Alex and Tatsiana, both of you misunderstood the English. (1) a generic drug is the one that has the same ingredients as the patented drug, but is a cheaper version with a different name. Alex got this correct. (2) The ending of this statement means "you may be ON A GENERIC VERSION in the future" - in other words: if you're not taking a generic medication now, you may be taking one in the future.
If you’re taking a prescription drug and not already on a generic version, you may be in the future.
El comentario del autor
With healthcare costs continuing to rise, generic drugs are looking more attractive than ever. The prospect of getting the same drug at a lower cost is tempting to anyone with a large drug bill — patient or insurer alike. The savings to insurers and individuals are massive: prices can drop by 90% or more, almost overnight. In 2012, Plavix and Seroquel, two other blockbusters, lost patent protection too — with just two drugs, it was estimated there would be $10 billion in health care savings created. A “patent cliff” that existed several years ago was expected to shrivel about $255 billion in worldwide patented drug sales over the following five years.If you’re taking a prescription drug and not already on a generic version, you may be in the future.
Traducciones de usuarios (1)
- 1.
Если вы принимаете рецептурный лекарственный препарат, а не дженерик(непатентованный), то возможно будете в будущем.
Traducción agregada por Alex SvPlata en-ru2
Discusión (7)
Uly, правильно ли я понял:
...принимаете рецептурный препарат, а не дженерик(непатентованный), то возможно будете в будущем.
правильно!
Thx 😌
+++Alex
Better? 😊
I don’t know - I don’t understand it. Maybe Alex can tell us what he thinks.