epipen-price-gouging-came-as-mylan-pulled-off-tax-inversion.html

    1. Re:Merry Grinchmas from Big Pharma!? by Altrag · · Score: 2

      Capitalism is by nature unethical. Its entire premise is that people are naturally unethical and it relies on competition to drive unethical practices out and leave only the best of the best.

      But in order to do that, capitalist theory relies on:
      a) competition existing.
      b) consumers being informed.

      Neither of those things exist in many markets. In the specific case of patented drugs, the patent explicitly blocks competition so (a) is immediately off the table.

      Luckily, most people are not actually naturally unethical. The reason this kind of thing didn't happen 10 or 20 or 100 years ago is based purely on there not having been a Martin Shkreli with the balls to publicly announce that they were going to let a bunch of people die in order to increase their bottom line a little bit and dare the government to stop them (which would require new legislation since Shkreli and now this asshat are perfectly within their rights, under current US law, to charge whatever the hell they want for their products no matter how immoral it is.)

      Now that Shkreli did what he did and got away with it (remember he was arrested for securities fraud not for letting innocent people suffer and die,) we're likely to see more and more patent owners come out and jack their prices through the roof just because they can. Probably not the big manufacturers (too much risk that the US government would change their mind about imposing pricing caps) but plenty of people like these guys who can get their hands on a patent or two for whatever high-demand drug certainly will.

    2. Re:Merry Grinchmas from Big Pharma!? by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      In the specific case of patented drugs, the patent explicitly blocks competition so (a) is immediately off the table.

      Niacor is nicotinic acid, vitamin B3. I don't know what it costs.

      You can buy the same thing from Amazon for $5.21.

      I would say that the "patent" on Niacin isn't very effective at blocking competition. In fact, I doubt there is a patent. I expect the difference is that Niacor is being sold as a drug and thus has the expense of FDA approval for that use; the stuff sold on Amazon is a "nutritional supplement" and doesn't.

      This kind of thing isn't new or especially earthshaking. I had something that the doc could have prescribed Ibuprofen for, but he told me to just buy OTC and take two. The only difference between the two products was -- one was twice the dose of the other per pill. The prescription version was one pill, the OTC required taking two. The prescription version had a deep-pocket pharma company that lawyers love to sue (e.g. Celebrex) whenever there are side effects, the store brand was forcing consumers to rely on doctor's orders and violate the published dosage limit.

      Before you crucify the maker of Niacor, keep in mind that their market for Niacor is extremely small (why buy Niacor when you can get the same thing for what many people would be paying as a co-pay for the expensive drug?) and their liability is high.

      If this were a case of a single-maker death-preventing drug, yeah. But niacin tablets creating such a furor? Really?

  5. If you want Vitamin B3 by viperidaenz · · Score: 4, Informative

    Eat Vegemite.

    1. Re:If you want Vitamin B3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried that, got hooked.

    2. Re: If you want Vitamin B3 by Type44Q · · Score: 1

      I bet vaginal yeast infections taste better.

    3. Re:If you want Vitamin B3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nooooo!..marmite!

    4. Re: If you want Vitamin B3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely correct.

      Unfortunately your mom wasn't available.

    5. Re:If you want Vitamin B3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not getting enough B3? A little Marmite help!

    6. Re:If you want Vitamin B3 by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Eat Vegemite.

      Uah, I'd rather live with cracked skin, dementia, and diarrhea from the B3 deficiency.

  6. Today's translations: by hwihyw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Although niacin, a type of vitamin B3, is available in over-the-counter forms for less than $5 per 100 tablets, some doctors still prefer to use the [overpriced prescription] version"

    Translation: Doctors get a kickback from prescribing a vitamin. Clueless patients fill the prescription and send it to their insurance. Everybody loses except doctors and drug companies.

    "approved by the US Food and Drug Administration"

    Translation: FDA approved vitamins that other vitamin manufacturers either cant get approval for or have to spend a fortune to get.

    So drug company gets a government monopoly on a vitamin that doctors are all too eager to prescribe to their patients for $300 a pop.

    1. Re:Today's translations: by layabout · · Score: 0, Troll

      Prescription niacin does have a different formulation from over-the-counter niacin and more importantly, you are guaranteed it will have exactly the amount of niacin it says on the label. Unlike OTC vitamins where the ingredients list is more advisory rather than actual. For a multitude of examples of capitalism in action, Google "vitamin fraud"

    2. Re:Today's translations: by hwihyw · · Score: 5, Informative

      And you can google for websites which independently test various vitamin/supplements. (https://labdoor.com/rankings/multivitamins). Reputable companies which provide quality vitamins/supplements are dime a dozen, its not rocket science. Also note that non-prescription vitamins and drugs ("capitalism in action") are dirt cheap, versus FDA approved prescription drugs (government in action) such as Niacor, Epipen, etc are only affordable to lottery winners.

    3. Re:Today's translations: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Monopoly pricing is not capitalism in action. Fraud is not capitalism in action.

      You clearly don't know the meaning of the term or are just trolling.

      Any response will be defecated upon.

    4. Re:Today's translations: by crunchygranola · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Prescription niacin does have a different formulation from over-the-counter niacin and more importantly, you are guaranteed it will have exactly the amount of niacin it says on the label.

      Looking up the composition in manufacturers labelling, that is not true in this case. This is a perfectly ordinary 500 mg of niacin in a perfectly conventional tableting composition (croscarmellose sodium, hydrogenated soybean oil, magnesium stearate, microcrystalline cellulose). There is absolutely nothing special about this.

      And 500 mg of niacin is not some special calibrated dose, nor is the body sensitive to the exact amount of niacin ingested. The dosing for chlolesterol treatment is basically to take it in large excess (1000-3000 mg/day), the body excretes the excess.

      And I googled "vitamin fraud" and found no indication that there were any problems with vitamins from name brand manufacturers (off-brand generics are of course problematic).

      So none of your reasons are applicable in this case. Indeed this looks like an invitation to separate corrupt MDs, profiting from kick-backs, from real doctors who care about their patients. All a real doctor need do is recommend a name-brand niacin tablet as a replacement. Even at the pre-jack-up price of $33 a bottle they should have done that. The special name on the bottle is worth little or nothing/

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    5. Re: Today's translations: by Type44Q · · Score: 0

      Any response will be defecated upon.

      Some will pay extra for that.

    6. Re: Today's translations: by Rockoon · · Score: 0

      Some will pay extra for that.

      The only capitalism in this thread so far.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    7. Re:Today's translations: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prescription niacin does have a different formulation from over-the-counter niacin and more importantly, you are guaranteed it will have exactly the amount of niacin it says on the label. Unlike OTC vitamins where the ingredients list is more advisory rather than actual.

      Hey, if you want me to take a dump in a box and mark it guaranteed, I will. I got spare time. If you're really convinced that OTC vitamins are "ingredients list is more advisory", I'd push the government to enforced FDA rules, enact harsher rules if they're currently not sufficiently, and most important enforce those rules so the notion of "vitamin fraud" isn't a thing. After all, just because some company passes the FDA good samples during testing means absolute shit on the actual production down the line.

      Seriously, the whole point of the FDA is precisely because of what you're talking about. Brushing it all aside with mentions of capitalism (and effectively caveat emptor) is utter bullshit.

    8. Re:Today's translations: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only 'formulation' difference for nicotinic acid (niacin) is the regular, sustained release [SR] formulation, and extended release (ER) formulation

      In very high doses, nicotinic acid might cause hepatotoxicity, which could be fatal

      People taking high doses of niacin to lower their LDL, hence, should take the extended release (ER) version, which rarely causes hepatotoxicity

      More info @ https://livertox.nih.gov/Niacin.htm

      Hope this helps

    9. Re:Today's translations: by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      A redbull has that much and is much cheaper

    10. Re:Today's translations: by interkin3tic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Clueless patients fill the prescription and send it to their insurance.

      Lets not blame the patients. You go to a licensed, extensively trained doctor because medicine and pharmaceuticals are too complex to understand unless you get paid to do it full time. Not knowing that this is a brand name of something you can get dirt cheap is not being "clueless" in any meaningful sense of the word.

      Translation: FDA approved vitamins that other vitamin manufacturers either cant get approval for or have to spend a fortune to get.

      Or maybe there's just no sane manufacturer who sees a point in spending ANY money going through FDA approval when there's absolutely no need FOR the FDA approval on it.

    11. Re:Today's translations: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both monopoly pricing and business fraud are well-documented classic capitalist behaviors. Acquisitive, greedy non-productive $$$_bitches always want more/faster/singular ... and excepting violence crony/monopoly-capitalism is their fav tool. Any other opinion vis' market behavior drools faux and will be defecated upon.

    12. Re:Today's translations: by havana9 · · Score: 1

      How works in Italy, where there is a National Health Service.
      There are four broad categories of prescriptions. Over the counter ones, you could walk in a pharmacy or in a supermarket and buy them. If you want a tax deducion you have to give the Fiscal code to be printed in the invoice.
      Full paid but with required prescription: sold only in pharmacies but you need a prescription from a medical doctor.
      Only in hospital: you have to go in a hospital to get them, and normally a nurse will inject you and watches for adverse reactions, They are free
      Medicine on prescription:they are free but if there are more than one version if you want instead of the lowest cost one the brand one you have a small copay on the difference. On some drugs there is a small copay anyway like 1/ 2 €
      Douctor could prescribe a brand one, but the pharmacy could swap if requested on the generic brand one. Strange vesion are going full price.

    13. Re:Today's translations: by tehcyder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Monopoly pricing is not capitalism in action. Fraud is not capitalism in action.

      You're right, it is unregulated capitalism in action.

      Without laws to discourage and punish it, fraud is just another way of making extra profit. And any business would love to be a monopoly given the chance.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    14. Re:Today's translations: by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      A redbull has that much and is much cheaper

      Unfortunately, it tastes like redbull.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    15. Re:Today's translations: by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Translation: Doctors get a kickback from prescribing a vitamin. Clueless patients fill the prescription and send it to their insurance. Everybody loses except doctors and drug companies.

      This is America. It's more likely that they can't afford vitamins, and need their insurance to pay for it. The Niacin flush will help keep them warm while they break up furniture into firewood.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    16. Re:Today's translations: by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Any response will be defecated upon.

      You might want to rethink that. Unless you really dislike your screen.

    17. Re:Today's translations: by slashrio · · Score: 1

      If it's only the nicotinic acid that can be hepatoxic, then why should people who take niacin take ER?

      --
      "Trump!!", the new Godwin.
    18. Re:Today's translations: by geekmux · · Score: 1

      "Although niacin, a type of vitamin B3, is available in over-the-counter forms for less than $5 per 100 tablets, some doctors still prefer to use the [overpriced prescription] version"

      Translation: Doctors get a kickback from prescribing a vitamin. Clueless patients fill the prescription and send it to their insurance. Everybody loses except doctors and drug companies.

      "approved by the US Food and Drug Administration"

      Translation: FDA approved vitamins that other vitamin manufacturers either cant get approval for or have to spend a fortune to get.

      So drug company gets a government monopoly on a vitamin that doctors are all too eager to prescribe to their patients for $300 a pop.

      If my doctor "prescribes" a compound that is available over the counter as a vitamin, then I'll be damned if I'm going to be stupid enough to spend hundreds on "prescription" strength. It's not like you're going to die if you consume too much niacin (my daily multivitamin has 150% of the recommended daily value).

      This is only a monopoly on those ignorant enough to fall for it.

    19. Re:Today's translations: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My pharmacist routinely gives the OTC version of stuff if a doctor tries that. Perhaps you should get your prescriptions somewhere else.

    20. Re:Today's translations: by Acron · · Score: 1

      Monopolies generally require government regulations to create, i.e. without something compelling people against their will, they will naturally purchase the cheapest effective option ensuring market competition will drive prices down. Without legal forces restricting market access, as a monopoly is attempted with prices increasing, there is a greater return on investing in finding competing solutions ensuring someone with a lot of capital will become interested in doing so.

    21. Re:Today's translations: by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Without FDA approval, a vitamin Manufacturer cannot claim to treat any illness. Because only an FDA approved "drug" can make such claims, by law. This is the same reason Walnuts cannot claim to any specific health benefits, even though there is all sorts of documentation showing benefits exist. They have to claim the nebulous "heart healthy", rather than specified (and proven) benefits.

      There is no sanity in the FDA laws.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    22. Re:Today's translations: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My doctor had me on a different prescription niacin replacement for years. Kept me on it for a few years after it went generic.

      Then, new medical research came out showing that, though it reduced cholesterol, it didn't improve health outcomes. So we dropped it.

      Other generic cholesterol meds and diet were working to keep my cholesterol in check, and dropping the niacin didn't change my numbers.

