Nycomed is a Switzerland pharmaceutical company. Nycomed was acquired by Takeda Pharmaceuticals in September 2011. Production was located in Norway, Denmark, Poland, Austria, Belgium, Germany, Estonia, India, Mexico, Brazil and Argentina. Head office is located in Zürich, Switzerland. Total revenue was Euro3,400 million in 2006 and the group had 12,000 employees then. The company awarded an annual prize totaling 20,000 euros to four excellent junior scientists at the University of Konstanz. Also, the award promoted the concept of scientific exchange and networking of its winners.
The company name was Nyegaard & Co. from 1890 until 1986 when it was changed to Nycomed. In 1913 it started producing , among these Globoid (copy of Aspirin). In 1969, the revolutionary radiocontrast agent Amipaque was discovered, starting a long process of internationalisation. The next generation product Omnipaque made the company highly successful. In 1986, Nycomed was purchased by the power company Hafslund ASA. In 1994, the diagnostic division of US based Sterling Winthrop was acquired. Then, in 1996, the therapeutics division Nycomed Pharma was demerger whilst the diagnostic division Nycomed Imaging was merged with the United Kingdom company Amersham plc. In 1999, the therapeutics company was established under the name Nycomed as an independent company. In 2007, Nycomed took over the much larger German pharmaceutical company, Altana Pharma. This acquisition made Nycomed one of the world's 25 largest pharmaceutical companies. In 2007 Nycomed acquired American company Bradley Pharmaceuticals. The closing deal was completed on 21 February 2008, and Bradley Pharmaceuticals became an integral part of Nycomed.
Nycomed pursued a strategy of licensing new medicines from research companies and introducing them to Europe. The company provided specialist/hospital products (e.g., Tachosil) throughout Europe. General Practitioner and pharmacy medicines are also provided but in selected countries. Today the company was active throughout Europe and expanded into new markets.
In October 2008, Nycomed Canada, Inc,. was named one of "Canada's Top 100 Employers" by Mediacorp Canada, Inc., and was featured in Maclean's newsmagazine. Later that month, Nycomed Canada was also named one of Greater Toronto's Top Employers, which was announced by the Toronto Star newspaper.
By 2011, Nycomed was a privately held Swiss company; that year Takeda Pharmaceuticals, Japan's biggest drugmaker, bought most of the company for about $14 billion - the deal did not include Nycomed's United States dermatology business. Takeda Buys Nycomed for $14 Billion, Kana Inagaki in Tokyo for the Wall Street Journal, New York, NY, 20 May 2011. Retrieved 1 November 2018. That deal made Takeda the world's 12th biggest drugmaker, which in January 2012, said it would cut about 10% of its workforce by reducing the number of people it employed outside Japan by 2,800 as it sought to 'streamline its global operations after its acquisition of Nycomed', a purchase that had dented its 2011-2012 profit by 31% UPDATE 1-Takeda to cut 10 pct of workforce by March 2016, Reuters news agency, Tokyo, 18 January 2012. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
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