Anonymous wrote:I actually called the Janssen folks, who now own the pharmaceutical company that makes Concerta. It's NOT exactly the same...Watson is using a "biological equivalent" in their generic. Dosage can be the same, but the chemical make up of it is, in fact, DIFFERENT. I also asked if the delivery system was the same, and while it is, the words "biological equivalent" were stressed to me over the phone.
So, for the folks who are saying it is the exact same medicine, I say look again. It looks the same, and has the same 'dosage', but the chemical makeup of the compounds they are using are different, which is how they can sell them at a cheaper rate. Cheaper is not always necessarily better.
This is incorrect. I have received the "generic" form and what I got was the exact same pill that is labeled as brand. The markings on the pill were exactly the same. Brand Concerta is marked with the letters ALZA and the "generic" that I got I compared to one of my brand pills and it had the same exact markings. A true generic pill will be marked differently. Every pill has to have a distinguished mark so that it can be identified. The pills marked with ALZA is manufactured by Janssen and given to Watson for distrubution under the terms of a settlement agreement from a lawsuit. Depending on your insurance carrier, it isn't exactly cheaper either. When I went back for a refill, the "generic" under the Watson label cost $50 for me whereas the brand under the Janssen label is $35. If they were really using an equivalent chemical that was not exactly the same, Blue Cross/Blue Shield wouldn't have an issue with copay.