      I think part of the entire niacin craze was that it was less expensive than the lipitor/crestor/.... brand alternatives, so it was used as the first drug of choice.

      It seems like the manufacturer is trying to pull a final payoff from a treatment that has proven better, non-brand, replacements now.

    23. Re:Today's translations: by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      There is no sanity in the FDA laws.

      Again, it's a reflection of how complex medicine is. Look at anti-vax movements, the public is way too dumb and uninformed to be treated as rational consumers, able to determine which treatments for illnesses are the best one.

      This is not elitism BTW. I include myself in the group of "incompetent to treat self" group, I'm a biologist and know a thing or two about pharmaceuticals and health, but I wouldn't fuck around with picking out my own prescription drugs independent of an MD's recommendation.

      It makes perfect sense that companies shouldn't be able to say "this is for treating X illness" without FDA approval. Sure, this means that prices are going to be higher for drugs, but we also spend less on hospitalizing people for incorrectly treated diseases they too over the counter remedies for.

    24. Re:Today's translations: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you're describing is anarchy, not capitalism. Unless you have an example of a capitalist system in which fraud is NOT illegal.

  7. Sounds like people need to educate themselves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Doctors sell drugs marketed to them by drug companies.

    Take an active role in your health care and question why you can't use a generic (which your insurance will most likely require) before you blindly pay for something.

    1. Re:Sounds like people need to educate themselves by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

      HIgh quality niacin supplements can meet or beat the prescriptions quality wise, flat out.

    2. Re:Sounds like people need to educate themselves by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Take an active role in your health care and question why you can't use a generic ...

      And remember that, for some things, you really shouldn't use the generic - even when the FDA and your insurance company say it's just fine.

      For example: Synthroid. This is a drug where:
        - the activity level is critical - you're replacing (all or part of) an important signal in a broken (or degraded) feedback loop with a constant output
        - but (unlike insulin) the tests are not easy enough to do real-time to recreate the feedback loop - so you take them every few months and adjust accordingly
        - being off too far can cause permanent neurological and other damage
        - the generic formulations are often far off the claimed dose, degrade at a different rate than the brand-name drug, or (in some cases) appear to be counterfeit with no activity whatsoever

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    3. Re:Sounds like people need to educate themselves by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Generics are the exact same as the originals.
      Otherwise they would not get aprovales.

      the generic formulations are often far off the claimed dose
      How should that be possible? Hm? You sell drug A with Xmg amount of chemical Y ... in a lab you can not even figure the difference between the original and the generic, unless one of them adds some trace amounts of marker material.

      How brain washed are you to believe such nonsense?

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    4. Re:Sounds like people need to educate themselves by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Eh? I take levothyroxin - and synthroid is exactly that. I usually get whatever generic the pharmacy I choose to visit has available. Never felt any difference for the past 10 years.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    5. Re:Sounds like people need to educate themselves by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Doctors sell drugs marketed to them by drug companies.

      Take an active role in your health care and question why you can't use a generic (which your insurance will most likely require) before you blindly pay for something.

      This is one of the advantages of the NHS here in the UK. The doctors aren't selling you anything. They will happily tell you to buy a generic over the counter medicine if it's available.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  8. MD here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "some doctors still prefer to use"

    If your doctor does this, just find a new doctor. There is no good reason to put up with this.

    1. Re: MD here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      We have seen doctors pool together to ban the prescription of a drug. If they have good options.

    2. Re: MD here by houghi · · Score: 1

      Living in Belgium. Doctors are requered to subscribe a cheaper alternative if avalable to keep costs down. When i go to the pharmacist and there is a cheaper alternative, they will explain that a generic is available and cheaper.
      Next time I saw my doctor I told him and he excused himself that he wrote down the brand name, not the medicine's name. E.g Aspirin instead of whatever is needed.

      He so once told me that I should not take an alternative. 10 pills fir a 10 day period. After that I got something else.

      Stupid socialism.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    3. Re:MD here by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      "some doctors still prefer to use"

      If your doctor does this, just find a new doctor. There is no good reason to put up with this.

      I see this as more a symptom of the medical system. Where I live doctors prescribe drugs, not brands. The pharmacist will then give you options including generic manufacturers, and marketing of drugs to patients is banned for anything other than basic over the counter medication.

      I've never asked my doctor if ${BRANDNAMEDRUG} is right for me.

    4. Re:MD here by MMC+Monster · · Score: 0

      The elephant in the room is physician continuing education.

      These drug reps go into the physicians' offices and buy them and their staff a lunch and give them a 10 minute talk about all the research about why their drug is the best in class.

      For some physicians, this is almost all the Continuing Medical Education they get. They cram for their recertification exam every 10 years and that's it.

      --
      Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
    5. Re: MD here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm also from Belgium but I don't understand your (idiot) comment?

      The problem seems to be that you have an incompetent doctor, not sure what socialism has to do with it.

    6. Re:MD here by FalcDot · · Score: 1

      I can imagine that there's still quite a few places in the US where the nearest doctor is a few dozen miles away, with the next nearest one double that.

      Not everyone always has a choice of doctors.

    7. Re: MD here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Living in Belgium. Doctors are requered to subscribe a cheaper alternative if avalable to keep costs down. When i go to the pharmacist and there is a cheaper alternative, they will explain that a generic is available and cheaper.
      Next time I saw my doctor I told him and he excused himself that he wrote down the brand name, not the medicine's name. E.g Aspirin instead of whatever is needed.

      He so once told me that I should not take an alternative. 10 pills fir a 10 day period. After that I got something else.

      Stupid socialism.

      In the US. For a problem I have, there's one effective drug to treat it.

      Almost every time I switch insurance companies, they deny covering the prescription. Then the doctor has to call them and convince them that yes, this drug he prescribed is needed for my health. This usually results in about a week of delay.

      Capitalism at it's finest.

    8. Re:MD here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never asked my doctor if ${BRANDNAMEDRUG} is right for me.

      I did for my statin. Lipitor vs. the generic. My doctor said they are nearly identical. Only in the rare case if the generic doesn't work would he consider the brand name. At $5/month without insurance, it's affordable. Brandname lipitor is 200x the cost.

      Bizarrely with my ACA insurance (and there's only one plan where I live), my generic will cost me $30/month starting in Jan. Obamacare, the insurance that keeps on raping.

  9. Re:Just put a bullet in that CEO's head as a warni by Dutchmaan · · Score: 0

    I think you are giving CEO's too much credit on that score to be honest. CEO's don't normally "catch on" to anything.

  10. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Congratulations. In just a few words, you managed to betray a staggering amount of ignorance with regards to;

    1. vitamins or their "development"
    2. socialism
    3. life expectancy in "socialist" countries (hint: it's higher and increasing) such as Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia, compared to USA (hint: it's lower and decreasing).
    4. health care costs in "socialist" countries such as Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia, compared to USA.

    I suppose we can only blame the - equally - sorry state of education in the USA.

  11. Statins by manu0601 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Artificially expensive niacin is still better than statins, another cholesterol-lowering drug that is expensive and toxic for muscles (yes, heart included, that is the funny point)

    1. Re: Statins by sethmeisterg · · Score: 1

      Citation please.

    2. Re: Statins by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1
      --
      #DeleteFacebook
    3. Re: Statins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not exactly a peer-reviewed article, but here's one

    4. Re: Statins by manu0601 · · Score: 2

      Citation please.

      Can't you follow a link? The wikipedia page has a whole section on side effects on muscles.

    5. Re:Statins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Expensive if you go with the brand name. My generic statin cost me $5/month without insurance and has been very effective.
      As far as muscle issues, that is a side effect for some.

    6. Re:Statins by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      It isn't clear to me that it doesn't work on the brain, indirectly, too. Yesterday I read that Canola (rape seed) oil as sold in the US apparently caused cognitive decline and weight gain in mice. Since consumption of canola is supposed to lower cholesterol, I wondered if the alzhiemers that this contributed to in mice might be related to the decline in cholesterol in blood going to the brain. Sometimes I wonder if the way to stop plaque buildup on arteries is NOT to lower cholesterol, but inflammation. And of course, use exercise to help eliminate excess blood cholesterol. But nobody wants a straightforward way to stay healthy, no no.

    7. Re:Statins by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      Agreed.

      Statins are the worst thing I ever did to my body.

      I lost most of my muscle mass in three weeks. I went from having an ass like a pack mule to having difficulty keeping my pants up. I feel on my butt trying to move a 55" LCD TV I could have man-handled one handed just a few weeks prior and started losing my vision because my eye muscles were too weak to focus.

      Why was I on statins? The onset of Type II diabetes. What does your body need to burn off glucose and fight Type II diabetes? THE MUSCLE THE STUPID FUCKING STATINS GOT RID OF. I told my doctor fuck you I'm not taking those anymore and started taking Niacin instead. Apparently Niacin can raise glucose levels while doing the other good they do. It's a wash, I'm better off taking the niacin and it's easier to get healthy when I'm not taking drugs that deplete muscle.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    8. Re:Statins by manu0601 · · Score: 1

      Cholesterol is essential to animal life.You cannot live without it.

      High cholesterol means something is wrong. But is is just a consequence, like fever means you have an infection.

      Taking a drug to lower cholesterol is like taking drug to suppress fever. It does not fix the root cause, and in the case of cholesterol, it may have side effects, since the body did not produce it for nothing.

    9. Re:Statins by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      which I think agrees with my point; perhaps the need here is lifestyle modification, most significantly, more exercise. Of course, some folks can have genetically high cholesterol. But does that cause damage? Or is there something wrong? Not sure.

    10. Re:Statins by manu0601 · · Score: 1

      Of course, some folks can have genetically high cholesterol. But does that cause damage?

      There are genetically caused conditions where one gets over 10 g/L of cholesterol, and it causes damage. But here we talk about levels 10 times higher than average.

    11. Re:Statins by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      I can see in those cases where drugs might be absolutely necessary.

    12. Re:Statins by manu0601 · · Score: 1

      Sure, but these are rare cases, and I do not know if statins are the right treatment there or not.

  12. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 5, Interesting

    These idiot pharmaceutical companies are just going to bring massive government regulation down on their heads by pulling this shit for short-term gains.

    How about this? Give the FDA the power to investigate cases of rampant profiteering due to any medical-related patents. If a company is found guilty of profiteering, all patents related to the case are invalidated. Patents are a grant by the government (and the people it represents) to protect original research, which we want to encourage. But when companies abuse that private-public contract, they should be punished accordingly by the loss of those patents.

    --
    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  13. Buying spree? by MiniMike · · Score: 0

    taking a bottle of 100 tablets from $32.46 to $295 (Editor's note: the link may be paywalled;

    Oh no! That jerk bought ft.com too!

  14. How about... eat healthy by guruevi · · Score: 2

    There are plenty of foods that can give you the necessary vitamins. Eat some veggies and a reasonable amount of real beef/chicken or other fatty foods and balance it out in your diet with good amounts of other vegetables and fruits so it will be taken up by your body. Drink some wine and beer while you're at it too, within reason, you can get all this food and more within 15 minutes for a family of 4 with less what you'll spend for a single person at McDonalds.

    Taking vitamin supplements is generally a waste since you're taking in more than your body needs, so most of it is simply excreted and your body needs other chemicals to even absorb them properly.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    1. Re:How about... eat healthy by crunchygranola · · Score: 2

      What you say is true, in general. But the anti-cholesterol effect of high dose niacin treatment is independent from its use as a vitamin. It is a vitamin that acts as a (safe, OTC) cholesterol treatment drug in high doses.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    2. Re:How about... eat healthy by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 0

      Vitamins have no effect on cholesterol at all.
      How do you come to that idiotic idea?

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    3. Re:How about... eat healthy by bingoUV · · Score: 2

      Awesome. Why don't you publish a refutation of https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... and many of its citations ?

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    4. Re:How about... eat healthy by slashrio · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately that's not true (anymore).
      Already in the 60's a report mentioned that the way agriculture is practised will result (and has resulted) in depletion of the soils and that as a result the level of nutrients would be (has been now) reduced considerably.
      Standard supplementation seems a good plan to me.

      --
      "Trump!!", the new Godwin.
    5. Re:How about... eat healthy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would anyone want an anti-cholesterol effect? Low cholesterol increase the risk of heart attack a bit. Better be safe.

  15. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Dorianny · · Score: 4, Informative

    Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. In a socialist system this vitamin wouldn't even be available because it never would have been developed in the first place.

    Tell that to the Colleges and Universities that actually perform most biotech research, largely backed by taxpayer funds. Socialize costs and privatize profits now that's good old American capitalist ingenuity for you

  16. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Holy shit! Godwin's law AND Poe's law rolled into one comment!

    You win my Internet today!

