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by mirimir
2535 days ago
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That's not the issue. As long as a brand drug is listed by the FDA -- whether or not it's actually being manufactured -- physicians can write prescriptions for generic equivalents. However, if a brand manufacturer has an old product delisted, then physicians can no longer prescribe generic equivalents. That's become more and more common. However, there is a workaround: compounding pharmacies. To my knowledge, accredited compounding pharmacies can make, on a customer-by-customer basis, any product that the FDA has ever approved. And many of them are mail-order pharmacies. In my experience, prices are comparable to mass-market generics, or lower. |
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>However, if a brand manufacturer has an old product delisted, then physicians can no longer prescribe generic equivalents. That's become more and more common.
Why is the ability to prescribe a drug tied to whether the branded version in still "listed"?