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by olliej 1224 days ago
You are missing the point. Every kind of insulin is more expensive in the US than _every_ other country. It's not just old stuff is "cheap", new stuff is expensive. It's old stuff is more expensive in the US, new stuff is more expensive in the US.

Average prices per "standard unit"

  * Rapid acting: $120 (US) vs $13.50 (JP)

  * Rapid-int (?) acting: $107(US) vs. $13 (JP)

  * Short-acting: $87 (US) vs $19 (FR)

  * Short-int acting: $95 (US) vs $13 (JP)

  * Intermediate acting: $73 (US) vs $13 (JP)

  * Long acting: $88 (US) vs $15 (JP)
Based on https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA788-1.html
1 comments

Novolin/ReliOn is nowhere near that expensive. I skimmed it, but report you are citing appears to be averaging the price of insulin types. So if there is a cheap rapid and an expensive rapid, it ignores that somebody can buy the cheap one. That averaging distorts the price of available traditional insulin dramatically.

https://www.goodrx.com/healthcare-access/research/how-much-d...

It is more expensive in the United States because the US is subsidizing the earnings requirements the companies who make the drug require to develop new variants. At a high level, everybody pays insurance, it gets funneled into high drug prices, high drug prices pay shareholders and fund R&D. It's capitalisms version of socialized drug creation, and the rest of the world benefits from the US overpaying.

Thank you for your informative comments on this thread.