  17. Re:Just put a bullet in that CEO's head as a warni by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    CEO's are psychopaths. They don't "catch on" anymore than mafia bosses or drug lords catch on.

    Why are CEO's psychopaths ? Because we want them that way. Shareholders want the best return on their investments, and manipulative, cut-throat, ruthless, heartless, soulless psychopaths are always more efficient than any other person who would take moral and ethical matters into consideration. So eventually, psychopath always end-up being the ones to keep their job.

    That's an unavoidable side effect of corporatism.

  18. Re:Just put a bullet in that CEO's head as a warni by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A proletarian uprising will never happen in America. Partisanship and identity politics ensure that we'll all be far too busy fighting each other to focus our anger where it really belongs. Until BLM and the KKK can fight alongside each other against a common enemy, we're doomed to corporatocracy.

    Plus, anything that disrupts the release schedule for the new iphone would never gain any serious popular support.

  19. Why did they even bother? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Couldn't they just add "Blockchain" to their name to reap crazy money?

  20. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "How about this? Give the FDA the power to investigate cases of rampant profiteering due to any medical-related patents"

    This won't happen with Trump & the GOP in charge. By the time they're done with it, it'll be gutted & kneecapped.

  21. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Dorianny · · Score: 5, Informative

    These idiot pharmaceutical companies are just going to bring massive government regulation down on their heads by pulling this shit for short-term gains .

    These "idiots" specifically target Medicare which is forbidden by law from doing cost/benefit analysis or from negotiating costs, which means that while every private insurance provider will negotiate low costs or threaten to drop them from the covered list, Medicare has no choice but to pay whatever the asking price is.

    This of course is by design, Big Pharma spends a lot of money on lobbyists and campaign contributions to keep the gravy train rolling

  22. Dream on by aepervius · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ever heard of Bayer ? Or Merck (I am speaking of the german one, not the US one It was a german company before the nationalization of 1915) one of the biggest pharmaceutical company ? And yes it does research all over the world, include Darmstadt near where I live. Whoever modded you insightful has no fucking clue and just acted out of the stupid US ideology that the word socialism is bad and an insult, when in reality the US practice some form of socialism, they jsut don't recognize it.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:Dream on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Ever heard of Bayer ? Or Merck (I am speaking of the german one, not the US one It was a german company before the nationalization of 1915) one of the biggest pharmaceutical company ? And yes it does research all over the world, include Darmstadt near where I live. Whoever modded you insightful has no fucking clue and just acted out of the stupid US ideology that the word socialism is bad and an insult, when in reality the US practice some form of socialism, they jsut don't recognize it.

      Yes, the US is full of morons. (That also explains Trump's election.)

    2. Re:Dream on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      To be fair, Americans tend to mean communism when they say socialism, not social democracy (e.g. Labour in the UK or the SPD in Germany), which is what Europeans tend to associate with that same word. On the other hand, many Americans (GP included) seem to think there are only two options: corporatocracy under a thin veil of makebelieve capitalism, like in the US, and communism, with no shades of grey and no other possibilities. Probably a symptom of living in a two-party system where everything is dumbed down to two possiblities.

    3. Re:Dream on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget Glaxo Smith Klein (UK)

  23. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The NIH actually did a study on this.

    Objectives. We explored whether the United States, which does not regulate pharmaceutical prices, is responsible for the development of a disproportionate share of the new molecular entities (NMEs; a drug that does not contain an active moiety previously approved by the Food and Drug Administration) produced worldwide.

    Sadly their methodology doesn't follow from their objective:

    Because country-specific comparisons of new drug development without a measure to account for size and wealth are relatively meaningless, we collected data on gross domestic product (GDP) for 2000, midway between the dates drug collection began and ended for the 20 countries that developed at least 1 NME.

    They don't state why they chose GDP, a variable which itself is dependent on drug discovery.

  24. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

    You win my Internet today!

    Woah, wait a second here... Did you get approval from the Elders of the Internet?

    --
    #DeleteFacebook
  25. Government-enforced insurance-industry subsidy by enigma32 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yeah, but the government forces us all to subsidize the insurance industry (thanks to the Affordable Care Act), so should we be surprised that this happens? They have deep pockets thanks to all of us.

    1. Re:Government-enforced insurance-industry subsidy by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

      Yep, we can be "legally" forced to pay for the chains. If you let them.

  26. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell that to the Colleges and Universities that actually perform most biotech research, largely backed by taxpayer funds. Socialize costs and privatize profits now that's good old American capitalist ingenuity for you

    And what better pay to push it than to demonize socialism? It's not like Democrats or Republicans are insane enough to stop the R&D money train. They just each want to funnel the after-R&D money train in different ways. Hence the US government is insanely inefficient because Democrats demand various things be done in government (where 90% of the hard stuff is done) but Republicans demand to never let it be 100% (and hence result in doubling the price: half in taxes, half in private spending) because gubment is the devil, or something. Oh, and of course, tax breaks for everyone. Just more of one class or another depending on who you are.

    Seriously, the only reason Republicans would support lowering taxes on the middle class or poor is if they were certain it'd be sucked up right away by private business. That is literally Reaganomics.

    PS - I'm actually for raising taxes. Of course that'd also require nationalizing things like health care which we half-ass in action even though will pay full price. One obvious provision to such a move: no requirement that doctors be given a government mandated wage but including a requirement that all contracts be renegotiable on wage within the year of the takeover date. It's doctor salaries which are across the board the reason for the absurd costs and also part of the reasons why hospitals can't "afford" to pay for residencies.

  27. I did google vitamin fraud and found non relevant by aepervius · · Score: 1

    You better give a link, because googling vitam fraud (at least from my region/user) does not give the results you are speaking of. It does give results about *herbal* supplement being fraud having none of the annoucned ingredient, but nothing about vitamin product, frankly most of which are actually sold for a few euros here around in bottle of 30 or 40 (and the ingredient lsit is not advisory for those AFAIK), and are sold by the mainline producer, and since they are mostly mixing up different (relatively cheap with respect to the quantities) chemicals in different proportion rather than complicated processes, I would wager there is few if any intentional fraud. OTOH this is an interresting read : https://www.alternet.org/perso... (there are more traditional sources if you prefer them).

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  28. This is when lynching is appropriate by Baron_Yam · · Score: 1

    The evil assholes involved in this should be afraid to show themselves in public for fear of immediately being beaten to death by an angry mob.

    1. Re:This is when lynching is appropriate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you think they put so much effort in 'reminding' everyone that "violence is not the answer" (unless you're part of their blue gang), and that any attempt to stop them from raping you up the ass that would actually have any sort of effect (that is to say, doing something that isn't *begging* and making them harder) is illegal?

      The public needs to actually start tearing these monsters and their immediate families apart - physically, individual by individual - in order to get the point across. Only when actual consequences are felt and their efforts actually stopped for once will these bastards maybe slow down a little.

  29. The 2nd Amendment is a wonderful thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Three Bump Stocks for the price of a bottle of Niacin.

  30. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    A beter approach might be yo allow Americans to shop the global market for compounds that meet the standards of European or Asian equivalents of the FDA. This would prevent US suppliers from monopolizing the market.

  31. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I pulled some strings and got the whole Internet on loan for the day. I just had to promise that I would make sure the blinky light keeps blinking.

  32. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Martin Shkreli case is about a 70-80 year old drug that was "re-monopolized" under FDA regulations, raising its price over 10,000x. The basic patents are looooong expired. The FDA is not a solution, it is a huge source of the problems - Uncle Sam the Monopoly Man, ya know!

  33. Haha Your Country Has No Consumer Protections! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    #freedumbs

    More and more like Zuma's South Africa every day.. poor USAmericans..

  34. For Cholesterol of all things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lowering cholesterol is easy, just quit drinking alcohol. Done deal. I had high triglycerides and LDL. Quit drinking alcohol for other health reasons and within 6 months my cholesterol was perfectly normal. Who would-a-thunk it. Oh, and the weight fell off after that. Lost 30lbs without even trying.

  35. What would happen by Blinkin1200 · · Score: 0

    What would happen if a bunch of people posted comments to an FDA web page stating they believed their product was contaminated with a foreign substance?

  36. niacin types and doses by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

    Just so everybody knows the differences. Niacin performance varies with its dissolution and absorption rate.

    "Instant release" can vary by tablet construction and meals. A typical aimpoint is 3000 mg per day in divided doses.

    The longest, slowest, extended release forms can become toxic at high doses and should be removed from the market. It took makers a number of years to optimize the intermediate release forms for cutting cholesterol and minimizing the flush or initial burn in. The supplement Enduracin is, or used to be, considered the premier time release formulation, based on the research of Robert Kowalski. Typically 1500 mg per day, divided into 3 doses.

    1. Re:niacin types and doses by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Sorry,
      there is no vitamin where the body needs 3000mg of intake per day.
      "mg" stands for "milli gram" ... thousands part of a gram.
      3000mg would be 3gram
      That is an insane high amount for a normal mortal.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    2. Re:niacin types and doses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "For high cholesterol: The effects of niacin are dose-dependent. The biggest increases in HDL and decreases in triglycerides occur at 1200-1500 mg/day. Niacin's greatest effects on LDL occur at 2000-3000 mg/day."

      https://medlineplus.gov/drugin...

    3. Re:niacin types and doses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a specific treatment for high cholesterol, it is not to maintain your vitamin level.
      I am not sure how it exactly works, maybe the cholesterol binds to the vitamin B3 and because of oversupply you pee it out.

  37. Exactly? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ... more importantly, you are guaranteed it will have exactly the amount of niacin it says on the label.

    If I have this right:

    Actually, you're guaranteed that the company did tests that show that, if it is not beyond the expiration date and hasn't been improperly stored, the drug will have at least 95% of the activity it claims on the label (for the on-label applications).

    That's a heck of a lot tighter than OTC vitamins (even absent fraud). But let's be careful about saying "exactly".

    (Lots of drugs are still quite potent far beyond their labelled expiration dates, though you don't necessarily know HOW potent. The manufacturing-to-expiration time is often when the company decided the formulation had adequate shelf life and stopped paying for testing, rather than the point where the drug degraded enough that it was close to missing the potency requirements.)

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:Exactly? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 5, Funny

      Most vitamins don'r degrade at all.
      Why would they?
      Relatively constant temperature, dry, no light. How do you guys think stuff can "degrade" in such conditions?

      Kid: "Hey mom! Look at this! This Himalaya salt has a 'best consume before 2022' date! It must be really good!"
      Mom: "yeah, we are so lucky! They dug out this perfect fine salt just last year, after it spent millions of years there! Just before the expiring date!"

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    2. Re:Exactly? by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      dry

      Air has zero moisture content where you live ?

      How do you guys think stuff can "degrade" in such conditions?

      Americans bottle their pills in groups of hundreds. Every time they take one out - multiple come in their hand and they put back the excess in the bottle. Taking the microbial growth on their skin along with them. Along with oxygen - the second strongest elemental oxidising agent. Along with other microbes in the air at that time. Somebody sneezed in the room shortly before this event, so microbes in small balls are descending to the ground at a small terminal velocity, some of which land in the bottle because generally the bottle is held vertically while the cap is off.

      Once the bottle is closed back, all these factors get a lot of time to work on your "vitamins". It is possible the vitamins do not degrade. Some of them, some of the time. But if you are saying it is impossible that the vitamins degrade during typical usage, you would have to provide stronger proof than proof by incredulity.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    3. Re:Exactly? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      No, I'm pretty sure OP was talking about buying a bottle of vitamins and leaving it (unopened) on a shelf for a while. Where I live (UK) you tend to buy things like vitamins in smallish bottles, usually one month's supply at a time. I'm sure you 're right that having a bottle with hundreds of pills and dipping into it over a period of several months will cause issues.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    4. Re:Exactly? by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      OK, none of the posts in the thread make clear the ageing is in unopened bottles vs opened, but humans do make unjustified assumptions sometimes.

      I prefer tablets in bubble packing, but yes bottles are quite common in the UAE.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  38. Nah by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 0

    Sorry, you don't know s--- about vitamins. Specific forms, combinations and doses of vitamins and other nutrients can often do amazing things. Just that they are not extensively tested and documented like drugs on patent. The negavitamin types, often shills cloaked in regulatory or MD/RD authoritarian "science" views, actually seem to be the loudest and most dangerous from where I sit.

    I will stipulate that there are massive propagandists on both sides.

  39. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right, because congress is so totally going to start regulating an industry... These companies know that nothing is going to happen for at least 2 or 3 years at worst.

  40. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this.

    Socialism is not an easy fix for cases like this. Socialism caused this case. Namely, it was caused by socialising the cost of inventions by a) granting a government-created monopoly to the inventors of this vitamin and b) creating a government bureaucracy with the power to test medicine for safety and efficacy,

    In a socialist system this vitamin wouldn't even be available because it never would have been developed in the first place.

