- Posted August 01, 2014
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
State inmates may get costly hepatitis C drug
LANSING (AP) - A new hepatitis C treatment that costs $1,000 pill is expected to be available to Michigan inmates.
The Detroit News reports the Michigan Department of Corrections 2015 budget, which takes effect Oct. 1, includes $4.4 million for the drug, which holds promise for a cure for the liver-damaging disease.
Corrections spokesman Russ Marlan says pills will be "targeted to the serious cases where the traditional hepatitis C drugs have been ineffective."
Meanwhile, Michigan Department of Community Health spokeswoman Angela Minicuci says the drug is being provided on a "case by case" basis to non-inmate Medicaid patients.
Illinois and other states are restricting Sovaldi's use, according to a July 23 earnings call held by the drug's maker, California-based Gilead Sciences Inc. The Food and Drug Administration approved Sovaldi in December.
Published: Fri, Aug 01, 2014
headlines Oakland County
- Judge’s memorial unveiled
- Judge to lead community-based behavioral health workshop
- ABA President Michelle A. Behnke calls Equity Summit 2026 ‘a step towards action’
- Michigan Human Trafficking Commission launches quarterly newsletter
- Nessel files testimony to protect ratepayers in Google data center proposal
headlines National
- Bill Kurtis’ memoir tells how law school trained him for covering trials
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Justice Barrett’s home targeted in attempted swatting call
- Texting-and-driving charges dropped against woman without right hand
- Fender warns guitar makers to stop producing Stratocaster look-a-likes
- General counsel compensation climbs, aligned with equity and company scale




