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Asthma Drug Still Being Prescribed to Kids Despite Potential Mental Health Risks
(www.scientificamerican.com)
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I haven't looked into this particular drug but what many times happens in the U.S. when a drug's patent is about to expire is that the manufacturers repackage the chemical compound under a different name and for a different disease and then they can re-patent the compound as something new and continue raking in the big bucks instead of letting the patent expire and generics take over (in actual free market competition btw), which would make the drug very affordable for consumers. The direct effect of this is that consumers are sometimes taking the wrong medicine, in order to support the profitability of the pharmaceutical industry. For example an anti-psychotic which has a patent expiring is rebranded as a sleeping pill (because many anti-psychotics make people sedated as a secondary effect) and gets a new patent for 20 years which props up the price of the drug, mevermind that anti-psychotics cause brain atrophy and, because of the profit-driven incentive model of private healthcare, are sometimes incorrectly prescribed to children for behavioural issues instead of psychotic symptoms. Yay for the stock price!
Quetiapine, a massive scandal waiting to get attention. In my opinion.