    The parts of that claim that are not vague are false.

    ~Loyal

    --
    I aim to misbehave.
  41. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... while every private insurance provider will negotiate low costs or threaten to drop them from the covered list, Medicare has no choice but to pay whatever the asking price is.

    Here's my complaint. After my wife was diagnosed with a brain tumor (GBM) the day before Thanksgiving 2005, she was prescribed Temodar for her chemotherapy treatment. The list price for one month of treatment (literally, one bottle of pills) was $11,000 US. The price using my BC/BS was $1,100 (10% copay) and the price using her Optima HMO was $40 -- and she would have required several months of treatment. If the drug maker can afford to sell drugs at the reduced/negotiated price to those people with insurance, they can afford to sell it at that price to everyone. Anything else is simply greed.

    Susan died seven weeks after diagnosis in Jan 2006, having never finished that first bottle of meds.
    Remember Sue...

    A side note about that particular medication. The label warned to avoid handling the pills and breathing any pill dust as it can cause lung cancer. Really nice stuff...

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  42. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    A better question (which I do not know the answer to) is, does the capitalist US produce more innovation than the socialist EU?

    Between the two, which produces more healthcare breakthroughs that make it to pharmacists/chemists?

  43. There are different kinds of Vitamin B3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    ***BE VERY CAREFUL*** !!!

    There is Niacinamide and then there is Nicotinic Acid

    Nicotinic acid is preferred in the treatment of high cholesterol levels while niacinamide is not preferred in this treatment. This is because since niacinamide is a derivative of niacin, the cholesterol lowering properties in niacinamide are inhibited

    Nicotinic acid is also preferred in treating circulatory problems because of its effects on the blood vessels and the role it plays in lowering high cholesterol levels hence preventing hardening of the arteries

    On the other hand, high Nicotinic acid doses can cause flushing a condition that causes blood vessels to widen

    This makes the capillaries under the skin to expand to allow more blood to flow making the skin to become red and itchy

    Niacinamide does not have the effect of skin flushing and that is why it is preferred over niacin in the treatment of pellagra, a condition that results due to lack of vitamin B3

  44. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These idiot pharmaceutical companies are just going to bring massive government regulation down on their heads by pulling this shit for short-term gains.

    The only reason these pharmaceutical companies can do what they are doing is because of "massive government regulation".

    Big pharmaceutical companies love "massive government regulation".

  45. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    In Asia, I pay 2 cents per pill for an "obsolete drug" that stops some common forms of cancer metastasis but is unadvertised, ignored and/or unavailable in most of the world. This saves me $20-30,000 a month in the US for a biotech drug.

    Is that even legal? Oh, right, no it isn't. Under federal law it is not legal to import prescription drugs into the United States unless you are the manufacturer. This includes drugs manufactured in the United States and shipped to other countries. So, you're already committing a crime.now. If you were in Canada, you'd end up doing the same thing, right? Or put simply, nationalizing medicine has fuck all to do with what you just said.

    Of course you could argue something about what you're taking is not "prescription" drugs because you didn't technically receive a prescription or something. Obviously that's not something the FDA or Canada is going to accept as an excuse. Nor are exceptions like "It is to be used to treat a serious condition and no effective treatment is available in the United States." going to fly because you readily acknowledge there's an effective treatment and you're simply refusing to buy the more expensive option.

    This is precisely, btw, what I'm talking about. We're getting the worst of both worlds: enough of a medical system funded by the government to make amazing new drugs and to have some of the best treatment options but then encoding in laws that prevent you from going a cheaper route because tax payer funded research doesn't translate into tax payer funded treatments. Nor is there a willingness to accept "obsolete drugs" because of malpractice lawsuits.

    If you think the enemy is nationalization, then you're missing the forest for the trees. The enemy is a government that is composed of individuals who will push things like banning medicine regardless. Turn this situation around and make nationalized medicine a thing, and I bet you that it'll be the 1-5 cent pills that will be pushed and the $20,000-$30,000 a month pills that will be effectively banned.

  46. Why? REGULATION vs NONE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the USA vitamins etc are NOT REGULATED. Every attempt to even regulate to the point of just verifying the labels on the bottles ends up in a big political fight over alternative medicine. It's also not helped that those wanting regulations often ALSO want to kill off alternative medicine in various ways at the same time. The two issues are always conflated by BOTH SIDES so nothing is done.

    PBS FRONTLINE just had a show on it in the last week which covered both issues involved. There are huge numbers of products out there which DO NOT MATCH THEIR LABELS and it puts people at serious risk. They had an example of a B vitamin given to infants which was many times more potent than advertised which could harm the infant--- simply because it was mislabeled! Another example had an added toxin in the vitamin because the maker didn't test it's source well enough.

    Doctors who know the situation can't fully trust any vitamin. Even a trusted company can screw up; while a regulated industry costs a bit more they don't screw up much.

  47. Why the left liberals are on fire in US right now by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    Besides Trump shit like this is one of the reasons. Americans are tired. Americans once thought only poor people who made bad choices do not get free healthcare and that due to capitalism the US healthcare is superior to Europe and Canada where they come to the US due the superiority ... which was the view in the 1990s.

    Greed, corruption, automation, and insanity on the right where the GOP is very very far right and crazy has changed things.

    America is historically anti communist due to the end of World War II were Russia was the new Nazi germany as they owned 1/3 of the world! These folks are now old gray hairs and dying out.

    Some voters voted for Trump as a middle finger to all this. They got had and now the left with the introduction of Obamacare have both caused a fire. Something has to change. People are dying. In Alabama British reporters were shocked to see poverty normally seen in third world countries in the good old USA outside of the cities. The young folks screwed over can't buy homes like their parents. Enough is enough. This is just one example and the Tax bill which was a gift to the lobbyists who treated the GOP with dont' bother coming to us for money if you don't rip people off for us just happened.

    It is now time.

  48. Pinworm medicine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Some investment firm did the same thing with pinworm medicine. What used to be two competing prescription medicines at around $15 is now a single option at $400 a pill, minimum two pills. Doctors don't realize the exorbitant cost because it's a new change and because insurance often covers it. Pharmacies don't stock the new medicine because of the exorbitant cost and will only order it if you can prove you're covered by your insurance. Result, a royally screwed up national healthcare market so that a handful of rich greedy assholes can unfairly profiteer off people's health requirements.

  49. Prescription strength. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Itâ(TM)s strange how few people seem to understand that if youâ(TM)re prescribed 100mg of a medication (or vitamin) twice daily, and its price is $10 per tablet, but thereâ(TM)s a non-prescription version is $0.02 ea, and its 25mg ea., you can just buy 4 times as much, over the counter paying in effect 8 cents for a ten dollar tablet, saving $9.92 for each dayâ(TM)s 100mg dose.

    1. Re:Prescription strength. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad that is illegal.

  50. Production costs nothing ... by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

    Considering that production of stuff like that basically costs nothing, $5 for 100 pills is already a rip off.

    What is wrong with just eating healthy? You don't need vitamin supplements.

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    1. Re:Production costs nothing ... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Considering that production of stuff like that basically costs nothing, $5 for 100 pills is already a rip off.

      What is wrong with just eating healthy? You don't need vitamin supplements.

      Reading through this thread it seems to be the case that we are talking about a vitamin being used as a specific drug to treat cholesterol, rather than general vitamin supplements, which are indeed a waste of time and money for almost everyone bar people with specific medical conditions.

      This is a genuinely educational story for once, and makes a change from puff pieces about fucking bitcoins.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    2. Re:Production costs nothing ... by Altrag · · Score: 1

      What is wrong with just eating healthy?

      - A lot of people don't know how to cook a proper meal.
      - A lot of those that do don't have the time.
      - And even then you also need the self-discipline to avoid eating crap -- which is created to intentionally be as flavorful and desirable (and even addictive) as the manufacturers can legally manage.
      - And pretty much anything you don't cook yourself from raw ingredients is going to be unhealthy in one way or another.
      - And depending on your view of things like GMO, getting healthy raw ingredients in the first place might additionally require you to grow your own food, adding more time and knowledge required.

      Its easy to say "its not hard" when you already know how to cook. Its a lot harder to pick it up if you don't. Especially if you're interested in learning to cook more than one or two different things in order to avoid getting bored with them and reverting to the crap food ways of your past.

    3. Re:Production costs nothing ... by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 0

      Everybody can eat an apple a day and on top of that drink some orange juice or a glass of milk.
      Problem solved.
      Read a book about food and stop writing such nonsense.
      What has "cooking your self" to do with earing a salad once a weak or having a small salad before every warm dish?

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    4. Re:Production costs nothing ... by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Everybody can eat an apple a day and on top of that drink some orange juice or a glass of milk.

      Which helps a bit, but in itself is not sufficient to be a "healthy diet."

      earing a salad once a weak or having a small salad before every warm dish

      Where exactly are these salads coming from? Oh right. Someone has to make them. While that's certainly less complex than making a fancy chicken cordon bleu or whatever (so passing my first mark,) it still takes time to purchase, wash and cut all the vegetables. In addition to whatever time spent preparing said warm dish.

      Yes you could claim that people who are that pressed for time need to relax and/or learn some time management skills.. and you'd probably be right.. but that's even more complexity added to the problem.

      If there's a pill that viably compensates for all that shit and takes 2 seconds to pop.. why would anyone go to the trouble of changing their lifestyle as much as you're suggesting -- even if they probably should?

    5. Re:Production costs nothing ... by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Well, because kniwing what you do and why you do it adds quallity to your life.
      If you prefer a pill over a salad, that is your problem.
      Hiwever I lost track how/why we ended here :)
      I simply have no respect for people who eat junk and self defend it with absurd reasons.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  51. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You are an idiot.

    In European countries etc. you are supposed to get drugs by a prescription. Not by "buying them cheap" in a drug store.

    Of course they are available ... but not for "sale" to medicate a kid with out professional supervision, moron.

    In Asia, I pay 2 cents per pill for an "obsolete drug" that stops some common forms of cancer metastasis but is unadvertised
    Care to name that drug, so the rest of the world can survive cancer metastasises, too?

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  52. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1, Informative

    First of all in socialism governments have no monopoly on invention, you are an idiot.
    Secondly, vitamins are not invented. They simply exist. Fruits contain them, the skin produces them, meat contains them etc. Idiot.

    You seem to think vitamins only exist in forms of pills and people need to eat them to be "more healthy" ... you are mistaken.

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  53. Meanwhile in Finland... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pharmacies are required by the law to offer a substitute for a prescribed medicine with a generally available interchangeable alternative, which would be the case for typical painkillers and I guess for vitamins as well. Works very well. Generic substitution

  54. Time for anti-gouging laws by Eravnrekaree · · Score: 1

    markets can work beautifully in many cases since it allows consumers to decide how the money is spent and can allow choices and competition.

    But, its time for some anti-gouging laws because this is getting outrageous. Don't confuse the issue of consumer driven choices on what they want to buy and the idea that we need some regulations here to stop the consumer from being abused by these kinds of tactics. An anti gouging law of course doesnt mandate the consumer what kind of vitamin to buy but would stop them from being gouged, so its not really a rabid anti-market thing.

    Its not just this vitamin but other drugs are being hiked in this manner.

    I also know that research on drugs does take place in a taxpayer funded manner. This is not a rebuke of markets since private investment can also fund many important drugs as well. Each comes with pros and cons so its a good idea to have both modes of research funding. Sometimes bureaucracies in government can hamper research and sometimes the risk averse nature of markets can so its good to be able to have one to balance the other, regarding things that are so critical in curing diseases.

    1. Re:Time for anti-gouging laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just take a look at the message above yours "Meanwhile in Finland...".
      Would that not be the best possible law, since you americans are so againts the man?
      Choice that the doctor has to give you, you can pay that 800% price if you want, but atleast if there's a choice, you get to know about the choice.
      Although it does not take care of any situation where the big pharma has patents and shit and is the only manufacturer, but that's the american way.

    2. Re:Time for anti-gouging laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not with the current congress. Vote for a #BLUEMIDTERM if you want consumer protection legislation.

      Letting big corporations fuck over the little guys is basically the Republican/Tea party platform.

    3. Re:Time for anti-gouging laws by Altrag · · Score: 1

      This is a patented drug. There is, by definition, no market or competition. Just a government-granted monopoly.

      In this case it sounds like there's an (unpatented) over-the-counter alternative that's not exactly the same drug but close enough for most people. So that's good I guess. Makes the story a little bit more palatable than the Martin Shkreli one from a couple years ago.

  55. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 0

    Sorry for your loss.
    However your math is afoul.
    The price is not cheaper because of insurance.
    The rest of the price is payed by the insurance
    The price is the exact same. And the company earns the exact same.

