What is Generic Medicine?
- The term "generic medicine" refers to medications that are produced and commercialized without patent protection.
- Since drug companies lay out high costs to research, develop and market brand-name drugs, they usually receive a 20-year patent protection for the medicines they create. Only after that period can other drug companies sell generic versions of patented medicines.
- Generic medicines and brand-name drugs contain the same active ingredients (the chemicals responsible for their therapeutic effect). However, their inactive ingredients, form, shape or color usually differ.
- Since generic medicines have the same active ingredients, same mechanism of action, as well as the same benefits and side effects as their brand-name counterparts, they can treat the same conditions.
- Generic medicines are not dangerous, cheap, ineffective versions of branded drugs. To be licensed, generics have to prove their efficacy and go through the same legal process as other pharmaceuticals.
- Beyond therapeutic effectiveness, generic medicine provides increased competition, which drives prices down, to the advantage of consumers and other payers.