GENERIC AND BRANDED DRUGS – SCI & TECH

News: Generic drugs in the US are too cheap to be sustainable

 

What's in the news?

       Generic drugs are the singularity of American healthcare – they are too cheap. And it’s driving some manufacturers out of business altogether.

 

Key takeaways:

       Americans pay on average 2.5 times more for prescription drugs than other wealthy, developed nations.

 

Generic Drugs:

       It is a medication that has exactly the same active ingredient as the brand-name drug and yields the same therapeutic effect.

 

Features of Generic Drugs:

       It is the same in dosing, safety, strength, quality, the way it works, the way it is taken, and the way it should be used.

       These similarities help to demonstrate bioequivalence, which means that a generic medicine works in the same way and provides the same clinical benefit as the brand-name medicine.

       They do not involve repetition of extensive clinical trials over the years, unlike brands that undergo extensive R&D procedure.

       They also have the same risks and benefits as their brand-name counterparts.

       Generic drugs do not need to contain the same inactive ingredients as the brand-name product.

       A generic drug can only be marketed after the brand name drug's patent has expired.

       Generic drugs are usually much less expensive than brand-name drugs.