Tag: Pharmaceutical companies

  • Insurers may be ready to support negotiated drug prices

    Insurers may be ready to support negotiated drug prices

    Cancer drug prices keep rising, up from an average of $129 a month in 1975 to an average of over $10,000 a month in 2010. These drugs are increasingly unaffordable, even with insurance, because the insurance companies keep hiking up the copays. In a new twist designed to keep prices sky high and generate greater revenues, the drug companies are attacking health insurers and allying with cancer groups to advocate for lower copays. It could be the drug companies’ undoing; insurers may be ready to support negotiated drug prices.

    You would think the drug companies would be embarrassed by the obscene cancer drug prices they are charging. (Express Scripts says that almost one-third (32 percent) of all health insurer spending on drugs came from one percent of prescriptions for costly specialty drugs.) You would want these drug companies to charge US residents what they charge residents of every other wealthy nation. Instead, they are effectively arguing that everyone with health insurance should pay higher premiums and deductibles.

    If insurance companies were to reduce copays for cancer drugs, there’s no question they would simultaneously increase premiums, deductibles and perhaps copays for other services. More people might be able to afford cancer drugs. But, fewer people would be able to afford insurance premiums, deductibles and other health care services.

    Right now, four states limit drug copays to no more than $150 a month. And, with Pfizer’s lobbying support, many other states are considering similar limits. But, as Karen Ignagni, head of the health insurers’ trade association explains, “it’s a shell game that’s being played on consumers.” Patients, state governments and employers all end up paying higher health care costs as a result of these caps.

    To date, the health insurance industry has not shown any willingness to ally with patients to push for negotiated drug prices. Rather, the drug companies and the health insurers have been allies. Perhaps, the drug companies’ behavior will finally move the insurers to do right by patients, take on the drug companies and argue for drug price negotiation. It’s about time they did. If they do, we would have the drug companies to thank!

  • John Oliver: Drug company marketing strategies and what they mean for you

    John Oliver: Drug company marketing strategies and what they mean for you

     

    John Oliver does a brilliant job of explaining drug company marketing strategies and the implications for us. In short, the drug companies reward doctors to prescribe their drugs to us.

    As Oliver explains, drug companies spend about $24 bilion a year marketing to doctors and generate more than fifteen times that, $329.2 billion, in revenue. They lavish doctors with free lunches and free samples; and they pay them to promote their drugs with other doctors. They buy the doctors’ influence.

    And, their practices can be over the line legally. They have paid billions of dollars to settle lawsuits around allegedly irresponsible marketing practices. Clearly, these steep payments are more than worth the enormous profits the drug companies generate.

    The Affordable Care Act now mandates that drug companies disclose the value of their payments to individual doctors. Check to see what your doctors are taking from them here. Once you know, it is worth considering whether you have the right doctors. And, watch the Oliver video.

  • Why are drug prices in the US twice as much as in Holland and Great Britain?

    Why are drug prices in the US twice as much as in Holland and Great Britain?

    Why are drug prices in the US twice as much as in Holland and more than twice as much as the Brits? Dean Baker at the Center for Economic and Policy Research explains here that the only reason we pay so much more for our prescription drugs than people in every other wealthy nation is because the US Congress allows the pharmaceutical industry to charge whatever they want for their drugs.  No other government allows the drug companies to set the prices for their drugs.

    Americans could save more than $300 billion if we paid the same amount for our drugs as Canadians, who pay about 72 percent of what we pay.  And, if the price of our drugs were the same as the Danes, we could save around $725 billion.

    So if you’re looking to save money on your next trip abroad, consider filling some prescriptions!

  • The cost of cancer drugs: It could bankrupt you

    The cost of cancer drugs: It could bankrupt you

    If you want to understand the power of the pharmaceutical industry to gouge Americans and, in particular, to force Americans with cancer into bankruptcy, you should watch this 60 Minutes piece that aired on October 5, 2014.
  • Drug and device companies paid doctors and hospitals nearly $3.5 billion in the last five months of 2013

    Drug and device companies paid doctors and hospitals nearly $3.5 billion in the last five months of 2013

    New federal data reveals that drug and device companies paid doctors and hospitals significant amounts of money to help promote their products in 2013. Thanks to health care reform, which requires much more accountability and transparency in health care, the Center for Medicare and Medicare Services has just released data showing that in the five months between August and December 2013, 546,000 physicians and 1,360 teaching hospitals received almost $3.5 billion from these medical industries.  To be clear, this does not include money from medical device and drug companies to members of Congress to help ensure that the U.S. government continues to allow them to charge Americans rates for their products twice as high as what other wealthy nations allow.

    To view the Open Payments data for yourself, click here.  It is intended to help the public understand how much money is going to doctors and teaching hospitals from drug and device manufacturers.

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