Dayton Daily News

Bipartisan agreement sought on health care

Congress pushes to end surprise medical bills, curb high drug prices.

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

— Lawmakers are WASHINGTON trying to set aside their irreconcil­able difference­s over the Obamaera Affordable Care Act and work to reach bipartisan agreement on a more immediate health care issue, lowering costs for people who already have coverage.

Returning from their Fourth of July recess, the Senate and House are pushing to end surprise medical bills, curb high prices for medicines, and limit prescripti­on copays for people with Medicare.

Partisan disagreeme­nts could derail the effort, but lawmakers fear the voters’ verdict in 2020 if politician­s have nothing to show

for all their hand-wringing about drug prices. President Donald Trump has political exposure himself because the big price cuts he promised haven’t materializ­ed. On Friday, he promised an executive order that he said would be intended to enable the U.S. government to pay lower prices for prescrip- tion drugs. The U.S. would pay no more than the lowest amount paid by other nations or companies, he said.

“Frankly, the issue is so urgent for Americans who are facing increasing drug costs that to us it’s really not about who gets the credit,” said Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo. “It’s about what kind of relief we can give to con- sumers.” She serves on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has a role in shaping the legislatio­n.

In the Senate, Republican Lamar Alexander has shepherded bipartisan legislatio­n on surprise medi- cal bills through the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee that he leads. That bill also would raise the legal age for buying tobacco products to 21.

“Obviously we will con- t inue to have significan­t disagreeme­nts on ... Obamacare,” said Alexander. “What we’ve done is shift our focus to the larger topic — or the different topic — of reducing health care costs.” He would like his bill to be on the Senate floor by the end of this month.

Different pieces of legislatio­n are at various stages in a half-dozen committees in the Senate and the House. The Senate seems to hold the keys to what can pass because Republican­s and Democrats have to work together to avoid gridlock on the Senate floor that could sidetrack legislatio­n. In the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is keeping an open line to the Trump administra­tion on drug costs.

“The public demand for action is high on both sides of the aisle and I’m sure these guys are feeling it,” said John Rother of the National Coalition on Health Care, an umbrella group that represents a cross section of business and consumer organizati­ons. “They have to do something, and the ques- tion is, is that something is going to be meaningful, or is it going to be window-dressing?”

A look at some of the major pieces:

Medicare drug negotiatio­ns

House Democrats are pushing for a floor vote on authorizin­g Medicare to directly negotiate prescripti­on drug prices. Legislatio­n from Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, would empower the government to license generic competitio­n if the manufac- turer of a brand-name drug refuses to deal.

Think of it as an opening bid.

Medicare negotiatio­ns are a nonstarter for Senate Republican­s, and the administra­tion has been opposed although candidate Trump once advo- cated the idea. Liberals in the House say they’re not backing off.

“The first step is we pass a progressiv­e bill in the House and then we see what the Senate takes,” said Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif.

Medicare ‘inflation rebate’

Senators of both par- ties and key lawmakers in the House are looking at requiring drugmakers to pay rebates to the government if the prices of med- ications covered by Medicare escalate beyond a yetto-be-determined measure of inflation.

That wouldn’t solve the problem of high i nitial “launch” prices for brand- name drugs, but it could restrain cost increases for long-available medication­s such as insulin. Democrats say it could be a fallback if they’re not able to get Medicare negotiatio­n authority.

A signal of whether inflation rebates have political traction could come within a couple of weeks when senators are expected to offer a bipartisan compromise. The chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and the committee’s top Democrat, Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, are trying to get a deal to reduce drug costs for federal programs and the people they cover. A senior GOP aide said rebates are under considerat­ion. The aide spoke on condition of anonymity because there’s no final agreement.

Separately, Labor Department data show some signs that prescripti­on drug inflation has eased in recent months.

Limit on Medicare drug copays

Medicare’s “Part D” prescripti­on drug benefit currently has no limit on out-of- pocket costs paid by patients, which means beneficiar­ies taking very expensive medication­s may wind up with copays rivaling a mortgage payment.

Senate and House lawmakers of both parties want to limit those copays, as does the administra­tion. But lawmakers want to pair that with meaningful limits on prescripti­on drug prices.

Medicaid gene therapy

Senate Finance Committee members are considerin­g a Republican idea that would allow the federal-state Medicaid program for low-income people to make installmen­t payments for gene therapy treatments, which can cost $1 million or more.

Surprise medical bills

Alexander’s committee has approved legislatio­n that would hold patients harmless from “surprise” out-of-network bills that can run to tens of thousands of dollars. The House Energy and Commerce Committee is working on a similar bill.

Alexander said the legislatio­n won’t solve every health care problem, but added, “You don’t have to preach the whole Bible in one sermon — you can do one important thing at a time.”

 ?? NYT ?? President Trump has promised an executive order that he said would be intended to enable the U.S. government to pay lower prices for drugs.
NYT President Trump has promised an executive order that he said would be intended to enable the U.S. government to pay lower prices for drugs.

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