HHS Advances Payment Model to Lower
Drug Costs for Patients
The International Pricing
Index (IPI) Model would lower costs for
physician-administered drugs by resetting Medicare payments
based on international prices and introducing competition
On Thursday, the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, through the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), announced and sought input on a
new “International Pricing Index” (IPI) payment model to
reduce what Americans pay for prescription drugs.
Under the IPI model, described in an Advance
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM), Medicare’s payments
for select physician-administered drugs would shift to a
level more closely aligned with prices in other countries.
Overall savings for American taxpayers and patients are
projected to total $17.2 billion over five years.
“President Trump promised that he would bring
down drug prices and put American patients first,” said HHS
Secretary Alex Azar. “With this innovative approach, he is
now proposing historic changes to how Medicare pays for
some of the most expensive prescription drugs, securing for
the American people a share of the price concessions that
drug makers voluntarily give to other countries.”
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