Mylan CEO: The Healthcare System Is Broken

Mylan NVMYL
, the seller of a potentially life-saving medical device called EpiPen, saw its share of controversy this week when officials of the US government called into question the company's pricing policies. In 2008 the EpiPen sold for around $100 but have since risen six times in price to just above $600. The company did however address the issue on Thursday and said it will now cut the price of its EpiPen by 50 percent. Related Link:
Mylan Cuts EipPen Costs By 50%
A call was made earlier this week by U.S. Senators for the Federal Trade Commission to investigate the price hikes and Mylan's justification for the price hike. Speaking as a guest on
CNBC's "Squawk Box" segment
on Thursday morning, Mylan's CEO Heather Bresch acknowledged the drug pricing is an issue that needs to be addressed but it is not the only issue. The executive added that the entire healthcare system is in crisis which forces patients to pay full retail prices when buying their drugs and then see their premiums on health insurance rise. She implored patients to get engaged and that the recent scandal involving her company should serve as an "inflection point for this country." "No one's more frustrated than me," Bresch said. "My frustration is, the list price is $608. There is a system. I laid out that there are four or five hands that the product touches, and companies that it goes through before it ever gets to that patient at the counter." She also said that "all involved must also take steps to help meaningfully address the U.S. health care crisis."
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