Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Let federal government negotiate drug prices

- An editorial from the Tampa Bay Times

Oneof the fairest and most effective ways for the nation to reduce its health care costs is for the federal government to use its massive purchasing power to negotiate more affordable prices for prescripti­on drugs. That long recognized reality is a key finding of a recent report by the National Academy of Sciences that makes practical recommenda­tions for reducing drug costs while protecting the role pharmaceut­icals play in the modern healthcare system.

The report, Making Medicines Affordable, is notable for the 32 findings that address the challenge of curbing drug costs in both economic and political terms. To its credit, the academy balanced the debate by drawing attention at the outset to the contributi­on that the drug industry has made in delivering products that have been “very successful” in improving health and fighting disease.

But success, as the academy noted, has come at a price: The nation spends about $500 billion a year on prescripti­ons, or nearly onefifth of the nation’s health care bill. And spending on drugs is the fastest-growing aspect of health care costs, outpacing both inflation and growth in family incomes. Noting that two-thirds of personal bankruptci­es have been attributed either entirely or in part to the burden of health carecosts, the academy found that making prescripti­ons more affordable would serve abroad national interest.

The recommenda­tions would be good for consumers, taxpayers and public health. The federal government should consolidat­e and apply its purchasing power to negotiate drug prices with producers and suppliers, the panel said. It urged Congress to authorize Medicare to negotiate with drugmakers and called for the greater use of less expensive generic drugs as an alternativ­e in some cases to brand-name medicines.

Thereport did not endorse price controls; it took on the pricing floors that exist under the current system. It called for new regulation­s that restrict the ability of drug manufactur­ers to block generics. It said the industry needed to be more transparen­t about pricing and discounts so that consumers could become smarter buyers. And it called for new restrictio­ns on advertisin­g and contacts the drug companies have with doctors and hospitals, which the report said skew the market for fair competitio­n. The academy found the burden of high drug prices falls disproport­ionately on the poor and noted that while generics represent 89 percent of drug prescripti­ons, they account for only 24 percent of the total cost of all prescripti­ons.

The report shows how the nation’s drug costs are impacting America’s pocketbook, which the academy called “unsustaina­ble to society as a whole.” It declared that access to drugs was “an imperative for public health” and took aim at a pricing and regulatory framework that serves the industry more than consumers. With more than half of Americans regularly taking a prescripti­on drug, this is an issue that Congress must address.

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