
Generic Zocor : Coming this summer along with a generic for Pravachol
This summer, generic versions of two statins, Pravachol and Zocor, will be sold at prices lower than what the brand names now command, reports the May issue of the Harvard Heart Letter.
If you have been taking Pravachol or Zocor, switching to a generic version of the same drug makes sense, says the Harvard Heart Letter. Generic drugs are the same as the brand-name version in all but looks, inactive ingredients, and price. By law a generic drug must:
- contain the same active ingredients as the brand-name drug
- be identical in strength, dosage, and administration
- work the same way in the body
- meet the same standards for quality
- be made by the same rules the FDA has set for the brand-name drug.
The difference? Generic drugs cost less.
What if you are taking a statin that doesn’t yet have a generic equivalent, such as Crestor, Lescol, or Lipitor? Although the statins are chemically different, they all lower total and LDL cholesterol. Insurers will almost certainly try to move people to generics, states the Harvard Heart Letter. However, some statins are more powerful than others. If you need to ratchet your cholesterol way down, talk with your doctor to see if going generic makes sense.
So far, Americans haven't been that good about switching from costly brand-name drugs to less expensive but equally effective generics. With effective generic statins on the market, maybe it's time to make the switch.
Also in this issue of the Harvard Heart Letter
- Beyond the bulge: A new look at heart disease in women
- Ask the doctor: MRIs and stents
- Ask the doctor: Can fried fish be good for my heart?
- Follow-up: Procedures for atrial fibrillation
- Heart Beat: Heart hurt by carbon monoxide poisoning
- Heart Beat: Coffee may slow the flow
- Heart Beat: Longer survival, more cases, boost heart failure population
- Heart Beat: Safety of bypass drug questioned
- Better diet? No pressure.
- A switch in time saves more than nine
- Eating to lower blood pressure
- May 2006 HeartBeat references
More Harvard Health News »
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Harvard Health Publications publishes five monthly newsletters--Harvard Health Letter, Harvard Women's Health Watch, Harvard Men's Health Watch, Harvard Mental Health Letter, and Harvard Heart Letter--as well as more than 50 special health reports and books drawing on the expertise of the 8,000 faculty physicians at Harvard Medical School and its world-famous affiliated hospitals.