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  56. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you may want to google how much money is spent on biotech research by companies. This is a nice myth you're propagating, but it's just a myth. Colleges and Universities are where amateur scientists learn to become professionals (hopefully). Paper publishing and that entire citation game is just practice for the real world where dollars spent are the ultimate citation.

  57. Re: Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even better question is whether there is more innovation from private sector or public sector. And there the answer would be quite clearly the private one, because even the research at universities is often financed or cofinanced by private sector.

  58. "world's largest healthcare market" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I count "world's largest healthcare market" as being the one with most amount of possible users, that being the people, not by how much money is being circulated atm.

  59. Re:escaping authoritarian medicine by interkin3tic · · Score: 1, Funny

    Free market medical move #1 was ending the ACA (Obamacare) mandate which would financially lock most people into FDA monopoly medicines and often poorly performing maimstream medicine. Many problems can be better addressed by the closer-to-natural-biochemistry of supplements, but first you need a little money leftover to start.

    Niacor is just niacin. There's no patent on Niacin since it's a natural vitamin. You can still buy Niacin without any prescription for cheaper than it was on prescription before the change.

    So... your rant about Obamacare and natural supplements doesn't make any sense but the actual story doesn't make any sense either, so I guess you win?

    I'm guessing it's like if AOL raised it's rates 800 percent. People like you would immediately blame government interference even though that has nothing to do with it and subscribing to AOL is totally pointless anyway.

  60. Ho boy by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Informative

    Doctor's prefer this because you don't always know what you're getting when you buy OTC vitamins. They're largely unregulated. When you buy prescription vitamins you know exactly what you're getting because they're now fully regulated by the FDA. Source: I've had close family members with cancer who've been prescribed vitamins.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  61. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by interkin3tic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It was discovered in 1873 at a public university.

    I'm really flabbergasted at the trolls on this story. I mean for fucks sake, how do you imply capitalism was responsible for vitamins being "developed?"

  62. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

    Give the FDA the power to investigate cases of rampant profiteering due to any medical-related patents.

    Sure, but worth pointing out there's no patent here in this specific case. They bought the brand name and the exclusive rights to sell it as a prescription, not exclusive rights to sell it whatsoever.

  63. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by tbannist · · Score: 4, Informative
    You forgot to quote the results and conclusion:

    Results. The United States accounted for 42% of prescription drug spending and 40% of the total GDP among innovator countries and was responsible for the development of 43.7% of the NMEs. The United Kingdom, Switzerland, and a few other countries innovated proportionally more than their contribution to GDP or prescription drug spending, whereas Japan, South Korea, and a few other countries innovated less.

    Conclusions. Higher prescription drug spending in the United States does not disproportionately privilege domestic innovation, and many countries with drug price regulation were significant contributors to pharmaceutical innovation.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  64. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 0

    First of all in socialism governments have no monopoly on invention

    Socialism, not socialism governments. Socialism happens when governments control the means of production. I've found that on Wikipedia, before, and in more scholarly publications. I'm sure you could find it after a short search if you have more than a very minimum level of competence. Article I section 8 of the US Constitution grants to congress the power of securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries; Congress has chosen to exercise that power through patents, copyrights, trade marks, service marks, and trade secrets. A patent is a monopoly right on the production of a good or service. Thus, monopoly is socialism.

    you are an idiot.

    Stupid is as stupid does.

    Secondly, vitamins are not invented.

    Legally, they are. If they weren't then congress would be violating the constitution when they granted monopolies to vitamin producers. The supreme court has heard cases on this and very similar products, and has been disinclined to rein congress in, therefore, under US law this vitamin is an invention.

    Idiot.

    You repeat yourself.

    You seem to think vitamins only exist in forms of pills and people need to eat them to be "more healthy"

    I can't imagine what I might have said to give you that impression.

    you are mistaken.

    If so then you would be able to show me where.

    ~Loyal

    --
    I aim to misbehave.
  65. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PS - I'm actually for raising taxes.

    The Law

  66. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by tbannist · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As usual, you seem to be talking out of your ass. The Martin Shkreli case is about a 64 year old drug, Dataprim, which has a small pool of users. Shkreli relied mostly on market inefficiency to raise the price. Basically, they bought Dataprim with the intention of raising the price, so they targeted a medically necessary drug that had no currently available alternatives. In their purchase agreement they required the previous owner to shut down 2nd party distribution to make sure no one could undercut their price. They knew since the user pool was so small, there would be limited incentive for other drug manufacturers to invest in producing a generic alternative.

    The only role the FDA played was that they would require that a new dug actually be tested to ensure that it does what it's supposed to do, so they would have increased the cost to produce a new version of the drug by requiring quality control.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  67. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly! I love your HIGH ENERGY comment! Many people are saying exactly the same thign! I too am American and I know that the socialism is super bad.

  68. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... it never would have been developed in the first place.

    Yeah, that's why the first man in space, first woman in space, first interplanetary lander, were all-American success stories. Oh, wait, they weren't.

    ... even be available ...

    Under the US system, an insurance clerk decides what medicine you can have, a doctor charges according to what health insurance you have (pure capitalism; hooray), the government pays exorbitant prices for no-bid pharmaceutical purchases, then enforces monopolies for other pharmaceuticals, those monopoly-protected, sunk-cost pharmaceuticals then get a 800% price increase. Tell me again, how my 75% government-subsidized healthcare is worse than your capitalist utopia.
        .

  69. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Five bucks says his answer involves tiger penises and his metastasized cancer was actually just chickenpox. But as someone who takes upwards of 14 pills a day and now lives in Canada, I can tell you that guy is deliberately full of shit. He's no idiot, he's a shill, and his job is to get those anti-universal-healthcare industry talking-points repeated as often as possible.

    The only medication you can't get in Canada are certain still-experimental treatments that *are* unfortunately a bit longer (easily a year, sometimes two) to clear here than in the US or much of Europe. However once they are, they're covered with everything else. For the rest, you're only going to have a problem if you try to do like in the states and ask for a specific brand you saw on tv: Doctors prescribe things under their generic name, not the name of whatever new packaging Shkreli decided to give it while jacking the price by 27k%, and some people *really* can't get their head around the fact that it's exactly the same pill.

  70. Niacin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It raises HDL, the good cholesterol, but does nothing for heart attacks and slightly increases the risk of strokes... so the only reason to prescribe niacin other than niacin-deficiency is not worth it.

    Niacin deficiency causes dementia, dermatitis (rash), diarrhea, and death.

    Captcha: Bowels.

  71. To good to be true? by TiggertheMad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In Asia, I pay 2 cents per pill for an "obsolete drug" that stops some common forms of cancer metastasis but is unadvertised, ignored and/or unavailable in most of the world. This saves me $20-30,000 a month in the US for a biotech drug.

    Any why is that I wonder? An obsolete miracle drug that stops the spread of common forms of cancer, it is cheap to make, and nobody outside Asia makes it or uses it... Doesn't that sound a little fishy to you? At what point does your bullshit detector go off? Asian 'medicine' is notorious for all sorts of worthless quack treatments and the FDA was created to keep useless, dangerous, and addictive medicine away from people. They aren't perfect, but they do a pretty good job of that.

    If you have a real condition that is treated by this 'medicine', I am happy for you and I wish you a long life. But you should really read what you wrote and think carefully about why the entire rest of the world isn't using this miracle drug.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
    1. Re:To good to be true? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      In Asia, I pay 2 cents per pill for an "obsolete drug" that stops some common forms of cancer metastasis but is unadvertised, ignored and/or unavailable in most of the world. This saves me $20-30,000 a month in the US for a biotech drug. Any why is that I wonder? An obsolete miracle drug that stops the spread of common forms of cancer, it is cheap to make, and nobody outside Asia makes it or uses it... Doesn't that sound a little fishy to you? At what point does your bullshit detector go off? Asian 'medicine' is notorious for all sorts of worthless quack treatments and the FDA was created to keep useless, dangerous, and addictive medicine away from people. They aren't perfect, but they do a pretty good job of that. If you have a real condition that is treated by this 'medicine', I am happy for you and I wish you a long life. But you should really read what you wrote and think carefully about why the entire rest of the world isn't using this miracle drug.

      OP has the same plausibility as those people who say the ZOG NWO bought up the everlasting lightbulb/car that can run on water because they want to keep humanity enslaved.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    2. Re:To good to be true? by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

      Dear Doofs,
      Of course I've gotten US and Asian scripts, for an off-label use for an old, approved drug now on the ReDO list ("Repurposing drugs in oncology"). The Redo list consists of old, generic drugs that have good potential cancer uses (e.g. small studies with good results) but now have no pharma sponsor to get FDA or other nations' approvals. Quality, cheap drugs show what a scam the US drug market is. Ditto the documented off label uses in PubMed.

      If I add 6+ years of high quality life vs everyone else who died out years ago, who is an idiot?
      If I save enough money to build a large house with unwasted cash, who is an idiot?

      Unfortunately for a lot of folks, they go to their graves, bodies and finances broken, thinking they exhausted the reasonable possibilities of staying alive. Unfortunately this is a misperception. Fortunately for me, I can read a few thousand research and clinical papers for myself, I have real commercial research experiences where the ordinary PhDs fail.

    3. Re:To good to be true? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Common forms of cancer" ? No such thing, Bosco. Every cancer reflects a unique spectrum of mutations with only the entire human genome in common. But, suck-in the mustard gas pad're ... gag and choke and vomit ... dripdripdip ... for nitrogen-mustard will shrink swiftly-growing solid tumors. Even yours it will ...

  72. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2

    Ya, I'm aware there's more to the expense than the co-pay - I forgot to include that, and the part paid by insurance obviously varies - but the total price paid is negotiated by the drug maker and insurance company and is less than the raw list price -- though our co-pays are often based on that list price. I was simply using the BS/BS and Optima co-pays as references that probably reflect, to some extent, the total negotiated price paid by the insurer.

    Thanks.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  73. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

    Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. In a socialist system this vitamin wouldn't even be available because it never would have been developed in the first place.

    Because we all know companies would never take billions in state subsidies while morons like you fuck yourselves by believing that free market bullshit. Socialism for the rich, harsh reality for the free market fundies amongst the public.

    Energy subsidies

    https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/survey/so/2015/NEW070215A.htm

    Our brains are much worse at reality and thinking than thought. See the manufacturing consent videos when you get the time.

    Science on reasoning:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PYmi0DLzBdQ

    Protectionism for the rich and big business by state intervention, radical market interference.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WHj2GaPuEhY#t=349

    Wikileaks

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABDiHspTJww&feature=youtu.be

    Manufacturing consent:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KwU56Rv0OXM

    https://vimeo.com/39566117

    US distribution of wealth

    https://imgur.com/a/FShfb

    http://www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html

  74. And this medicine does not even work by GeLeTo · · Score: 2

    "two large randomized controlled trials of niacin, AIM-HIGH and HPS2-THRIVE, have shown that despite its effects on HDL-C, niacin does not decrease the incidence of cardiovascular events and may have significant adverse effects."
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p...

  75. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Thus, monopoly is socialism.

    QED All governments are socialist. SMH

    Someone, mistakenly, told you how bright you are.

  76. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rest of the price is payed by the insurance

    No it isn't. There may be a line-item charge or an invoice stating that, but funds in that amount aren't exchanged. It's all a farce.

    I dare you to pay for such an expense yourself then file a claim with your insurance and see how much they fight you on handing over the cash despite the fact that they would have had no problem doing it with direct billing. Direct billing allows the shell game to take place. The cost is X. The price Y - hundreds or thousands (or more) times X. The negotiated price for insurance companies is much closer to X, though they claim it's just under Y. Follow the money and you'll see that that's complete horse shit.

    captcha: doctors

  77. Make America healthy again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Things like this will make america great again...
    By keeping weak and unhealthy people from coming to america
    Also by forcing unhealthy and weak people to leave

  78. Re: Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by houghi · · Score: 1

    How about this. If you do not like the law, buy your own. --lobying industry

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  79. Re: Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by houghi · · Score: 1

    Name of the drug? I would be happy if he named the country. Israel, Japan and a few countries more are al Asia.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  80. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    These idiot pharmaceutical companies are just going to bring massive government regulation down on their heads by pulling this shit for short-term gains.

    Err this is the USA we're talking about. Trump would likely see this as an example of capitalist excellence and then abolish the FDA while saying it will be better for all Americans to let the market self regulate.

  81. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    which means that while every private insurance provider will negotiate low costs

    This is a fucked system in the first place. You shouldn't have to rely on an insurance to "negotiate" the cost of your life. The only thing an insurance provider should negotiate is with the client how much of a gap needs to be paid.

    Price discrimination for medical services is not legal in most other countries, and outright regulated in many.

