Prices for top Medicare drugs are up a lot

The prices for brand-name drugs have been rising much faster than the rate of inflation for tens of years, reports Leigh Purvis for AARP. Older and disabled Americans with Medicare feel these price increases, especially when they take as many as four or five prescription medicines every month and generally must pay a percentage of the cost of their drugs out of pocket.

In the first two days of this year, NPR reports that drugmakers hiked up the price of 575 drugs by around three to four percent. That price hike is lower than in past years when drug price increases could easily be 10 percent, but higher than the rate of inflation. Because of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), drugmakers will face government penalties for these hikes, but they likely expect to offset the cost of those penalties with greater profits from people in the commercial market.

About 20 percent of people with Medicare say that they manage the cost of their drugs by not filling prescriptions or not taking full doses. The AARP Public Policy Institute analyzed what’s happening with the 25 brand-name drugs that Medicare Part D spends the most on and that are not subject to Medicare drug price negotiation. Medicare spent about $50 billion on these drugs in 2022. Seven million people used these drugs.

The Public Policy Institute found that the list prices for these 25 drugs nearly doubled since they first came to market, well above the rate of inflation. More than 40 percent of the brand-name drugs’ list prices today stem from price increases since they came onto the market.

Purvis concludes that the IRA goes a long way to stop these huge price increases. Not only does it allow Medicare drug price negotiation, but it forces pharmaceutical companies to pay stiff penalties if they raise the price of their drugs above the rate of inflation. The IRA helps to ensure that people with Medicare can afford to fill their prescriptions and to promote good health outcomes.

As of this year, because of the IRA, you should pay no more than $2,000 out-of-pocket for drugs covered through your Medicare Part D drug plan.

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