One of the least appreciated cost-savers in medical treatment is the simple act of splitting pills. Suppose you're a U.S. citizen with depression who needs to take Lexapro brand of escitalopram oxalate, a commonly prescribed antidepressant, at a typical starting dose of 10 milligrams (mg) per day. Let's figure out how much your treatment will cost, both by month and by day.
For purposes of illustration I'll use prices shown online at drugstore.com. If you buy thirty Lexapro 10-mg tablets (which is how the prescription is usually written) it will cost you $70.15 per month or $2.34 per day to get treated. But what if you buy Lexapro 20-mg tablets and take a half-pill each day? Medically, this treatment is the same. But look what happens to unit prices. Thirty Lexapro 20-mg tablets cost $69.99. We need just 10 mg per day, so we split the 20-mg tablets in half to make our 10-mg doses. (The tablets are even scored to make this easy.) In this case it costs you just $35.00 per month or $1.17 per day to get treated. Your daily price just dropped by half!
Isn't that amazing? And it's not just an isolated example. If you do a similar analysis for many other drugs, you'll find that taking half of a double-strength pill costs substantially less than taking all of a regular-strength pill. Or another way of saying this is that the cost of a month's treatment is driven more by the number of pills involved than by the total number of milligrams taken.
Is this an accident of pricing? Should we be whispering about this? Is this pulling something over on the drug companies? Hardly. If you think that multi-billion-dollar companies trading on the New York Stock Exchange make pricing mistakes, then I've got some choice swamp-land in Florida I'd love to sell you.
So why would drug companies create these pricing mismatches (read: opportunities)? To understand this, let's walk through two prescribing scenarios. First, suppose a doctor is prescribing Lexapro to a patient who is lucky enough to have drug insurance. The patient pays a predetermined co-payment for each month's worth of medication, so he or she has the exact same out-of-pocket expense whichever way the prescription is written. So will the doctor write for thirty 10-mg pills or fifteen 20-mg pills?
Your guess is probably right-the prescription will be written for the larger number of lower-strength pills. The retailer and the drug company will get full price. They're happy. The patient doesn't need to break tablets in half and the doctor doesn't need to take time to explain why pills have to be broken, so they're happy. What's not to like? The only loser is the insurance company. Do the doctor or the patient care? (Let's see, how many favors has the insurance company done for the doctor and patient lately?)
Now here's the second prescribing scenario. Joe Workingman has no drug insurance and has to shell out cash to pay for the full price of medication. The doctor feels that 10 mg daily of Lexapro is needed. This time, the doctor prescribes fifteen Lexapro 20-mg pills per month, instructing the patient to take a half-pill per day. Medically, there is no loss of efficacy. The patient is pleased to pay less money. The doctor is a hero for being thoughtful and clever. Because the doctor still prescribed the same product, the drug company is happy. (The drug company would rather get half their price than nothing. Besides, they've already priced this scenario into their drug.)
So the drug company wins either way, particularly if they're competing against a similar product made by another company that the doctor might choose instead. In fact, all it takes for everyone to be happy is a breakable tablet. Admittedly, some pills are difficult to break in half (but not excessively difficult, or else the drug company wouldn't capture the low-end market). This is where pill-cutters come in handy. Every drugstore has them. They're cheap because they're made out of nothing more than plastic and razor blades. They're better at splitting pills than your thumbs or a paring-knife because they break pills more evenly, and the pieces don't go skittering across the counter.
In the author's practice there are some pill-splitting overachievers who even manage to break quadruple-strength pills into quarters. Imagine the savings in doing that.
In fact, the only obstacle to saving the patient money is if the drug company puts their product into capsules, because capsules can't be split. Would a drug company do such a mean-spirited thing? You betcha.
Lexapro was the sixth so-called serotonin-reuptake-blocker to come on the market, so it had to compete with all the earlier drugs in its class. But the first serotonin-reuptake-blocker to come on the market had first-mover advantage and was able to retain market-share even after the competing products arrived. This first-mover was the world-famous Prozac brand of fluoxetine, made by the Eli Lilly Company.
