Are Generic Drugs Safe?

What you need to know when deciding between brand-name drugs and their generic drugs counterparts.

Are generic drugs safe?What youโ€™ve always heard: Switching from brand-name to generic drugs is safe and can save you money. In fact, the average price of a generic medication is 80 percent less than its brand-name alternative. The FDA promises that when a generic drug is approved, it has met โ€œrigorous standardsโ€ of quality, purity, and potencyโ€”a guarantee that makes a swap very appealing.

But wait…: The American College of Cardiology has warned that the absorption rates and potency of generics may differ from those of certain types of brand-name drugsโ€”a discrepancy that could be life-threatening in some cases. With some medications, slight changes in the level of the drug in the blood can cause unintended side effects. For example, too weak a dose of a blood thinner could leave a person vulnerable to a heart attack or stroke; too strong a dose might cause internal bleeding.

The headlines now: By the end of the year, ten top-selling brand-name drugs in America will be available as generics.If youโ€™re taking Lipitor for cholesterol, your doctor might suggest generic atorvastatin instead. Patients with asthma will soon have a choice between Singulair and montelukast. The blood thinner Plavix will soon compete with the generic clopidogerol.

So what should you do?: With any medicationโ€”generic or brand-nameโ€”thereโ€™s a chance of complications, says Sheila Weiss Smith, former director of the Center for Drug Safety at the University of Maryland. But if your health-care professional recommends switching to a generic, you can feel confident about making a change. Generics may not be exact copies of brand-name versions, but because they have the same active ingredients in the same amounts, theyโ€™re just as safe and effective. In the rare cases in which drug strength must be exactโ€”blood thinners or certain drugs for heart failure, for exampleโ€”a doctor should carefully monitor any switch to a generic.

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