·
Johnson & Johnson raised U.S. prices on around two dozen
prescription drugs on Thursday.
·
The price increases include the psoriasis treatment Stelara,
prostate cancer drug Zytiga, and blood thinner Xarelto, all among its
top-selling products.
·
J&J joined many other companies that raised U.S. prices on
hundreds of prescription medicines earlier this month.
Published 6:19 AM ET Fri, 11 Jan 2019 Reuters
Johnson
& Johnson raised U.S. prices on around two dozen
prescription drugs on Thursday, including the psoriasis treatment Stelara,
prostate cancer drug Zytiga and blood thinner Xarelto, all among its
top-selling products.
J&J joined many other companies that
raised U.S. prices on hundreds of prescription medicines earlier this month.
Most of the J&J increases were between 6
percent and 7 percent, according to data from Rx Savings Solutions, which helps
health plans and employers seek lower cost prescription medicines.
The increases came on the same day that
Democratic members of Congress introduced proposed legislation aimed at
lowering the cost of prescription drugs for American consumers.
J&J said the average list price increase
on its drugs will be 4.2 percent this year. However, it expects the net price
it actually receives for its medicines to drop. That is because drugmakers
negotiate rebates and discounts off the list price with payers in order to
ensure patient access to their products.
The company does not plan to raise prices on
any more drugs this year, J&J spokesman Ernie Knewitz said.
Drugmakers kicked off 2019 with U.S. price
increases on more than 250 prescription medicines by January 2. That total has
almost doubled, with pharmaceutical companies hiking prices on nearly 490 drugs
by January 10, according to Rx Savings.
This includes insulin price hikes of between
4.4 percent and 5.2 percent by Sanofi and 4.9 percent by Novo
Nordisk.
Sanofi said its increases were below the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services projections for medical inflation,
and that it expects net prices to drop in 2019. Novo Nordisk said its raised
list prices help offset increases in rebates to insurers and pharmacy benefit
managers.
With pressure from lawmakers and the
administration of President Donald Trump intensifying, the pace of
drug increases has been slower than last year, when drugmakers raised prices on
around 650 drugs over the first 10 days of 2018.
The United States, which leaves drug pricing
to market competition, has higher prices than in other countries, where
governments directly or indirectly control costs. That makes it by far the
world's most lucrative market for manufacturers.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services has proposed policy changes aimed at lowering drug prices and passing
on more of the discounts negotiated by health insurers to patients. Those
measures are not expected to provide relief to consumers in the short-term,
however, and fall short of giving government health agencies direct authority
to negotiate or regulate drug prices.
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/01/11/jj-raises-us-prices-on-around-two-dozen-drugs.html
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