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The EpiPen Scandal Is Worse Than You Think: What You’re Not Being Told
The Antimedia ^ | 26 August 2016 | Alice Salles

Posted on 08/27/2016 11:45:21 AM PDT by amorphous

Presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton urged Mylan to voluntarily slash the prices of its products while promising that, once she’s elected, her “plan to address exorbitant drug price hikes like these” will be finally implemented. This is a particularly empty promise considering Mylan has donated between $100,000 and $250,000 to the Clinton Foundation, which was recently revealed to be peddling influence in exchange for cash.

Senators Susan Collins (R-ME) and Claire McCaskill (D-MO) are also pressuring the manufacturer to disclose more about its pricing. Even Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) — whose own daughter, Heather Bresch, serves as Mylan’s CEO — weighed in, claiming he, too, shares his colleagues’ “concerns about the skyrocketing prices of prescription drugs.”

But none of what these politicians are saying rings true to anyone who’s paying attention. Here’s why.

The Monopolistic Origins of the EpiPen

The autoinjector known as the EpiPen provides injections of epinephrine in cases of serious or even life-threatening allergy attacks. It is derived from another product known as the Mark I NAAK ComboPen, a device created for a monopoly: the U.S. military.

The device was designed by Sheldon Kaplan for Survival Technology, Inc., a company with a long history of working with the Pentagon. Once the ComboPen was created, it was sent to the U.S. military to treat soldiers who had been exposed to nerve agents.

In 2007, Mylan “purchased the generic drugs division of Germany’s Merck KGaA for $6.7 billion,” acquiring the EpiPen brand of autoinjectors. Under Merck, the devices cost $7 each, which resulted in just $200 million in gains each year, a mere 5 percent of Merck’s revenue at the time.

But Bresch saw potential in this simple plastic device and focused on how to make the newly purchased brand something that could be widely used. For her dream to come true, she needed the assistance of experts in the monopoly business. That’s when she turned to the U.S. government for help.

The FDA, Washington, and Crony Capitalism Are All to Blame

Though the EpiPen is not covered by patent protection, Bresch’s close relationship with Washington may have helped her company ensure competition wasn’t an issue.

In an article for the Mises Institute, Jonathan Newman writes that “Mylan has been repeatedly protected from competition, and it has repeatedly (and predictably) increased the price of EpiPens in response.”

According to Bloomberg, Mylan has been aggressive in its approach to regulators.

For the past seven years, Bresch has been “[turning] to Washington for help. Along with patient groups, Mylan pushed for federal legislation encouraging states to stock epinephrine devices in schools.”

In 2010, when the FDA launched new federal guidelines related to epinephrine prescriptions, Mylan stopped selling single pens, switching to twin-packs. Bloomberg reports that, at the time, “35 percent of prescriptions were for single EpiPens,” but as the new rules were implemented, Mylan “changed label rules to allow the devices to be marketed to anyone at risk.” While the guidelines targeted persons who had severe allergic reactions only, Bresch saw the rule changes as “big events that we’ve started to capitalize on,” she said in October of 2011.

After a seven-year-old died due to an allergic reaction to peanuts at a Virginia school, Congress passed a law pressuring states to ensure its schools had epinephrine devices on hand at all times. The year this bill passed, Mylan spent over $1 million in lobbying alone. Now, Bloomberg reports, “47 states require or encourage schools to stock the devices.”

As part of the EpiPen popularization plan, Mylan started handing out “free EpiPens to more than 59,000 schools” in 2012. In 2014, the company allegedly spent $35 million on TV ads, and in 2015, Mylan signed a deal with Walt Disney, stocking theme parks and cruise ships with the devices. Between 2012 and 2015, the company also spent over $6 million in lobbying.

Over the past seven years, Bresch’s persistence and power-driven attitude helped the company spread the EpiPen far and wide, causing its use to grow 67 percent in the United States. EpiPen prescriptions are now so common that pediatric allergist Robert Wood from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine says EpiPen is the new “Kleenex.”

