It’s time to stop talking past each other on drug pricing
Today, the curtain will go up on another act of political theatre in Washington with lots of half-truths, outright myths, and political messaging coming from politicians.
What is good in politics is not the same thing as good policy. I wish that we could have an honest conversation to understand better how the healthcare system in the U.S. works and ways that we can help it work better for patients. While we are unlikely to get that today, here are a few things I wish would get the attention they deserve.
While I understand the temptation to look outside the U.S. for answers, adopting the practices of international systems that limit patient access isn’t a serious answer to the question of how the U.S. healthcare marketplace can work better for patients.
U.S. patients typically have earlier access to newly launched products than patients in other countries with a single negotiator.
As a percentage, what we spend on drugs compared to overall health spending in the U.S. is one of the lowest of economically-similar countries.
The gulf between what drug makers receive (net price) and list price is significant, and a recent report projected that net drug prices are likely to drop between 2% and 5% yearly over the next five years.
For over thirty years, drug companies have given the Medicaid program the best price among nearly all purchasers. Safety net hospitals and others accessing drugs via the 340B program get similar discounts. For many drugs, the size of this discount is so large that states get them free or, starting in 2024, will be paid for using them. Medicare drug plans are also able to tap into discounts that average 23% but, in many instances, are 50-80% of the list price.
In the U.S., we value market forces such as competition that bring the price of about 90% of prescribed medicines (e.g., generics) here to lower levels compared to what we pay versus our peers. As a reminder, there are drug shortages for generic medicines with prices that are too low.
We are in a golden age of biopharmaceutical innovation, and the U.S. is the R&D leader of the world.
Last year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) approved 55 novel drugs – the second-highest over the last 30 years.
There is a complex ecosystem of investors and payors funding this innovation. There are large costs – and risks – with bringing a molecule from the lab to a patient, and recent NPC research suggests that most of the cost of that risk is borne by drug developers.
Physicians credit pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical innovation for the majority of improvements in outcomes for patients diagnosed with debilitating health conditions since 1990.
Proposals such as the interagency guidance on the use of march-in rights are likely to have a serious effect on innovation. In comments to the National Institute for Standards and Technology, NPC pointed out that exercising march-in rights to control costs would be ineffective and has the potential to chill innovation with minimal gain.
Central planning and price regulation don’t lead to innovation. Are we interested in having a serious conversation about how to make the healthcare marketplace work better for patients in the U.S., or are we more interested in political theatre?
Accomplished Leader in Pharmaceutical Market Insights | Expert in Market Access/Payer Research
8moI agree with many of the thoughtful comments(e.g., price transparency), but I disagree with the premise of the post. The very first paragraph, and much of the post presents the same exact talking points that have been used for years. I don't think that the dialogue can move forward until and unless we stop recycling the same talking points.
Pharmacy Informatics at Milliman IntelliScript
8moPart of the problem is price transparency. This is not unique to medications, but pervasive in all of healthcare. When you have "retail" prices that no one pays, what good is it? It is fictional. Rebates, net zero prices, and a list of other price actions distort the market. Health Care consumers don't benefit.
Rewiring prescription drugs for affordability and access
8moJohn — it’s time you and I reconnected and have the discussion you’re looking for! Waltz Health is “rewiring” the supply chain and I agree with you completely — our system can be greatly improved. We think realigning incentives is the key, coupled with a new-to-the-world tech engine to navigate the system on behalf of individuals and plan sponsors. We see pulling the member much closer to the supply chain — the innovators who bring drive to market — represnts the “keys to the kingdom”! Waltz Health has built the system — let’s reconnect soon…and I’ll walk you through it!! For years you’ve been a voice of reason in the Pharmaceutical supply chain, thank you for your leadership!
Health Economist | Public Health & Health Care Data Specialist
8moI'm very interested and I agree that there is a lot of political theatre at play. So, where is a good place to start? I see a potential idea in federally defining drug price. My understanding is that there is no federal definition of a drug price in the commercial market so all negotiations start with list price (i.e. AWP). From 46brooklyn Research "AWP is a price that has no basis in federal law. That inherently makes it a fake price, because there is no oversight of it and more importantly, no robust legal standards that hold its setting accountable." I know there are many prices in the Rx supply chain and some of those are defined in federal law such as WAC and AMP (used in Medicaid), and ASP (which is used in Medicare negotiations). To me, having a price that's established in federal law would be a good market-oriented solution. I'd love to hear others' thoughts.
Making the connection between health policy, reimbursement and access with actionable insights | Consultant | Medicare, Medicaid, Inflation Reduction Act Expert
8moI wish we were ready for a real conversation but hyperbole seems to win.