  82. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Niacin. It was in the Slashdot story above.

  83. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Vitamins are discovered, not invented. How to _refine_ the vitamins is typically patented.

  84. Consumers can control this... by bradley13 · · Score: 1

    Consumers need to take responsibility for themselves, their health, and their finances. Know what your doctor is doing, know what medicines are being prescribed. it's your health, after all, and ultimately also your wallet.

    Example: I went in to a clinic for an ultrasound of the other day. While I'm sitting there, the doc places his ultrasound gadget on some unrelated body-part. On my bill appears a charge for Fr. 60. I can either blindly accept the bill, or I can apply my brain, go back to the doctor's office and say "not what I ordered, not paying this, take it off the bill". Doctors are service providers just like any other - people need to treat them as such, and not as all-knowing and infallible demigods.

    Same for prescriptions. You get a prescription, tell the doc to explain what it is, what it's for, etc.. Ask if there is an OTC or generic version. If not, ask if there is an equivalent medicine that would be OTC or generic. Also: research it yourself: all this stuff is online. Sometimes you'll even find information that your doctor is unaware of.

    Lastly, in the US where ObamaCare has screwed up the markets beyond recognition, there are an increasing number of places that will take cash. Last time I visited the US, I saw exactly this: while we were there, our son came down with strep throat. Went to a local doc, told him we were paying cash: they were suddenly all smiles, and the prices were very reasonable. They didn't want to deal with the insurance crap any more than we did.

    --
    Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
    1. Re:Consumers can control this... by Altrag · · Score: 2

      This may have been a decent argument in 1760 when nearly the entirety of human knowledge could be summarized in a few dozen volumes and a well-read person could be expected to have a reasonably good grasp of most fields of scientific research of the time.

      In 2017 when English Wikipedia alone has over 5 million articles. If you take that as a roughly equivalent summary as with the above, that would take thousands upon thousands of volumes.

      Basically, there's just no way a person can be expected to know everything about everything anymore. In addition to our lives being generally busier and thus less time to study even the things we care to.

      I mean there's definitely a line to be drawn. If you come in with a sore ankle and the doctor wants to xray your chest, most people should be expected to call bullshit. Asking them if there's an OTC alternative to a medication is probably within a reasonable expectation as well (though generally this would be regarded purely as trying to save money rather than an actual detailed inquiry.) Expecting them to ask the doctor for details on each medication though? Even if the doctor was willing to spend the time explaining everything most people wouldn't understand 3/4 of it anyway.

      We do place a lot of trust in professionals. That's why we have professionals. If we could be expected to know everything ourselves, we wouldn't have much need for many of the specialized fields that exist. I mean why would you need an oncologist when any old fool should be able to spot cancer on their xray and know which chemo drugs they should take to try and fight it?

      Now I know I'm stretching the point quite a bit from "knows enough to ask questions" into the extreme of "knows everything about the field" but the same point stands -- there's just too much shit in the world to know, and not enough time to learn it all. You need to know about your health and your diet and your car and your computer and your politicians and how to inspect a house when you go to buy one or what the contractors are doing if you build it and on and on and on. Certainly each one of those fields is an entire area of study if you want to go in-depth but even just getting a surface level idea of what's going on is a pretty daunting task when you've just gotten home from working a double and want to do nothing more than turn on Netflix and pass out to the Game of Thrones theme song.

    2. Re:Consumers can control this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Consumers can no-more "take care" of their health than physicans can calculate Greens functions and FFTs for 3-dim X-ray studies .

  85. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A better question (which I do not know the answer to) is, does the capitalist US produce more innovation than the socialist EU?

    "Capitalist" US doesn't produce innovation. It is heavily subsidized.

    Socialize costs and privatize profits.

  86. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "socialist" countries [...] such as Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia

    I'm currently living in the United Kingdom. Within five minutes' walk of my home are three places - one pharmacy and two shops - where I can buy vitamins, with no prescription. They're cheap, costing only a few pounds, and if any of them raised their prices, I'd just go to one of their competitors. These vitamins are manufactured by private companies, transported by private companies, and retailed by private companies.

    The situation in Australia, when I lived there, was similar.

    This is a perfect, efficient example of capitalism in action - and you're calling it socialism? The actions in this story are only possible because of government control of vitamin distribution, requiring prescriptions. When it comes to healthcare, the US really does appear to be a socialist hellhole.

  87. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    In European countries etc. you are supposed to get drugs by a prescription. Not by "buying them cheap" in a drug store.

    Depends on what sort of 'drugs' you're talking about. Things like vitamin supplements or paracetamol you just buy in a supermarket her in the UK (or pay ten times as much for branded products in a Health Store if you choose). They have to meet legal standards because of evil government regulations stopping you selling rat poison as aspirin, so yes there is a barrier to entry.

    But things like anti-depressants, yes you need a prescription and quite right too.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  88. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm currently living in the United Kingdom. Within five minutes' walk of my home are three places - one pharmacy and two shops - where I can buy vitamins, with no prescription.

    They also sell prescription strength ones for which you do need a prescription. If you get low on Vit-D it's not all that unusual to get prescribed some.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  89. Okay... by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

    Eat Vegemite.

    Now what do I do about the continuous vomiting?

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    1. Re:Okay... by arth1 · · Score: 1

      Eat Vegemite.

      Now what do I do about the continuous vomiting?

      Some Marmite should take care of that.

  90. Re: Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by llZENll · · Score: 1

    Excellent. Although invalidating the patents is definitely not punishment, itâ(TM)s merely correcting the wrong. Punishment would go further, like fining the corporation 1-10% of annual income, AND fining all employees involved 1-10% of annual salary. Accountability is seriously lacking in business and government.

  91. Expensive niacin - heart problems by NormanHaga2580 · · Score: 0

    It is quite OK that the pharmaceutical is raising the cost of prescription Niacin. I was using high Niacin amounts to control Cholesterol after two heart attacks. A few months ago I went to my cardiologist for a routine check up. The doctor told me that the latest studies indicate that Niacin is useless for cholesterol control. Checking the studies online, the doctor is correct.

    Go ahead and raise prices, the medical professionals now advise against Niacin for cholesterol - even when you are Statin intolerant, as I am.

  92. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Posting anonymously because I have already moderated...
    . ..And in the UK, prescription prices are fixed for the patient at £8 something (around $10-$11, I guess). I wouldn't know, since I'm of an age where I get them for free.

  93. Cholestrol Research is full of deception by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    David Diamond- Demonization and Deception in Cholesterol Research
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yX1vBA9bLNk&feature=youtu.be

  94. Competition in pharmaceuticals? by Picodon · · Score: 2

    It is a story because most doctors in the U.S. prescribe medicines by brand name. If the prescription forbids substitutions (a decision that was possibly made with the assumption that there isn’t much cost difference between generic and branded versions), or if if the brand name manufacturer had introduced any subtle change in the formula or presentation (for example, dosage of 295 mg instead of 300 mg, such that no perfectly identical generic will be found), the pharmacy will deliver the branded version, no questions asked. The patient will pay their ten dollar co-pay and the insurance will be billed the rest. Nobody will notice anything. And the following year, everybody’s health insurance premiums will go up by another insane percentage, as usual.

    There is no real competition in pharmaceuticals because nobody (prescribers, patients, government) cares about the cost of medicines (or treatment, for that matter), except insurance companies (who secretly negotiate what they pay) and, regrettably, patients who are not insured enough to cover the cost of what they need (and those, as we all know too well, have zero influence).

    1. Re:Competition in pharmaceuticals? by torkus · · Score: 1

      To draw a comparison, it's like college.

      Loans upon loans for amounts essentially unfathomable to teenagers pay for college. "Sign here for your loan and everything is paid for" so OF COURSE college students don't really complain about the cost. They never see it until it's too late and, even then, it's just a payment to make because the amount is too large to otherwise really consider.

      You obfuscate the cost and then no one complains about it. They complain about the 'problem with student loans' and 'expensive health insurance' when those are symptoms, not the problem.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
    2. Re:Competition in pharmaceuticals? by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      the pharmacy will deliver the branded version, no questions asked.

      You need to find a better pharmacy. Mine is very good about dealing with generics and getting any prescription that can be filled by a generic changed so it can. It doesn't come up often because my primary care doc is also generic-friendly.

      I have no doubt that if the only difference is your hypothetical 295mg vs. 300mg, my pharmacist would be faxing in a change request to get the generic instead.

      The patient will pay their ten dollar co-pay

      Patients need to stop being passive consumers of their health care and pick up an active role. If their doc prescribes a branded med with a 295mg dose, and the web shows the existence of a 300mg generic, they damn well ought to be on the phone to the doc getting the prescription fixed. It's fun to rant about big bad pharma, but if you do nothing to solve the problem when you can, then you are part of the problem, too.

    3. Re:Competition in pharmaceuticals? by Picodon · · Score: 2

      I have no doubt that if the only difference is your hypothetical 295mg vs. 300mg, my pharmacist would be faxing in a change request to get the generic instead.

      It’s not hypothetical, it actually happened to me. By chance, I had searched the web before going to the pharmacy, only specifying the active ingredient name and not the dosage in the search, which returned results showing generics available for 8 USD. That was dumb luck, but I didn’t know it at the time. Went to the pharmacy expecting to find that generic and was told the full price was over 8 times that and that there was no matching generic, no arguing. I was so stunned, I couldn’t quite understand what was going on. I refused the product at the pharmacy and went home, searched the web again. At the beginning, I could no longer find the cheap generic, then realised that it was because my search was different (I was now including the dosage), finally found again the cheap generic, noticed the difference, did some more searching and ended up reading a couple blogs that explained that the new formula had actually been introduced a year prior, at nearly 20 times the price of the old generic, then had recently gone down 50% in price! I had to drive back to my physician and explain the matter. She looked surprised and, frankly, rather uninterested (possibly thinking that I was a weirdo), but nonetheless agreed to write me a replacement prescription using the previous formula, still available as a generic for less than the amount of a co-pay!

      I haven’t felt much kindness toward the pharmaceutical industry since that day... So, no, it’s no fun to rant about big pharma. They are filthy predators and I’ve seen it with my own eyes.

      Thinking about that story, I still feel like a geek. Do you really expect the average consumer to go through what I went through? To search on the web all variations of a medicine, using the generic ingredient names (when people, including trained physicians, keep saying “Advil” rather than “ibuprofen” and stumble on pronouncing anything less common)?

      Sure, people need to be less passive but, as I wrote, nobody cares about costs in healthcare. Indeed, not only is it a rather touchy subject (“Cheap means it’s not as good, right?”), everything is done (by industry, insurers and providers) to confuse consumers (just have a look at the cheesy variety of presentations and mixes in over-the-counter meds, all at artificially different prices), and everything is done to hide the true cost of healthcare in general (not just pharmaceutical products). Even the cost of surgical procedures can vary by a factor of 3 without correlation to quality of care.

      So, no, bitching that ordinary Joe who’s hurting right now and needs care, is not doing due diligence shopping for a better value... That’s not going to solve the problem. This is a typical case where we need some decent consumer protection and regulation to help fight deceptive and predatory marketing techniques (including better labeling, up-front and public disclosure of treatment costs, etc.).

    4. Re:Competition in pharmaceuticals? by jsailor · · Score: 1

      Well said. It's a system that thrives on ignorance and laziness of the public. The public being consumers, but also the voting public. Ultimately, people need to be responsible for themselves, but US society has reached a point where they don't want that responsibility. Instead, they get subjected to unnecessary tests (because their plan allowed them and the doc wanted a few more $$), don't get the proper tests they need, pay way too much for drugs, as you point out, and don't do any of the things necessary to avoid going to the doctor in the first place. People need to police their medical providers, pharmacy, and elected officials. Most people claim they don't have time, yet it seems the TV, movies, and similar are being consumed in record amounts. As someone pointed out, getting enough information to question a prescription, test, or procedure requires only a few minutes with Google. I'm not advocating self-medical treatment via the Internet, but I am advocating spending 5 minutes to better understand and then question the "experts" that just made decisions about your care. I use a high deductible plan for many reasons, one of which is any doctor worth a damn in NYC will not take insurance. I pay over $800 for a physical rather than a small copay, but it's with pre-tax dollars from an HSA and my doctor gives me a thorough physical and then spends 20-30 minutes talking through everything with me afterwards and conducts a follow-up call on any outstanding issues. Also, he doesn't push me onto whatever drug has been pimped to him by the pharmaceutical companies. That's not a solution for everyone, but it's different than the factory approach and ignorant acceptance of what's handed out by the system.

    5. Re:Competition in pharmaceuticals? by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      You need to find a better pharmacy. Mine is very good about dealing with generics and getting any prescription that can be filled by a generic changed so it can. It doesn't come up often because my primary care doc is also generic-friendly.

