The ABC news website (an Australian national news service funded by the Australian government) reports on a group of high school students from Sydney Australia who have managed to recreate the active ingredient in Daraprim for a mere $20.
Daraprim has received a lot of coverage recently after Turing Pharmaceuticals who owns the patent, initially raised the price of the drug from $13.50 to $750.00, though they have since stated that the price will be reduced.
From the article:
For $US20, a group of high school students has created 3.7 grams of an active ingredient used in the medicine Daraprim, which would sell in the United States for between $US35,000 and $US110,000.
Pyrimethamine, the active ingredient in Daraprim, treats a parasitic infection in people with weak immune systems such as pregnant women and HIV patients.
In August 2015, the price of Daraprim in the US rose from $US13.50 per tablet to $US750 when Turing Pharmaceuticals, and its controversial then-chief executive Martin Shkreli, acquired the drug's exclusive rights and hiked up the price.
Since then, the 17-year-olds from Sydney Grammar have worked in their school laboratory to create the drug cheaply in order to draw attention to its inflated price overseas, which student Milan Leonard said was "ridiculous".
(Score: 2) by Pino P on Thursday December 01 2016, @06:05PM
what was the last time you voted or campaigned for a politician who firmly opposes patents and copyrights?
When I donated to Larry Lessig's presidential campaign, which the DNC obstructed by playing Calvinball with debate eligibility.
Other candidates don't include anti-copyright planks in their platform because they know they'll lose news coverage that way. All major U.S. TV news sources have a conflict of interest against anti-copyright candidates because NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, and Fox News all share a parent company with an MPAA movie studio: Universal, Disney, Paramount, Warner Bros., and Last Century Fox respectively.