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						 Drug 
						industry must address image problem over prices: Teva 
						executive 
			
   
            
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		[September 30, 2015] 
		By Bill Berkrot 
			
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - Teva Pharmaceutical 
		Industries Ltd's research chief said on Tuesday the drug industry must 
		act responsibly when it comes to pricing medications, given the mounting 
		anger over the high cost of therapies in the United States. 
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			 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton brought new 
			attention to the issue last week, proposing to cap patients' 
			treatment costs, just one of several ways she would prevent 
			"profiteering" by drugmakers if elected. 
			 
			"The receptivity of the American public to this indicates that this 
			is an issue, and Teva has to pay attention to it just like other 
			pharma," said Michael Hayden, global head of research and 
			development at Teva, the world's largest generic drugmaker. 
			 
			"Politically, I can't see this becoming a reality. But the message 
			is more important than the reality, and the message is that we have 
			to be mindful of what the healthcare system can tolerate," Hayden 
			said in an interview at the PSA Pharmaceutical Strategy Conference 
			in New York. 
			  
			  
			 
			True innovation needs to be rewarded, he said, citing strides 
			against HIV, recent cures for hepatitis C, and those working to 
			develop effective treatments for Alzheimer's disease. 
			 
			"But we need to be responsible too. Our goal is not to make money 
			and disrupt the whole healthcare system," Hayden said. 
			 
			Clinton's proposals include allowing the government's Medicare plan 
			for the elderly to negotiate drug pricing. She suggested that large 
			drugmakers should be made to help increase competition of generic 
			drugs by investing in their production when there is only one 
			manufacturer. 
			 
			Tiny Turing Pharmaceuticals became the latest company to face public 
			ire last week for raising the price of a decades-old treatment for a 
			dangerous parasitic infection to $750 a pill from $13.50 after 
			acquiring it as the sole manufacturer. The company has since said it 
			would roll back the price, but did not specify by how much. 
			
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			Hayden called the Turing example "inappropriate and shocking 
			behavior that undermines what we're trying to do in the industry." 
			 
			Teva has faced criticism for raising the price of its own branded 
			multiple sclerosis drug Copaxone in recent years, a common practice 
			among larger pharmaceutical companies. Hayden countered that Teva's 
			generic medications have saved the U.S. healthcare system $162 
			billion over 10 years. 
			 
			"We need to change the way we're viewed by the public. We're doing 
			good. We're really indispensable to the healthcare system," Hayden 
			said. "Turing and others don't really help that perspective ... We 
			have an image problem." 
			 
			(Reporting by Bill Berkrot; Editing by Bernard Orr) 
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