      Just for comparison, where I live in Australia, if the doctor has put down the name of a brand rather than a compound or mix of compounds, pharmacists are legally required to ask you if you are okay with a generic if one is available.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  95. Are vitamins even... by MerlTurkin · · Score: 1

    beneficial? Just eat right and you shouldn't need them.

  96. Re: Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not really sure about the government setting prices. Governments usually don't get the lowest prices. They will probably pay 5 dollar for the 5 cent version. Which still is an improvement in this case

  97. Re:Why the left liberals are on fire in US right n by Altrag · · Score: 1

    Whee! Time for some off-topic speculation!
    Some initial disclaimers:
    1) I'm going to assume Trump isn't impeached, imprisoned, has a stroke and dies or just decides its too much work and that he does indeed run again in 2020.
    2) I'm going to assume that there's no amazing superstar Democrat coming out of left field (har har pun) that I've never heard of and therefore of course can't foresee.

    With that out of the way we have on the right well.. Trump. Since we've assumed he's not impeached, we'll also assume that Muller finds nothing and his record is cleared of wrongdoing (or at least its buried deep enough that even a special investigation can't find it.)

    And on the left we have.. who? Bernie Sanders would be the obvious choice based on his current standings in the polls.. but he's too far left for much of the established Democratic party and they're likely to try their best to keep him off the ticket again. But lets assume they fail and he gets on there and we get two old guys with wild hair battling it out. To be honest, I'd probably still give it to Trump. He's enough of a showman that I think he could bluster his way out of 4 years of screwing the people and essentially out-loudmouth Sanders.

    So who else.. there's some talk that Chelsea Clinton might be interested in running. I think she might have a chance if she's very, very careful about stepping out of her parents' shadow while not entirely disowning them. It would be a very fine line to walk but I think its doable if she's got the gumption. I don't really know enough about her to judge whether she's got that gumption or not but even if she does, I don't think its would work in 2020. Maybe by 2028 or even 2032 depending on what happens between now and then. Hillary's downfall is still too fresh in mind.

    So she's out. Bernie's pretty questionable. That leaves.. who? There's just not that many big-name democrats right now and the moderately-known dems like Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer have been getting their names dragged through the mud far too much. They would have to go on a miracle winning streak to gain back enough traction to even have a hope of even getting nominated (and that's already assuming they would want the job and accept the nomination..)

    Trouble is, while everyone makes a stink about Trumps ratings right now, a lot of people don't seem to notice or care about the fact that Democrats aren't really doing much better. There is a large amount of the American public who are just disillusioned with the whole mess and don't really like either party. That's a very different and relatively new concept. We're talking about a large percentage of voters who actively dislike politics rather than just being apathetic about it.

    Going back to my assumptions, #1 is of course pretty tenuous. Between Muller and Trump's age (and not-especially-healthy lifestyle) and the recent speculation that he may just not want to deal with another 4 years, its entirely possibly we won't see him in 2020. Now the GOP isn't nearly as lacking for candidates as the Dems are. Paul Ryan comes to mind immediately -- he's pretty camera-friendly if nothing else and seems to be held in fairly high esteem (at least by those who like tax cuts for the wealthy.) But he doesn't have Trump's showmanship and definitely would not be as strong.

    I could also see Ivanka or maybe even Eric trying their hand at the game (Don Jr's shot himself in the foot too many times.. Eric gets a lot of flak for being less than photogenic but he hasn't actually done anything that would rule him out.. that we know about.. and the few things we have heard about Eric have been grudgingly positive, or at least not explicitly negative. Then again maybe he really is as dense as the liberal media mocks him for being..) But as with Chelsea, I don't see it happening in 2020 for either of them. Would certainly be an interesting time if we get Chelsea vs Ivanka at some point though -- the US would guaranteed have their first female president if tha

  98. Re:Why the left liberals are on fire in US right n by Altrag · · Score: 1

    I should add a third assumption:
    3) We don't have WW3 break out or a Yellowstone eruption or something similarly disastrous that just flat out changes everything and makes all current politics somewhat irrelevant.

  99. kill them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yes, fucking kill these bastards. It's the only way to stop this shit.

  100. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Altrag · · Score: 1

    Damned commies thinking that lives should be worth more than money.

  101. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Altrag · · Score: 1

    The various health organizations around the world explicitly do NOT maintain equivalent standards for (mostly political) reasons. Or in other words, the FDA would explicitly ban that practice because it would potentially allow for the import of unapproved (by them) drugs.

    But even if you ignore that, most of the major drug makers take out patents for their drugs in all major market countries, so they'd just jack the price up to US levels if they saw you were purchasing the drug from a US address -- and then charge you international shipping as well. And if you had them shipped to a cheaper country and brought them back to the US yourself well.. you can already do that (as long as you have a valid prescription for the drug, the border agents aren't going to question whether you brought the bottle with you both ways or just one..)

  102. Amoral not immoral by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Capitalism is by nature unethical.

    Only if you contort and narrow the definition of ethics and capitalism to fit a very contrived view point. Capitalism is neither ethical or unethical. A person can be a capitalist and be very ethical or they can be unethical. Capitalism as a philosophy and an economic system is amoral. (which is different from immoral) It is the society around it and the norms of that society that determine whether an action taken is ethical or not.

    it relies on competition to drive unethical practices out and leave only the best of the best.

    Capitalism has nothing to do with ethical or unethical practices. Never did and never will. That's why we have regulations around capitalism to shape behavior towards ethical practices.

  103. Formulations differ by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Generics are the exact same as the originals.

    That's not true in a lot of cases. The active ingredients are supposed to be the same but the formulation is rarely identical. Different inactive ingredients, different processing techniques, etc. Most of the time these differences are inconsequential but not always.

    1. Re:Formulations differ by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      However for the discussion here it is completely irrelevant.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  104. The Shkreli Maneuver by LaughingRadish · · Score: 2

    Let's call this sort of thing "The Shkreli Maneuver".

  105. Better explanation by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Translation: Doctors get a kickback from prescribing a vitamin. Clueless patients fill the prescription and send it to their insurance. Everybody loses except doctors and drug companies.

    Here is a less cynical and probably more accurate version

    Over The Counter vitamins are an almost completely unregulated market (congress specifically forbade the FDA from regulating vitamins) and it's been demonstrated that major retailers are selling fakes. So if you are a doctor and it's important to ensure a patient get the proper dosage of that vitamin, what other options do you have?

    Translation: FDA approved vitamins that other vitamin manufacturers either cant get approval for or have to spend a fortune to get.

    The FDA is forbidden from regulating vitamins. The only power the FDA has is to limit the sale of a product it finds to be unsafe.

  106. Re:Why the left liberals are on fire in US right n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since we've assumed he's not impeached, we'll also assume that Muller finds nothing and his record is cleared of wrongdoing

    This is already an impossibility, Mueller (I emphasize the spelling since you got it wrong), has already gotten plea deals that make it impossible to clear Trump of wrong-doing, not that there aren't tons of other things that document Trump's misdeeds, but you premise your arguments on the impossible.

    In any case, you're focusing your attention on the White House, but neglecting Congress. Which in the House, is balanced on a major upset in the form of the Supreme Court looking hard at the districting process. Not to mention the rest of the legislature.

    A decision in Gill v. Whitford that leads to a nationwide change BEFORE the next elections in 2018? Unlikely, perhaps, but would turn a lot of tables around. And it will hit before 2020.

  107. Vitamin stability by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Most vitamins don'r degrade at all.

    Care to bet on that? Unless you can store them in a thermally stable environment with no exposure to light, humidity or oxygen there what you just said is demonstrably not true.

    Kid: "Hey mom! Look at this! This Himalaya salt has a 'best consume before 2022' date! It must be really good!"

    Salt is not a vitamin.

    1. Re:Vitamin stability by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      I did nt say salt is a vitamin.
      But I said the same as you: stored in stable environments vitamins don't degrade. Thanks for supporting my stand point.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  108. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    I live in the U.S., I can but vitamins, with no prescription, in every grocery store and most convenience stores in the country. So, you completely misunderstood this.

    That being said, you are correct that this is only possible because of government control...of course, I suspect that the end result of this will be similar to what happened when Martin Shkreli pulled his game. Another company looked at the product and said, "There is not patent on that. We can make that, and make a good profit on it, for less than they were selling it for before this all happened." Martin Shkreli is a complete jerk, but the result of his action was that the drug in question is now available for less than it was before he tried to profiteer off of it. If he had not proved himself such a selfish jerk in other ways, I might suspect he did it to create just that outcome.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  109. "Flush-free" niacin is not the same as Niacin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Niacin was recommended to me to raise my "good" cholesterol (which statins don't do). However, I was told that the "flush-free" niacin (niacinamide) found in over-the-counter vitamins would not have that effect. So to get niacin I had to get the prescription form. It had a small effect on my good cholesterol, but as has been noted, studies don't show that niacin actually reduces the incidence of heart disease.
    So I have stopped taking it.

  110. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    Of course, the end result was that there is now another company producing two competing medicines which it is selling for less than the company Martin Shkreli bought originally charged for it.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  111. Currently out of stock by pedz · · Score: 1

    I liked it so much... I bought the company!!!!

  112. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Devil's Advocate (and a different AC) here. How are taxes in those countries? I support socialized healthcare as much as anyone else who supports it, but TANSTAAFL. If you want to convince people who disagree with you, you need to share the whole picture, not bits and pieces.

  113. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by danbert8 · · Score: 2

    Cancer is a bastard. Sorry for your loss.

    But yeah, the list prices are outright blackmail. They'll charge as much as they can get away with or they damage your health. What is costs them to produce is irrelevant. You want to make an immediate impact on the price of medical care? Make drug and medical service discounts illegal. If insurance companies have to pay the same price as non-insured patients, costs will drop precipitously and immediately.

    Oh and all those people out there who think medical companies should be non-profits? That does nothing... They still ridiculously overcharge and convert the extra cash into lavish buildings, equipment, and salaries for executives.

    --
    Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
  114. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by torkus · · Score: 1

    "Chinese herbal medicine" Oh, and the pill will increase your libido, grow your cock by 3" (apologies to the women), and ensure your pregnancy is a healthy one (apologies to the men).

    --
    You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
  115. Re: Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by orlanz · · Score: 1

    It is mostly cofinanced. According wikipedia, 28% is fed, 29% is pharma, 19% is biotech. The rest is public, private, & charity mix.

    Then you have to consider that almost all research is tax deductible which with a conservative 20% tax rate, thatâ(TM)s another 9% coming from fed & local govt.

    Then there is the patent aspect that is given to the company cosponsoring. Which pretty much privatizes the benefits of said research.

    Also companies rarely fund âoegood for societyâ research. Normally it is what ever has the highest return. The govt has to âoeencourageâ via cofunding and patent grants, to research rare or common but low return diseases (ie: malaria).

    Finally, the infrastructure to support the research is usually on the govt dime. Such as CDC & WHO maintaining stock of the most hazardous substances & diseases.

    So in the US, there is significant public funding but ROI seems almost entirely private.

  116. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by evolutionary · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately the current presidential administration is likely to gives these sobs a medal for innovate business practices. (see latest tax bill for reference). We are coming just short of "let them eat cake"....

    --
    "Imagination is more important than knowledge" - Einstein
  117. Reliable quality by sjbe · · Score: 1

    And you can google for websites which independently test various vitamin/supplements.

    Great. Some random website tells me its ok. I know it must be true because it is on the internet. [/sarcasm]

    Also note that non-prescription vitamins and drugs ("capitalism in action") are dirt cheap, versus FDA approved prescription drugs (government in action) such as Niacor, Epipen, etc are only affordable to lottery winners.

    Non prescription drugs are either extremely safe (like asprin) or aren't actually drugs. We have a prescription system because quackery is a real thing. What you get without regulations is something like homeopathics and other snake oil "cures" or fake vitamins that don't actually contain what's on the label. Prescription vitamins are a thing because the OTC versions are of undependable and unverified quality. For some people that isn't good enough.

    Now that's no excuse for jacking up the price but quality control IS a real issue with drugs and vitamins.

  118. Opportunity for Generic by Artagel · · Score: 1

    Wockhardt has FDA approval for a generic. I am not sure if Wockhardt would enter the market because of this. All they have to do is make it and sell it to lower the price.

    You can find information like this at Drugs@FDA, with the lovely link https://www.accessdata.fda.gov.... If you search for NIACOR and then look under the result for therapeutic equivalents, you find the approved Wockhardt product has been approved as Application No. 081134 since 1992.

  119. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by vux984 · · Score: 1

    No. It's really not. The insurance companies have separately negotiated substantial discounts of their own.

    So if a treatment is $1,000 list, then a guy with insurance might pay $100, and the insurance company might pay $200. For a total of $300.