But making the EpiPen so popular wasn’t an easy task, mostly because Mylan finally bumped into some competition along the way.

Competition Drives Prices Down — And Mylan Wasn’t Down with That

In 2009, Pfizer Inc., the world’s biggest drugmaker, and Mylan sued Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. over a patent-infringement. At the time, the Israeli company was accused of using Mylan’s design without permission. But in 2012, both parties reached an agreement, and Teva was allowed to seek approval from the FDA for its epinephrine injecting device.

According to Gizmodo, Teva has failed to obtain approval from the FDA to develop affordable generic versions of the EpiPen. The company says it won’t try to go through the same process again until 2017.

The only other device that was closer to competing with Mylan’s EpiPen was Auvi-Q, and it was also driven out of the market. In 2015, the company launched a recall campaign claiming the devices could be delivering faulty dosages.

“Epinephrine is extremely cheap,” reported Jonathan Newman. In order to understand why Mylan was able to raise the prices of EpiPen, we mustn’t look at the device or drug. We also cannot blame the markets for this issue. Instead, we must look at how Mylan keeps competition at bay.

In a free market scenario, “[a] firm cannot just willy-nilly raise their prices without a competing firm leaping in to give consumers what they want at a lower price,” Newman explains. But in the real world, “Mylan has a great friend who keeps would-be competitors out of the market, or at least makes it so difficult for them that they eventually go out of business.” Mylan’s friend, in this case, is the FDA — a government agency.

Without the ability to pay corporations any favors, Washington power players would not be passing resolutions and pieces of legislation that benefit Mylan. In order to understand why Mylan’s monopoly over the EpiPen has driven the prices up, we must look at the system at hand.

The current environment favors this influence game played by both government officials and corporate drones, but ultimately, the consumer pays the price for their follies. And that’s why few members of the mainstream media are taking the time to explain this relationship. Mostly because, they too, are involved in this systemic influence scheme.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: clinton; clintonfoundation; cronyism; democrats; epipen; fda
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This article (The EpiPen Scandal Is Worse Than You Think: What You’re Not Being Told) is free and open source. You have permission to republish this article under a Creative Commons license with attribution to Alice Salles and theAntiMedia.org. Anti-Media Radio airs weeknights at 11 pm Eastern/8 pm Pacific. Image credit: Intropin. If you spot a typo, please email the error and name of the article to edits@theantimedia.org.
1 posted on 08/27/2016 11:45:21 AM PDT by amorphous
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To: amorphous

This is why free and open markets are important.


2 posted on 08/27/2016 11:46:41 AM PDT by rey
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To: amorphous

Run up the price to a bizarre degree on a medicine or medical device with a monopoly or nearly so, crash the healthcare system and make a few Democrat billionaires in the process, what’s not for a Democrat to like?


3 posted on 08/27/2016 11:54:03 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: amorphous

Crony Capitalism at it’s worst brought to you by the corrupt Democrat party, and the corrupt FDA. I bet dirt bag Daddy Manchin is up to his eyeballs in sleazy behavior to help his little baby rake it in.


4 posted on 08/27/2016 11:54:42 AM PDT by DAC21
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To: RegulatorCountry

We have the best government that money can buy. /s


5 posted on 08/27/2016 11:56:53 AM PDT by amorphous
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To: amorphous; null and void; aragorn; EnigmaticAnomaly; kalee; TWhiteBear; Salvation; ...
Image and video hosting by TinyPic

The EpiPen Scandal Is Worse Than You Think: What You’re Not Being Told

bbl...

