Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Details of promised drug card still being sorted, official says

- RILEY GRIFFIN

A day after President Donald Trump said that Medicare beneficiar­ies would get a $200 prescripti­on discount card within weeks, administra­tion officials said the details are still being worked out and that all the cards wouldn’t be going out before the Nov. 3 election.

The White House is still working on paying for the plan and distributi­ng the cards, a senior official with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said in a Friday briefing. The White House will say more about its plans in the near future, the official said, adding the cards will go out as soon as mechanical­ly possible. Overall, the plan could cost $6.6 billion.

On Thursday, the president said that Americans covered by the federal health care program for seniors and the disabled would receive the cards within weeks to help pay for their pharmaceut­icals.

Spokespeop­le for the industry’s two largest trade organizati­ons, Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America and the Biotechnol­ogy Innovation Organizati­on, said the groups haven’t been given any additional informatio­n on the plan.

Bloomberg News on Thursday reported that the discount cards would be paid for by funds drawn from a demonstrat­ion program Medicare uses to test new payment systems. The cost is expected to be offset by future savings generated from new price cuts Trump has ordered for drugs bought by Medicare, according to a White House official.

Trump framed the cards as a political move, remarking in his speech Thursday that “Joe Biden won’t be doing this.”

“It’s the first time that money has gone from Big Pharma’s pockets to American seniors’ pockets, and this president made sure that it happened ,” said White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said on Friday in a television interview.

Democrats called the cards a blatant attempt to buy votes from elderly people. Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, the senior Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, called the plan a “Taxpayer Funded Bribe” in a statement.

“Trump is resorting to gimmicky coupons that hide the fact that he has totally failed to lower drug prices and that Big Pharma is thriving under his watch,” Wyden said. “Drug companies will be paying as much for this gimmick as Mexico is paying for the Wall.”

Earlier this month, Trump launched a process that could cut some U.S. drug costs by tying prices to those paid by countries with national health systems.

The so-called ‘Most Favored Nation’ order, announced in July, has long been opposed by the pharmaceut­ical industry, which says the move will slash their revenues and stif le innovation. At that same meeting, Trump invited the industry to the negotiatin­g table to find an alternativ­e solution to save patients money on their out-of-pocket drug costs.

But the Trump administra­tion and pharmaceut­ical industry didn’t reach a consensus.

“These drug companies were offered the chance by the president to come in and negotiate and they didn’t negotiate to get to a result,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar during a Friday morning television interview with Fox News. As a result, Azar said, Trump moved forward with the executive order.

Though savings derived from ‘Most Favored Nations’ order will be used to offset the cost of the $200 discount card, according to the White House official, that effort still is in its earliest stages of planning.

The Sept. 13 executive order offered few details, and is merely a first step that instructs Health and Human Services to begin the rule-making process to test “a payment model” for some medicines. The Most Favored Nations order hasn’t been materially implemente­d.

“We will use every tool available — including legal action if necessary — to fight this risky foreign price control scheme,” BIO CEO Michelle McMurry-Heath said at the time.

Even as Health and Human Services officials said on Friday that funding details were still being worked out, Trump’s Former Acting Chief of Staff, Mick Mulvaney, questioned the impact of the move.

“I’m not sure where they got the authority to do it,” said Mulvaney in a television interview with Fox Business on Friday morning.

“If we could have fixed health care with executive orders alone, we would have done that back in 2017,” Mulvaney said. “But I think what you’re seeing here is an important message from the administra­tion that’s says, look, this is what we stand for.”

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