COVID-19 drug to cost Ksh.41K for one vial

Mishale

Elder Lister
COVID-19 drug to cost Ksh.41K for one vial, five-day treatment may need six vials By CNN For Citizen Digital
COVID-19 drug to cost Ksh.41K for one vial, five-day treatment may need six vials

In Summary
A typical five-day treatment course would include six vials, which would equate to $2,340 (Ksh. 249,139) per patient, Daniel O'Day, Gilead Sciences chairman and CEO, said in the letter.


The United States now has a highly anticipated price tag for the antiviral drug remdesivir.
Gilead Sciences, the company that makes the COVID-19 drug, announced in an open letter on Monday morning that it has decided to set a price of $390 (Ksh. 41,523) per vial for the US government, which would include Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense hospitals, and other governments of developed countries.

But the discounted price will not include Medicare or Medicaid.
A typical five-day treatment course would include six vials, which would equate to $2,340 (Ksh. 249,139) per patient, Daniel O’Day, Gilead Sciences chairman and CEO, said in the letter.
The US government will continue to manage US allocations of remdesivir to hospitals through September, the company said.
The letter added that the price for US private insurance companies will be $520 (Ksh. 55,364) per vial, which would total $3,120 per patient for a five-day treatment course of six vials.

The government price is applicable to the Big Four federal agencies (Veterans’ Affairs, Indian Health Services, Department of Defense and the Coast Guard), as well as other government direct purchasers like the Federal Bureau of Prisons, once on the Federal Supply Schedule,” a Gilead spokesperson told CNN.


‘We believe all patients will have access’
“As with all our actions on remdesivir, we approached this with the aim of helping as many patients as possible, as quickly as possible and in the most responsible way.
“This has been our compass point throughout, from collaborating to find rapid answers on safety and efficacy, to scaling up manufacturing and donating our supply of remdesivir through the end of June,” O’Day wrote in the letter.


“In each case, we recognized the need to do things differently to reflect the exceptional circumstances of the pandemic,” O’Day wrote.
“Now, as we transition beyond the donation period and set a price for remdesivir, the same principle applies.
“At the level we have priced remdesivir and with government programs in place, along with additional Gilead assistance as needed, we believe all patients will have access,” O’Day wrote.

HHS noted in a press release on Monday that hospitals will receive remdesivir shipments and pay no more than Gilead’s wholesale acquisition price, which amounts to approximately $3,200 per treatment course.
“Generally, patients do not pay directly for hospital-administered drugs like remdesivir; rather, for Medicare and most private insurers, the drug’s cost is incorporated into payments made by the insurer, such as Medicare paying for the drug through a diagnostic-related group,” the press release said.
“These supplies will be allocated in the same way that Gilead’s donation of approximately 120,000 treatment courses of remdesivir were allocated.”
In other words, HHS allocates the product to state and territorial health departments based on the needs of hospitals with Covid-19 patients, and then health departments allocate the drug to hospitals.
“The delivery of the purchased remdesivir will be streamlined, going directly to the hospital, per the state’s allocation decision, rather than going first to the state health departments for subsequent delivery to hospitals,” according to the HHS press release. Shipments will likely occur every two weeks.




now the economy/world should be opened up and let people look for money.
for those retired and have pension money, save up at least 41k for a vial in case you contract Corona.
i also wish the lethal version won't be released to raise demand for the vaccine.
 
@Mishale obviously this is your input. Its not Gilead's or any other interested party.
What do you know that we don't? Or is it just senseless scare mongering?
it's scaremongering.
but based on how the whole issue of the pandemic is/has been treated.
i would like to quote some scientists/doctors who have given conflicting information from that given by governments but we all know our governments are "always right"
the other facts would be from the WHO, from how the virus was first transmitted from person to person which they later revised but one can argue that its a new strain so not much information is available. a trial and error basis.
also how it was being predicted that Africans would be lying on the streets dead but one will argue that most if not all African countries acted swiftly to prevent spread and death.

so i am hoping that all gaps i can personally see are just me being paranoid and my love for conspiracies.
 
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