Substandard drugs, not fakes, undermine fight against malaria

By Magdalena Mis LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Poor quality drugs, not fake medicines, are the real threat in fight against malaria, causing deaths and increasing the risk of drug resistance, researchers said on Monday. While previous reports have suggested that up to a third of malaria drugs could be fake, researchers at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine who analyzed anti-malaria drugs in Cambodia and Tanzania, found no evidence of fake medicines.
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Teva to pay $512 million to settle claims of delayed generic Provigil

A sign bearing the logo of Teva is seen in JerusalemTeva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd has agreed to pay $512 million to settle a class action claiming that Cephalon Inc, which Teva bought in 2011, used anticompetitive settlements to delay generic versions of its wakefulness drug Provigil, according to court papers. The settlement is the largest ever to be paid to drug buyers that bought directly from manufacturers over allegations of delaying generic drugs, according to a motion to approve the settlement filed on Friday in Philadelphia. Teva and an attorney for the plaintiffs could not immediately be reached for comment. The lawsuit, filed in 2006 by drug wholesalers and retailers, claimed that Cephalon entered into settlements in patent lawsuits with Teva, Mylan Inc and Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd to keep generic versions of Provigil off the market until 2012.

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