February 12, 2018
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald
Trump makes big promises to reduce prescription drug costs, but his
administration is gravitating to relatively modest steps such as letting
Medicare patients share in manufacturer rebates.
Those ideas would represent tangible
change and they have a realistic chance of being enacted. But it's not like
calling for Medicare to negotiate drug prices.
Skeptics say the overall approach is
underwhelming, and Trump risks being seen as an ally of the powerful
pharmaceutical industry, not its disrupter.
The White House Council of Economic
Advisers has released a 30-page strategy for reducing drug costs, and it calls
current policies "neither wise nor just." The plan, outlined before
Trump releases his new budget proposal Monday, focuses mainly on Medicare and
Medicaid changes, along with ideas for speeding drug approvals and fostering
competition.
"Despite promises to drastically
lower prices the mix of proposed changes does not appear likely to do so, even
though there are some constructive proposals," said John Rother, CEO of
the National Coalition on Health Care, an advocacy group whose members include
consumer organizations, medical societies, hospitals and insurers.
Polls show the high cost of drugs is
a top concern of Americans, regardless of political leanings. In his State of
the Union speech, Trump seemed to foreshadow major change, saying "fixing
the injustice of high drug prices" is a top priority this year.
"And prices will come down
substantially," Trump added. "Watch."
As a candidate, Trump advocated
Medicare negotiations and he called for allowing consumers to import
lower-priced medicines from abroad. But the White House strategy paper veers
away from such dramatic steps. His new health secretary, Alex Azar, was a top executive
at pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly.
Medicare negotiations and drug
importation are unacceptable to the drug industry, which has spent tens of
millions of dollars since Trump's inauguration to influence the Washington
conversation around drug prices, including a high-profile TV advertising
campaign portraying its scientists as medical trailblazers.
The White House strategy largely
sidesteps the question of whether drugmakers set their prices too high to start
with. Rather, it recommends changes to policies that the administration
believes unwittingly lead to higher prices, and suggests ways to speed drugs to
market and increase competition.
It takes aim at foreign governments
that dictate what drug companies can charge their own citizens. Trump often has
noted that the same medications Americans struggle to pay for can be bought for
much less abroad.
The White House report examined 35 economically advanced
countries, and found that U.S. consumers and taxpayers pay for more than 70
percent of drug company profits that fund innovation.
"Other nations are free-riding,
or taking unfair advantage," according to the review.
The industry defends its pricing by
saying companies have to recoup considerable research and drug development
costs within the limited window when brand drugs are protected from generic
competition. But examples of profit-seeking abound.
An investigation by Sens. Charles
Grassley, R-Iowa, and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., in 2015 found that the makers of the
breakthrough hepatitis C drug Sovaldi decided to charge roughly $1,000 per pill
even though the company's own analysis showed a lower price would allow more
patients to be treated. Gilead Sciences disagreed with the senators' conclusion
that it put profits before patients.
The White House strategy recommends:
—working with states to revise
Medicaid rules so manufacturers don't have an incentive to set artificially
high prices due to the rebates they provide the program for low-income people.
—changing the way Medicare pays for
drugs administered in a doctor's office so Medicare doesn't reimburse based on
a fixed percentage of a drug's cost. Critics say the current system creates an
incentive for doctors to prescribe more expensive medications. The Obama
administration proposed a similar change, but had to back off.
—changing a requirement that insurers
in Medicare's prescription program cover at least two different medications in
each broad class of drugs. In some cases, that can tie the hands of insurers
trying to negotiate lower prices.
—requiring insurers to share rebates
from drug companies with patients. Drugmakers use the rebates to help gain
market share. Insurers say they plow the money into reducing premiums. But
patient copayments are usually based on the full price of the drug, before rebates.
The issue is a major source of friction between drug companies and insurers.
—revising the Food and Drug
Administration's drug review and approval process to promote competition.
Many of the ideas can be pursued by
the administration through rule-making, which means Trump can drive change
without a balky Congress. But whether that translates into a big hit with the
public is unclear. There's no estimate from the White House of the potential
impact on prices.
Financial analyst and former drug
company executive Richard Evans said the administration plan would help bring
down costs, but not to the same degree as giving Medicare a direct role in
setting prices.
"Convincing the average voter
who is upset about drug prices that this is the path to righteousness is going
to be a hard sell," Evans said.
https://insurancenewsnet.com/oarticle/trumps-big-promises-on-drug-costs-followed-by-modest-steps
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