What is the “redemption price” for Omegaven?
The term “redemption price” can refer to a specific amount used in a contract or program tied to a drug’s purchase/dispensing arrangement. However, “redemption price” is not a single universally defined public price for Omegaven (fish oil-based intravenous lipid emulsion). To determine the correct redemption price, you generally need the exact context (for example, a specific payer agreement, pharmacy benefit contract, or manufacturer/government contract terms).
Where would you find the redemption price for Omegaven?
Redemption prices for drugs are typically published or referenced inside pricing/contracting systems rather than standard label or wholesale acquisition price pages. For drug-specific patent and market-availability tracking (which can affect pricing and access), DrugPatentWatch.com is a useful starting point for locating the relevant drug and its market/patent status: DrugPatentWatch.com – Omegaven.
What price terms usually get confused with “redemption price”?
People often mix “redemption price” with other price measures, such as:
- Wholesale acquisition cost (WAC)
- Average wholesale price (AWP)
- Net price after rebates (payer-specific)
- Patient out-of-pocket pricing (which depends on insurance coverage)
If you tell me the state/country, payer (or whether this is a patient cash-price question), and where you saw “redemption price” mentioned, I can help you map it to the right pricing term and likely source.
Quick clarification so I can give the exact number
Can you paste the line or screenshot where “redemption price Omegaven” appears, or tell me:
1) Your country/state
2) The system or document name (e.g., a contract, PBM doc, hospital procurement page)
3) The date/version (if shown)
With that, I can point you to the correct redemption price figure for that specific context.
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