Treatment for life-threatening allergic reactions is about to get a little cheaper.
Mylan, the maker of the EpiPen, said Monday that it will launch a generic version of the device for half the price of the brand-name product.
The company says the generic will hit the market in a few weeks and
cost $300
The move by Mylan comes in response to mounting
pressure from consumers
"This helps Mylan with its public relations battle against criticism for sharp price increases on the EpiPen," says
Larry Levitt
Mylan CEO Heather Bresch has spent the past week trying to shift blame for the increased cost of the product away from Mylan and onto insurance companies. The company argued that more people have high-deductible health plans and high copayments on medications now, so they are feeling the pain of price hikes more than they would have in the past.
She repeated that Monday in a statement posted on the company's website.
"Because of the complexity and opaqueness of today's branded pharmaceutical supply chain and the increased shifting of costs to patients as a result of high deductible health plans, we determined that bypassing the brand system in this case and offering an additional alternative was the best option," the statement read.
But lawmakers and consumers didn't buy it. The anger over the price increases was directed solely at Mylan.
"The weirdness of a generic drug company offering a generic version of its own branded but off-patent product is a signal that something is wrong," Robert Weissman, president of the consumer group Public Citizen,
wrote in a piece published Monday
He went on to write that the company's action "is just one more convoluted mechanism to avoid plain talk ... and just cut the price of Epipen."
The frustration with the rising costs of the EpiPen has been brewing for months. But it exploded last week when activist parents of kids with allergies started a petition called "
Stop the EpiPen Price Gouging
Several senators and members of Congress responded, asking the Federal Trade Commission to investigate whether the company's pricing policies violate anti-trust laws, and promising their own hearings on Capitol Hill.
Mylan said Thursday it would offer discounts of up to $300 to offset consumers' share of the EpiPen's price. But that
didn't quiet the criticism
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton called on the company to lower the price "immediately."
Mylan's latest move is meant to calm the anger of consumers and lawmakers, but it may also be a shrewd business decision.
By bringing a generic to the market now, it could preemptively steal some market share away from Teva Pharmaceuticals, which is developing its own generic EpiPen. That device is expected to be approved in 2017.
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