The
CEO of Turing, a sickeningly smug former hedge funder named Martin
Shkreli, tried to paint this gigantic price increase as an altruistic
move that would benefit patients. This only made the rest of humanity
collectively gag even further and Shkreli, who has earned the nickname
“Pharma Bro,” became the most hated man on the Internet,
even beating out the dentist who killed Cecil the Lion.
OK,
so with all that background information out of the way, it seems that a
heroic rival drug company has decided to take Shkreli to the cleaners
by introducing a rival drug that will cost significantly less. As Ars Technica
reports, Imprimis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. is selling 100-pill packages of
its Daraprim alternative for $99 each, which works out to just $0.99
per pill.
“While
we respect Turing’s right to charge patients and insurance companies
whatever it believes is appropriate, there may be more cost-effective
compounded options for medications, such as Daraprim,” Imprimis CEO Mark
L. Baum said in a news release announcing the drug.
At
any rate, this is a very good lesson in public relations for future Ayn
Randian supermen who think that the way to succeed in capitalism is to
simply be as greedy and ruthless as possible: If you do things that make
the entire world hate you, a competitor will find a way to exploit you.
Hopefully Imprimis’s ploy works and the Pharma Bro will never think of
pulling a stunt like this again.
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