So what did Lilly do after competing products appeared? They stone-walled the consumer by never ever putting their product into anything other than a capsule. Moreover, for the entire time their product was still patent-protected, they never produced a higher-strength capsule. So if you needed a higher dose of Prozac, you had the honor of paying for two or three capsules per day. Why did they choose such a consumer-unfriendly approach? Because they could. (Everyone now turn toward Indianapolis and wave to the nice people at Lilly.)
My medical students look at me strangely when I start talking about publicly traded companies and market forces while I'm supposed to be teaching them about medicine. But the way I look at it, if you don't understand market forces, then you'll never understand why things in medicine are the way they are.
(C) 2005 by Gary Cordingley
Gary Cordingley, MD, PhD, is a clinical neurologist, teacher and researcher who works in Athens, Ohio. For more health-related articles see his website at: http://www.cordingleyneurology.com
Perhaps one of the most insidious dangers in modern technology... Read More
This is very sensitive area of your body. Too private.... Read More
When your knee hurts, getting relief is all that's on... Read More
Irritable bowel syndrome sufferers often find that they have to... Read More
Medical Billing SoftwareThe practice is running smoothly, with patients coming... Read More
Doctors have been encouraged to prescribe the cholesterol-lowering drugs called... Read More
Resperate is natural and powerful and it puts you in... Read More
If you joints are constantly killing you, here are three... Read More
Prescription drugs can save your life. But interactions between prescription... Read More
When you (or loved ones) are taking prescription or over... Read More
We cannot help but accept the fact that children do... Read More
I had a call the other day from a potential... Read More
This report will give you 22 important tips to make... Read More
Purchasing drugs from a Mexican pharmacy is, for the most... Read More
A neuroma is an inflamed nerve. In the foot, the... Read More
When a patient has a serious illness and there is... Read More
OverviewA diseased or injured nerve use to mean that you... Read More
What is nail fungus?Nail fungus, also known as Onychomycosis, is... Read More
Michael Richardson, MD has some suggestions on maximizing your next... Read More
Lunesta is a newly released sleeping pill. Marketed as a... Read More
Dizzy Dean, the great baseball pitcher of the 1930s-1940s, once... Read More
Each year hospitals end up killing twice as many people... Read More
The recent withdrawal of the prescription drugs Vioxx and ... Read More
Pfizer's exciting drug history traces back to the most popular... Read More
The central location of the city of Chicago has made... Read More
With the hum of the election campaign and the debate... Read More
This is a short overview of a questionnaire used for... Read More
When an unconscious patient arrives in the ED, every hospital... Read More
Most people are well aware that an estimated 45 million... Read More
Tea tree oil is the essential oil comes from the... Read More
Tendons are ropes of fibrous tissue that connect muscles to... Read More
Chinese Medicine, over 2000 years old, is an ancient form... Read More
Hi Rusty. A few days ago, I slightly injured a... Read More
There is an undeniable connection between the occurrence of acid... Read More
We have all talked a lot about the problems in... Read More
Things are moving forward and new and advanced procedures are... Read More
Viga and Viga for Women is a dietary supplement sold... Read More
The five drugs that are discussed in this article are... Read More
Phenylpropanolamine, or PPH, used to be an active ingredient in... Read More
Americans are on the go. According to a NSGA Survey,... Read More
When you ask what arthritis is, professinals will tell you... Read More
Cold-Eeze is a homeopathic solution to the common cold. It... Read More
If you are a regular user of prescription medications, you... Read More
A variety of options exist for hemorrhoid treatment including surgery,... Read More
The physicians conundrum: Everywhere, physicians are contemplating or engaged in... Read More
Lunesta is a newly released sleeping pill. Marketed as a... Read More
Xanax is a Prescription Drug which is habit forming. You... Read More
It's now possible to locate and purchase a wide variety... Read More
A great place to begin taking charge of you arthritis... Read More
Pfizer's exciting drug history traces back to the most popular... Read More
Medicine Medicine |