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Prescription Drugs in Prison: Huge Profits for Pharmaceutical Companies at Taxpayer Expense

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Prescription Drugs in Prison—Watch Out

By Alliance for Natural Health [1]

What we are looking at is a potential storm of inmate addiction, violence, and soaring federal medical costs.

Last month we told you about [2] how under the new healthcare law, many more prisoners will receive powerful psychotropic drugs to treat mental illness—despite the fact that these drugs are linked to addiction, crime, and violent homicidal outbursts. The social consequences of treating inmates with these drugs is frightening.

Earlier, we told you about [3] a new drug called Sovaldi to treat hepatitis C. It can cure up to 80% of hepatitis C cases [4] in as little as twelve weeks—all at the low, low price of $84,000 per course of treatment [5]. Why is the price of this drug so high?

Sovaldi’s $1,000-a-day price tag was a bit of sticker shock for several members of Congress: on March 20, three members of the powerful Committee on Energy and Commerce sent a letter to the CEO of Gilead Sciences demanding an explanation [6] of “the methodology used to establish Sovaldi’s pricing,” particularly since “a breakthrough treatment for hepatitis C could result in significant public health benefits.”

While Gilead has yet to publically respond to the committee, we believe the Sovaldi price-setting equation may be closely linked to America’s burgeoning prison population. Here are a few crucial facts:

Over 50% of those infected with hepatitis C [4] depend on taxpayer-funded healthcare. Across the country’s various prison systems, 13 to 54% of inmates [7] have hepatitis C.

+ State jails are legally obligated [8] to provide high-quality (and inherently pricy) treatments like Sovaldi to prisoners.

+ Thanks to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) [9], states can now shift much of their constitutional burden to provide healthcare to prisoners to federal taxpayers.

= $1,000-a-day price tag, per inmate, for Hep C treatment.

Quite simply, it seems that Gilead can charge so much because they know that your tax dollars are paying for the healthcare of one of Sovaldi’s biggest target audiences: convicted felons.

Who would have thought that prisons would be the next frontier for Big Pharma profits? Big Pharma clearly has. Once the government has signed on, millions of literally captive customers are assured.

To fully understand Big Pharma’s prison arithmetic, Illinois is one of six states currently signing state prisoners [10] up for Obamacare and ACA-expanded Medicaid. Illinois also happens to be one of the first states to approve Sovaldi for the treatment of its prisoners [11].

Increased costs aren’t limited to Sovaldi: the overall cost of healthcare for inmates ballooned 52% from 2001 to 2008 [12] (another reason why states are trying to pass the financial hot potato onto the federal government).

Of course, there are a variety of cost-effective natural treatments that could help manage hepatitis C, but none seem to have to potential of Sovaldi to cure it:

We all need to utilize safe, effective, and economical alternatives to lucrative Big Pharma drugs. We also need to break the government protected monopoly that allows a company to charge $1,000 per pill. But so long as the money keeps flowing back and forth between Pharma and public officials, it will be difficult to rein in the current plague of crony medicine.

Read the full article here: http://www.anh-usa.org/prescription-drugs-in-prison%E2%80%94watch-out/ [1]