By NOAM N. LEVEY STAFF WRITER JAN. 21, 2020
The debate over
creating a single government health plan for all Americans may be dominating
the Democratic presidential campaign, but most voters are focused on a more
basic pocketbook issue: prescription drug prices.
In poll after
poll, the high cost of medications is at or near the top of voters’ healthcare
concerns, far outpacing interest in moving all or some people into
Medicare-like coverage.
That, in turn,
is pushing candidates to turn more directly to the issue on the campaign trail
in early primary and caucus states, including Iowa, whose caucuses formally
kick off the race for the nomination in two weeks.
Several
Democratic hopefuls — including Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar — are running television ads in
Iowa highlighting their commitment to tackling drug costs.
“You talk to any
Iowan, and it is almost certain to come up,” said Anthony Carroll, associate
Iowa state director for AARP, the mammoth national advocacy group for seniors,
which has made controlling drug prices a top priority. “What I hear from voters
is that they can’t afford to wait.”
In one recent
poll, two-thirds of Iowa voters identified prescription drugs costs as the most
significant healthcare concern, matched only by worries about overall
out-of-pocket healthcare costs.
The survey by Morning Consult found similar sentiment
among voters in New Hampshire and South Carolina, whose primaries follow the
Iowa caucuses.
Similarly,
a nationwide poll in September by the nonprofit Kaiser
Family Foundation found that 70% of Americans wanted members of Congress to
make lowering drug prices their top priority.
By contrast,
just 30% of people said enacting a national “Medicare for all” plan should top
lawmakers’ agenda.
“In all our
polling over the years, healthcare costs are at or near the top, but it is
prescription drugs that are really the salient issue,” said the foundation’s
Mollyann Brodie, who has been polling Americans about healthcare issues for
more than two decades.
“People are
refilling their prescriptions constantly and they see what they’re paying.”
The challenge
has become particularly acute for patients as health insurance
deductibles soar, forcing growing numbers of Americans to skip care and
delay filling prescriptions.
A focus on drug
prices is likely to not only resonate with Democratic primary voters, but also
to highlight one of President Trump’s major policy vulnerabilities.
Seven in 10
Americans don’t believe Trump is doing enough to lower drug prices, according
to a November poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Trump made
controlling drug prices a key plank of his 2016 campaign, promising to deliver
relief to patients by, among other things, allowing Medicare to start
negotiating directly with drug companies.
But the
president has since reversed positions, rejecting a proposal by House Democrats
to give the federal program negotiating authority.
At the same
time, several other Trump administration initiatives to rein in prices have
stalled or been abandoned, including proposals to restrict rebates that
insurers and drug companies often negotiate and to require drugmakers to list
prices in television ads.
Three years
after taking office, Trump’s proposed regulation to allow importation of
lower-priced drugs from Canada and elsewhere is only now being reviewed and may
not be finalized for months.
“This is a real
albatross for Trump,” said Chris Jennings, a longtime Democratic health policy
advisor who worked in the White House under former Presidents Clinton and
Obama. “Democrats are well positioned to hold him accountable.”
Nevertheless,
Democratic presidential hopefuls thus far have spent much more time jousting
over their competing plans for expanding Medicare coverage, a pattern that was
repeated at last week’s debate in Iowa.
Sanders and
Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren are pushing plans to move all Americans
into a government health plan.
Other
candidates, including former Vice President Joe Biden and former South Bend,
Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg, advocate more incremental strategies for expanding
health coverage that build on the 2010 Affordable Care Act.
That debate
reflects, in part, the fact that Medicare for all remains a major fault line in
Democratic politics.
By contrast,
there is broader agreement in the party about how to rein in drug prices.
The leading
Democratic presidential candidates all support giving Medicare — the government
insurance plan for seniors and disabled people — authority to negotiate lower
prices with drugmakers. Current law prohibits such negotiation.
This idea is
hugely popular among both Democratic and Republican voters. Democrats support
Medicare drug negotiations by a 42-percentage-point margin, while support for
the idea runs 38 percentage points higher than opposition among Republicans,
according to the recent Morning Consult poll.
Many of the
Democratic hopefuls favor loosening restrictions on importing lower-priced
medications from abroad and taking more aggressive steps to prevent drugmakers
from delaying the development of lower-priced generic versions of their drugs.
Several also
support new government-imposed caps on how much pharmaceutical companies can
charge for their products.
Biden has said
he would establish
a review board to assess the value of new drugs and recommend a price,
a model that has effectively restrained prices in
other wealthy countries such as Germany.
Buttigieg said
the federal government should
revoke patents from pharmaceutical companies found guilty of egregious
overpricing.
Warren, who is
in a fierce battle with Sanders for support on the Democratic left, has gone
further, arguing the federal government should
begin manufacturing generic drugs to make cheaper medications
available to patients. That competition would put pressure on drug companies to
lower prices, she says.
The
Massachusetts senator, whose Medicare for all plan stirred intense opposition
after she unveiled it last fall, has concentrated markedly on drugs prices in
recent weeks.
Asked about her
healthcare plans at last week’s debate, Warren didn’t even mention Medicare for
all at first, pledging instead to take executive action if elected to cut
prices on insulin and other drugs.
When a supporter
at a recent town hall in Mason City, Iowa, asked how she would sway voters wary
of her sweeping healthcare plan, Warren swiftly steered the conversation toward
prescription drugs.
“Let’s start
with what’s broken,” she said. “Thirty-six million Americans did not get a
prescription filled last year because they couldn’t afford it.”
Klobuchar, who
has been a leading advocate in Congress for legislation to curb drug prices,
has also made the issue a top-tier item.
And Sanders,
whose Medicare for all plan is arguably the signature issue of his campaign,
routinely holds up what he calls the corruption
of drug companies to assail the failings of the current American
system.
“We will take on
the greed and the corruption of drug companies,” Sanders pledged at a recent
rally in Newton, Iowa.
Having elevated
the issue of drug prices on the campaign trail, Democrats now face another
challenge: They must convince voters that they will be able to deliver
meaningful relief.
House Democrats
last month passed sweeping legislation to tackle high prices and give Medicare
the authority to negotiate for lower prices on up to 250 medications.
But the
pharmaceutical industry retains huge influence in the Capitol, and the bill has
been categorically rejected by Republican leaders in the Senate.
It remains
unclear if lawmakers will be able to reach a compromise on any major prescription
drug legislation this year.
Times staff
writers Melanie Mason and Seema Mehta contributed to this report.
https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2020-01-21/high-cost-prescription-drugs-campaign-issue
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