Pharmacist Finds A Way Around Govt-Protected Drug Maker — Makes EpiPen Alternative For $20

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Pharmacist Finds A Way Around Govt-Protected Drug Maker — Makes EpiPen Alternative For $20

http://wendymcelroy.com/news.php?extend.7431

From the Free Thought Project: Pharmacist Finds A Way Around Govt-Protected Drug Maker — Makes EpiPen Alternative For $20 [Ed: a massive hat tip to the man.]
EpiPen currently has annual sales of about $1 billion. In response to the controversy, Mylan said that it would sell its own generic version of EpiPen for $300 — a concession not well received by those who depend on this life-saving technology.

According to a report in Forbes, the government’s outrage over the price of EpiPen is hypocritical as it was a direct result of the government’s policy that caused the price spike:

[...] After multiple denials by the FDA of competing Epi devices and President Obama’s 2013 legislation forcing public schools to purchase EpiPens, Mylan gained market share to reach its present level of 90 percent.

Why can Mylan get away with a 500% price increase? Because it has a monopoly, one that is maintained by “the federal government’s own regulatory scheme” which allowed, in fact encouraged, “a billion-dollar market [to be] cornered by one supplier.” Government officials decry Mylan’s behavior to distract the public from government complicity.

Sanofi , Teva, and Adamis are three pharmaceutical companies that would like to compete with Mylan; however, they cannot sell Epi because they do not have the FDA’s okay. The feds keep changing their administrative rules and regulations. In fact, “the FDA maintains no clear and consistent principles for generic drug-delivery devices like auto injectors or asthma inhalers.”

Thanks to Patent No. 7,449,012, no one could compete against Mylan in the realm of EpiPen. And, thanks to loopholes in patent laws, companies like Mylan can make a tiny and insignificant change to their product to restore patent protection and once again rely on the state to legitimize their monopoly. However, the active ingredient is in EpiPen is no longer afforded a government monopoly through a patent, and can, therefore, be reproduced as a generic.

Because of this lack of support from the state to make its competition illegal, someone has been able to step up and provide an alternative.

Jeremy Counts, owner of Main Street Pharmacy in Blacksburg, Virginia, is buying the medicine in bulk, and making his own EpiPens, which he is selling for just $20!

“I mean, it was ridiculous. I was having people come in and they were, well, what am I going to do?” Counts said.

“I buy the epinephrine in bulk and I get a good price and then I take the syringes and I pre-load them with 2 doses for people, and after I pre-load them, they’re ready to go,” he explained.

“There is absolutely zero difference as far as the actual medication being delivered. The only difference is they’ve got a fancy pen with a spring in it,” he added.

Counts also said that he is providing this service basically at cost, and is hardly making a profit on the deal.

The only major difference between Count’s pens and the official EpiPens is that his product lasts about three months in storage while the official product lasts a year.

Read more at http://thefreethoughtproject.com/pharmacist-epipen-alternative-20/#MPxA2GoWYtBmFgaD.99
 
He will be shut down soon enough. The reason so many businesses want their own control of government is to have the ability to flat out outlaw competition. Why do you think Big Pharma made pot illegal? For the health of the people? Ha ha ha ha ha, yeah, right. None the less, good for the pharmacist, shame on you Big Pharma.
 
It's always been about control. Plus, this could help the depopulation agenda as well. Kills two birds with one stone.
 
Again, the Epipen is a convenience. A vial of epinephrine and a syringe will accomplish the same thing. This is about marketing.

There were competitors.

Other companies have tried to make their own version of the epinephrine injector without attempting to copy the EpiPen. But their efforts haven't been very successful either.


Amedra pharmaceuticals makes Adrenaclick, which has an injector with two caps (EpiPen has only one.) But Amedra has limited manufacturing capabilities for the device and a barely visible market share, according to Price.


Auvi-Q, made by Sanofi, was taken off the market in October 2015 after concerns the device wasn't dispensing the proper dose of epinephrine.
More epinephrine products will be on the market in 2017. Teva's generic version of the EpiPen is expected to be reintroduced then, and Mylan will put out its own generic in the coming weeks.


NPR - clueless as always:
It's too early to tell if more consumer choices will bring down EpiPen's price.
 
He will be shut down soon enough. The reason so many businesses want their own control of government is to have the ability to flat out outlaw competition. Why do you think Big Pharma made pot illegal? For the health of the people? Ha ha ha ha ha, yeah, right. None the less, good for the pharmacist, shame on you Big Pharma.

Exactly.

Pot was made illegal because of hemp.

Hemp is probably the most valuable plant in existence. It can produce oil, steel, and cotton alternatives w/o depleting the soil. Big Oil & Cotton couldn't have that so met with TPTB to make pot evil and take hemp out with it.

The Ford Hemp Car

 
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