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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 9, 2023
Contact:
CMS Media Relations
CMS Media Inquiries
HHS Releases Initial
Guidance for Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program
Under President Biden’s
prescription drug law, drug companies will pay rebates to the federal
government for raising prescription drug prices faster than the rate of
inflation
As
part of President Biden’s historic Inflation Reduction Act, the
nation’s new prescription drug law, for the first time ever, drug
companies will pay rebates to Medicare when their prescription drug
prices increase faster than the rate of inflation for certain drugs
dispensed to people with Medicare. The U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) announced next steps outlining how the Department
will implement the new Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate
Program, which will lower drug costs for millions of Americans. Today,
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released the
initial guidance detailing the requirements and procedures for the new
program.
“There
is no reason Americans should have to pay two to three times more for
the same drugs than people in other countries,” said HHS Secretary
Xavier Becerra. “This Administration is committed to lowering health
care costs, and with President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, we are
delivering results. We are fighting to rein in the excessive cost of
skyrocketing prescription drug prices, and now drug companies that
increase their prices faster than the rate of inflation will have to
pay rebates back to the Medicare Trust Fund.”
“With
today’s guidance, we are continuing to implement the Inflation
Reduction Act, which lowers out-of-pocket drug costs for people with
Medicare and improves the sustainability of the Medicare program for
current and future generations,” said CMS Administrator Chiquita
Brooks-LaSure. “The Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program
will require drug companies with excessive increases in drug prices to
pay rebates to Medicare.”
For
decades, Americans have spent more on prescription drugs than people in
other countries — paying two to three times more for the same drugs.
The Biden-Harris Administration has made lowering high prescription
drug costs in America a key priority, and the new prescription drug law
makes changes to Medicare so that millions of people with Medicare will
spend less on their prescriptions. For the first time ever in Medicare,
through the new Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program,
drug companies will have to pay for increasing prescription drug prices
faster than the rate of inflation. In addition, people with Medicare
may pay a lower coinsurance for certain Medicare Part B drugs.
If
the new prescription drug law had been in place from July 2021 to July
2022, more than 1,200 prescription drugs
potentially would have been subject to the inflation rebates. Under the
Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program, drug companies who
raise prices faster than the rate of inflation will be required to pay
rebates to the Medicare Trust Fund. Below is a timeline of key dates
for implementing the Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate
Program:
- October
1, 2022: Began the first 12-month period for which drug companies
will be required to pay rebates to Medicare for raising prices
that outpace inflation on certain Part D drugs.
- January 1, 2023: Began the first quarterly
period for which drug companies will be required to pay rebates
for raising prices that outpace inflation on certain Part B drugs.
- April 1, 2023: People with Traditional Medicare
and Medicare Advantage may pay a lower coinsurance for certain
Part B drugs with price increases higher than inflation.
- 2025: CMS intends to send the first invoices to
drug companies for the rebates.
The
Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program will require
rebates to the Medicare Trust Fund in cases of price increases that
exceed inflation, particularly brand name drugs, which make up 80
percent of all prescription drug spending. Since one of the primary
drivers of increased prescription drug spending has been increases in
spending per prescription, requiring rebates for price increases above
inflation for drugs already on the market may help reduce future growth
in prescription drug spending.
As
part of the initial guidance released today, CMS is seeking comment
from the public on key topics, including:
- the
process to determine the number of drug units for rebatable drugs;
- reduction of rebate amounts for certain Part B
and Part D rebatable drugs in shortage and in cases of severe
supply chain disruptions;
- the process to impose civil monetary penalties
on manufacturers of Part D rebatable drugs that fail to pay
rebates;
- assuring accuracy of the inflation rebate
payments; and
- other areas.
“Public
feedback is critical to successful implementation of the new drug law,”
said Dr. Meena Seshamani, M.D., Ph.D., CMS Deputy Administrator and
Director of the Center for Medicare. “Technical expertise and feedback
from a wide range of interested parties is crucial for our ability to
strike the right balance in implementing the law, ensuring access to
affordable and innovative therapies.”
Comments
received by March 11, 2023, will be considered for the revised
guidance. CMS anticipates issuing revised guidance later in 2023 for
the Medicare Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program.
View a fact sheet on the Medicare
Prescription Drug Inflation Rebate Program guidance.
Read the Medicare Part B Prescription
Drug Inflation Rebate guidance.
Read the Medicare Part D Prescription
Drug Inflation Rebate guidance.
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