6 posted on 08/27/2016 11:59:54 AM PDT by LucyT
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To: amorphous

sublingual epinephrine

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16461140


7 posted on 08/27/2016 12:02:54 PM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: DAC21
Antares Pharma is the company supplying Auto injectors to Teva for their Epipen which the FDA has blocked. (zero doubt because of political pressure to keep the good times rolling at Mylan and the Manchin House) I bought shares a few years back which I'm holding and upside down on. Knock on wood the shaming will result in a momentary sliver of integrity by the FDA and get Teva approved as an Epi supplier. It would be nice to break even on my ATRS stock.
8 posted on 08/27/2016 12:06:11 PM PDT by DAC21
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To: DAC21

Joe Manchin-The Flim-Fiam man!


9 posted on 08/27/2016 12:11:12 PM PDT by Dr. Ursus
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To: amorphous

As a beekeeper, I always kept an AnaKit and then later an EpiPen on hand in case someone near my hives got stung and reacted. In the late 90s and through the early 2000s, they were relatively inexpensive.

I learned through a pharmacist friend that I could buy Primatene Mist inhalers and a generic brand from WalMart that each contained epinephrine and which could be used in place of the injectors since the epinephrine entered the blood stream much, much faster. The last Primatene Mist inhaler I bought was in 2009. Walmarts’ brand was removed from the shelves around the same time, much to my disgust. Now I know why. Big Pharma and big corruption and greed strike once again.

Thankfully, no one around my hives has ever been stung by my bees except for me.


10 posted on 08/27/2016 12:26:09 PM PDT by miele man
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To: amorphous

A perfect example of how statism, socialism, politics and crony-capitalism combine in the USA


11 posted on 08/27/2016 12:26:45 PM PDT by PGR88
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To: miele man
It's even worse than you imagined:

Manufacturers use chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, as propellants (spray) in these inhalers to move the medicine out of the inhaler so patients can breathe the medicine into their lungs.

The United States signed an international agreement, called the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer along with many other countries. These countries promised to make it illegal to make or sell substances that decrease the ozone layer, including CFCs, after certain dates.

http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/InformationbyDrugClass/ucm080427.htm

12 posted on 08/27/2016 12:32:21 PM PDT by palmer (turn into nonpaper w no identifying heading and send nonsecure)
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To: amorphous

I have yet to find confirmation about inaccurate dosages in the superior Auvi-Q


13 posted on 08/27/2016 12:47:23 PM PDT by wtd
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To: amorphous

This should have been more widely viewed as a perfect example of RAT crony capitalism. RATs always like to have government top cover when they engage in capitalism.


14 posted on 08/27/2016 12:57:55 PM PDT by Rockitz (This is NOT rocket science - Follow the money and you'll find the truth.)
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To: amorphous

The original auto injector device used by the military (Mark I NAAK ComboPen) to ease the effects of nerve gas contained Atropine... not epinephrine.


15 posted on 08/27/2016 1:07:04 PM PDT by JDoutrider
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To: amorphous

What we’re not being told is the name “Senator Joe Manchin (D)” - which has been conspicuously absent from most news reports on EpiPen so far.


16 posted on 08/27/2016 1:13:21 PM PDT by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: Brian Griffin
Brian Griffin wrote: "sublingual epinephrine"

Wow! How available is this form of epinephrine?


17 posted on 08/27/2016 1:27:54 PM PDT by wtd
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To: amorphous

Crony capitalism is not new to the US.
It’s been around since the 1850’s. It’s visceral in American business.


18 posted on 08/27/2016 1:28:54 PM PDT by Original Lurker
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To: wtd

I have yet to find confirmation about inaccurate dosages in the superior Auvi-Q
******************
It’s not the nature of the evidence; it’s the seriousness of the charge.


19 posted on 08/27/2016 1:48:27 PM PDT by Neidermeyer (Bill Clinton is a 5 star general in the WAR ON WOMEN and Hillary is his Goebbels.)
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To: miele man

After my initial visit to the allergist, I was advised to get a pen in case of adverse reactions.

I never had a problem and lost it in a flood last year.


20 posted on 08/27/2016 1:55:55 PM PDT by wally_bert (I didn't get where I am today by selling ice cream tasting of bookends, pumice stone & West Germany)
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