NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Advocates from AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the nation’s largest HIV/AIDS nonprofit medical provider, is spearheading two protests in New York City and San Francisco on Wednesday February 12th at 12 noon in each city targeting Gilead Sciences over the price of Sovaldi (sofosbuvir), its new Hepatitis C drug. The drug, which was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in early December, was immediately priced by Gilead at $84,000 Wholesale Acquisition Cost (WAC) for a twelve-week supply of the drug—or $1,000 per pill.
WHAT: |
NEW YORK DRUG PRICING PROTEST/Gilead Sciences’ $1K Hepatitis pill |
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WHEN: |
WEDNESDAY, Feb. 12, 2014 |
12:00 – 1:00pm EASTERN Time |
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WHERE: |
Leerink Swann Global Healthcare Conf., Waldorf Astoria Hotel, 301 Park Ave, NYC 10022 |
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WHO: |
Jessica Reinhart, Senior Grassroots Community Manager, AHF |
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Michael Camacho, MPH, NYC Regional Director, AHF |
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And 15-20 drug pricing advocates & protesters with “Gilead-Outrage!” banners, signs and face masks | ||||||||
NY CONTACT: |
Jessica Reinhart, Senior Grassroots Community Manager, AHF +1 (323) 203-6146. |
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WHAT: |
SAN FRANCISCO DRUG PRICING PROTEST MARCH/Gilead Sciences’ $1K pill |
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WHEN: |
WEDNESDAY, Feb. 12, 2014 |
12:00 – 1:00pm PACIFIC Time |
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WHERE: |
Marching FROM: |
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San Francisco CITY HALL, 1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett Place, S.F., CA 94102 |
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Marching TO: |
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San Francisco FEDERAL BUILDING, 90 7th Street (corner Mission & 7th) S. F., CA 94103 |
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WHO: |
Jesse Brooks, Regional Advocacy Consultant |
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Dale R. Gluth, Bay Area Regional Director, AHF |
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And 15-20 drug pricing advocates & protesters with “Gilead-Outrage!” banners, signs and face masks | ||||||||
SF CONTACT: |
Jesse Brooks, Regional Advocacy Consultant (510) 575-8245. |
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“Gilead’s $84,000 drug Sovaldi is only one portion of a two drug, twelve-week combination treatment for Hepatitis C, which affects and estimated 3.2 million people in the United States. The two-drug combo pushes treatment to well over $100,000 per patient—a price point that is simply not sustainable,” said Jessica Reinhart, Senior Grassroots Community Manager, for AHF, in anticipation of the New York protest held during the Leerink Swann Global Healthcare Conference at the Waldorf Astoria Wednesday February 12th. “Gilead’s history of predatory pricing on its lifesaving medications—first on its HIV drugs, and now, for this new hepatitis medication—sets the stage for protests like ours as well as for direct action from government officials and drug purchasers for government programs seeking to compel Gilead to cut its outrageous pricing. We also want to let the financial industry know that we are not going to simply stand by and watch this price gouging.”
“In addition to protesting the pricing of Sovaldi, our protests will serve as a reminder of Gilead’s previous bad deeds in its pricing and policies,” said Dale R. Gluth, Bay Area Regional Director for AHF in anticipation of the San Francisco protest march from City Hall to the Federal Building set for Wednesday February 12th. “In late 2012, within days of FDA-approval of Gilead’s four-in-one AIDS treatment combination Stribild, the company immediately priced that treatment at $28,500 per patient, per year, Wholesale Acquisition Cost (WAC)—a whopping 37% more than the price of Gilead’s best-selling three-in-one AIDS treatment, Atripla. For the record, $28,500 is more than most U.S. AIDS patients earn in any given year!”
“For Gilead, we have outrage, pure and simple,” said Michael Weinstein, President of AIDS Healthcare Foundation. “There can be no better example of the unbridled greed of the pharmaceutical industry than Gilead’s latest move: pricing its new hepatitis drug at $28,000 per 28-tablet bottle or $1,000 per pill! Gilead’s predatory pricing of Sovaldi is a direct threat to public heath, and it sets the stage for legislators and advocates to demand that officials who purchase drugs for government programs like Medicaid, Medicare and the AIDS Drug Assistance Programs act decisively to rein in pricing and protect patient access to lifesaving medications.”
Gilead did not even pay to research and develop Sovaldi. In 2011—for $11 billion in cash—it purchased Pharmasset, the company that had already developed the drug. Advocates now believe the pricing of Sovaldi is being driven by Gilead’s desire to recoup its financial investment in Pharmasset, and assumes it can accomplish this by charging Medicaid and other taxpayer-funded programs whatever it wants.
AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the largest global AIDS organization, currently provides medical care and/or services to more than 282,000 individuals in 32 countries worldwide in the US, Africa, Latin America/Caribbean, the Asia/Pacific Region and Eastern Europe. To learn more about AHF, please visit our website: www.aidshealth.org, find us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/aidshealth and follow us on Twitter: @aidshealthcare