    Meanwhile, if its covered by medicaid, medicaid pays the full $1000, because they aren't allowed to negotiate, and the government can 'afford it'.

    Take a look at other countries too. like Canada and the UK, France, etc. What their health care systems pay the same pharma companies for the same drugs is straight up less. Full stop.

  120. News for Nerds?!! Really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So.. ./ moderators, where IS that News for Nerds??

  121. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by wyHunter · · Score: 1

    You can do similar in the USA - this is just lunacy

  122. Niacin Tablets? by pecosdave · · Score: 2

    I bought the powder! That stuff is super cheap in powder form and isn't that slow release namby-pamby crap, FEEL THE BURN! I'm not immune the to "Niacin Sunburn", but I rarely get it anymore. If I happen to be a little dehydrated or I drink the stuff too fast I still get one, but if my wife picks up the cup I've been drinking from and just sips it BURN!!!

    I bought this over a year ago and I'm still using the same canister (I should take it more regularly, I've gotten lazy about getting a morning drink together).

    --
    The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  123. Re:escaping authoritarian medicine by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

    Zzzzzz, you must be asleep.

    I responded to the prior post, above mine:
    "This new administration could have been an opportunity to bring open-market forces to medicine. But so far, I see no indication of this happening. If anything, the swamp is getting deeper."
    Dumping the fascistic ACA mandate is a step to bringing open market forces to medicine...

  124. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by wyHunter · · Score: 1

    You can see this already. In all but one hospital I have been in - not a huge number, but several - visiting patients etc. there isALWAYS lavish marble tiled atrium etc.

  125. People are sheep by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    If the doctor tells them something, or prescribes them something, they take it as gospel. I know my doctor sometimes wants me to take this or that, VERY expensive drugs for blood pressure, cholesterol etc. I have found for the BP problem, instead of taking ONE pill, I can get a generic of basically the same thing, take 2 in the morning, one in the evening and the pills are 8 bucks for NINETY DAYS worth. Does the same thing, works just as well. If people would not so much "challenge" their doctor, but ASK QUESTIONS, about alternatives and what not, things would be better off.

  126. Real story by kenh · · Score: 1

    Although niacin, a type of vitamin B3, is available in over-the-counter forms for less than $5 per 100 tablets, some doctors still prefer to use the version approved by the US Food and Drug Administration to treat high cholesterol.

    The issue isn't that the FDA-approved drug, which went thru a series of clinical drug trial to prove efficacy of the treatment increased in price, it's that doctors continue to write prescriptions for this approved brand-name treatment, and that insurance companies are still paying for it.

    It makes sense that an infrequently-prescribed treatment would go up in price as fewer and fewer prescriptions are written for it (dwindling sales force prices up to pay for recouping treatment approval costs.

    --
    Ken
  127. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by eth1 · · Score: 1

    Ya, I'm aware there's more to the expense than the co-pay - I forgot to include that, and the part paid by insurance obviously varies - but the total price paid is negotiated by the drug maker and insurance company and is less than the raw list price -- though our co-pays are often based on that list price.

    The thing is, the "list price" is often set to game the discount system. My mom needs a hearing aid. She was told that one she was considering was $12,000 list, something like $1,000 with insurance, or they would "discount" it to $4,000 if you had to pay yourself because you didn't have insurance. So who actually pays list? No one (except maybe Medicare, if they can't actually negotiate discounts), apparently. They jack up the "list" price so that they can give their negotiated discount percent and still rake in money. If they're "discounting" it to $4k for everyone, they're obviously still making money at that price.

  128. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

    No idea about UK, but in France and Germany every insurrance pays the same for the same medical.
    Why would they not? As soon as it became public that ine is paying less, the government (or the relevant regulation authority) would demand the same lowered price for everyone.

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  129. New band name? by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    From the sound of it, are the Rotating Festering Assholes the DC-based successors to the Butthole Surfers ?

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
    1. Re:New band name? by mnemotronic · · Score: 1

      From the sound of it, are the Rotating Festering Assholes the DC-based successors to the Butthole Surfers ?

      It could also be a dance ...

      You put your hand in your pants
      And your brain in a trance
      Then you spin across the room
      In a festering gloom
      Ain't never gonna see such an evil crevasse
      Grease me up daddy, got a festering ass.

      --
      The Russians have won. They have made the world a cesspool of distrust, greed, fear and hate.
  130. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

    Vitamins are not invented and I doubt anyone ever had a patent on one of them. No idea what you want to tell me.
    I'm drinking Caipirinha right now, contains all vitamins from A, B*, C, D, K ... no one has a patent on them.

    So, with your idiotic rant about socialism (which you seam to mix up with comunism) you want to claim that the US government is socialistic because it grants monopolies in terms of patents and trade marks?
    You are confusing me ...

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  131. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Drugs are quite cheap in Europe because of nationalized insurance. They simply refuse to pay for drugs that are overpriced and even can remove drug companies from market if they misbehave. Also national insurance insist that you buy an equal generic drug for the cheapest price available at the time of purchase unless you have issue with some of the binding agents, such as lactose. This doesn't mean prohibitively expensive drugs are unavailable but they are checked and cleared first, and then only specialist doctors proscribe with license for the drug until 1) special case is removed, or generics become available.One such case was melatonin in Sweden. It's been available for ever everywhere else. In Sweden drug companies overpriced it, so a special license was required to prescribe it which was a hassle, as soon as other generics came to market, license was rechecked and removed and the prices dropped like 1000 or more percent. The company that did the overpricing, I avoid as the plague even if it means I need to buy a more expensive brand.

  132. Re: Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And since the NHS has to make up the difference, it very much does care if a drugs company tries to pull a fast one like in the article.

  133. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because about 50% of the world's entire medical R&D budget comes from the United States. Saying that Switzerland contributed "more than their share" is meaningless when their share is so close to zero as to be indistinguishable.

  134. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by vux984 · · Score: 1

    The point I was making is that the French (and German) insurance companies pay less than the list price quoted to the American consumer.

    I'm not suggesting what you argued isn't true. I'm just arguing that whatever price the French are paying for their pills its usually much less than the list price an uninsured American has to pay.

  135. Re:Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by jdschulteis · · Score: 1

    It's doctor salaries which are across the board the reason for the absurd costs and also part of the reasons why hospitals can't "afford" to pay for residencies.

    Salaries are only one piece of the complex puzzle that explains why US per capita health care costs are more than double those of civilized countries.

  136. Or just don't buy the prescription by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

    Get your own instead for $5 and to hell with what the doctor tells you. B3 is B3 is B3.

  137. Re:escaping authoritarian medicine by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I read that part. The ACA mandate and health insurance isn't what keeps market forces out of medicine, safety is. It was so idiotic it wasn't worth responding to.

  138. Re:escaping authoritarian medicine by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

    There are many market forces, including the ability to vote with your feet. Having spent their precious money on ACA insurance premiums and copays cuts most people off at the knees - their choices already financially drained, they are forced to do whatever their insurance pays for.

    You're apparenty too locked into living, and dying, in an unfree society.

  139. Re:Why the left liberals are on fire in US right n by Altrag · · Score: 1

    impossible to clear Trump of wrong-doing

    Always forget how pedantic /. is. To clarify, he's cleared of enough wrong-doing that he'd still be able to run for the next election. There's almost certainly ties to Russia within Trump's campaign (and probably himself as well) but unless it can be shown that those ties directly impacted the election results (or their actions since taking office,) it likely won't amount to more than a slap on the wrist. Having business dealings with Russia is not a problem. Lying about it when you're running for office is a problem but I doubt its a big enough problem that Trump couldn't bluster his way out of it. Actual treasonous actions on the other hand.. that's a whole different ball game.

    you're focusing your attention on the White House, but neglecting Congress

    Mostly because the GP was talking about Trump and well, in American politics the president is the face of things.

    But if we want to talk about Congress.. I doubt much will change there, especially if Trump gets himself reelected. Sure the odd seat might switch here and there but the house is very republican right now and would have to lose a LOT of seats to swing that.. and the senate hasn't managed to get much done (other than tax cuts for the rich that everyone in congress loves regardless of party,) so switching from a slight republican lean toward a slight democratic lean (especially with republicans controlling both the house and the White House) will probably still leave them just unable to do anything.

    Even if Trump doesn't run in 2020, I don't see much change though. Voters are just way too partisan at this point. I mean look at Alabama. Roy Moore damned near won on a platform of "I promise I don't touch little girls!" If a democrat wins the presidency then its likely they'll also take the senate. The house of representatives is still pretty questionable and I doubt they'd get the supermajority (and the ability to start doing things without republican interference) so likely still not much would get done.

    A decision in Gill v. Whitford

    Even if it does, I'm not sure how much difference it would make. Gerrymandering has been going on for decades by both parties and while it would likely hurt the republicans more at this point, again they have a pretty large lead in the house and killing gerrymandering would hurt many of the democratic seats just as much. We'd hopefully end up with a lot closer and fairer elections on a seat-by-seat basis but looking at it from the higher level view of simple "#dems/#reps" I don't know that it would change things significantly.

    Without another superstar on the presidential ticket, I just don't really see things changing that much in the "nobody can get anything done" context. Whether its a republican unable to do anything or a democrat unable to do anything, the end result is the same.

    Of course Trump is the superstar right now.. and he had lots of promise to get things done (whether good things or bad is not the point.) But he and his congress just got too greedy on things like healthcare and instead of being able to pass a 90% measure, they repeatedly failed to pass a 120% measure purely because the bills were so unpalatable that even some of their own senators couldn't bring themselves to vote for the things. It takes a lot of screwing over the little guy to make a republican turn down a money grab bill.

  140. Subj: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah but>
    >

  141. Re:Just put a bullet in that CEO's head as a warni by doccus · · Score: 1

    Hey! REALLY not neccessary. The shareholders will do it themselves when profits drop. Unless anyone thinks that someone is actually going to PAY that ridiculous amount.
    There's one warning though. They may have inside information that these particular vitamins are gtoing to be banned in the near future and are acting retroactively. JUst check out online for what happened to the price of the active ingredient in hoit milk when it was banned from OTC sales (L-Tryptophan)

  142. Price of drugs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Watching how Americans are screwed by such companies is infuriating as it trickles down to other countries. Most new drugs are invented and researched in universities. A national drugs programme is the way to go but you Americans have been sold a bill of goods that so called socialism is a sin. Pay what you will. The rest of the first world watches this and sneers at the foolishness and corruption of health in Merica, it is pathetic and I pity the poor folk who are the victims of the stupidity and corruption of pharma and the government who plays along with it with lobbies and pay offs...

  143. Re: Socialism is an easy fix for cases like this. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    The US has some of the most expensive health care in the world. The socialised systems are uniformly cheaper (and not by a little bit).

    Taxes in many more socialised countries tend to be a bit higher than the US (not as much as you might expect) but it's not for healthcare, it's for all the other things.

  144. Re:Just put a bullet in that CEO's head as a warni by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't buying a competitor's product be a gentler Fuck You than that?

    And more effective for the patient, as well?

    --
    There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
  145. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by jjo · · Score: 1

    The role the FDA played was in not honoring the approval of generics by drugs agencies in untrustworthy banana republics like Canada, Britain, France, and Germany. Since the FDA thinks it has incomparably superior skills and knowledge, manufacturers must pay for redundant FDA approval to sell in the USA, so that can be uneconomic to get a small-market generic approved for the USA. This can produce a monopoly situation ripe for price gouging.

  146. Re:Surprise! Companies are in it for profit! by harvey+the+nerd · · Score: 1

    Thanks for keeping a sharp eye on the details. When I wrote "70-80 year years old" extemporaneously , I was thinking of the sulfonamides, so commonly used with Pyrimethamine for malaria, which I've actually used in the combo drug, ca 36-37 yrs ago.

    But I agree with the next poster and other factors, to hold FDA regs responsible for creating the conditions to enable the highly inflated US drug price structure. This includes them menacing me over a cheap and highly effective cancer drug even while it was only being used in a foreign country by a foreign citizen. Before I embrassed the FDA manager for the criminal overreach.

  147. Shkreli's price increase was hack journalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For some reason, Martin Shkreli is continually mentioned in articles like this, despite the story about his purported price increase being largely fabricated, or at best, hack journalism that omitted major details about the issue that absolved him of most of accusations made against him, that were readily available solutions to the problems before any PR recovery were necessary.

  148. Not nice, but still OK ... by garry_g · · Score: 1

    ... as long as the medicine affected is against easily preventable illnesses ... sorry, but high cholesterol is a result of eating habits ... by changing food intake to more healthy ways of eating, probably near 100% of high cholesterol can be cured ...
    Of course it is easier to just treat the symptoms instead of the cause ...