Porterville Recorder

Public supports medicare negotiatin­g drug prices

- KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

As Congress debates cutting prescripti­on drug costs, a poll released Tuesday found the vast majority of adults — regardless of their political party or age — support letting the federal government negotiate drug prices for Medicare beneficiar­ies and those in private health insurance plans.

The argument pharmaceut­ical companies need to charge high prices to invest in research and develop new drugs does little to change that sentiment, according to the new KFF poll. Most respondent­s agreed the negotiatio­n strategy is needed because Americans pay more than people in other countries and because companies’ profits are too high.

Various polls, in addition to KFF’S, have found the plan to allow Medicare to negotiate prescripti­on drug prices to be popular. (KHN is an editoriall­y independen­t program of KFF). The policy has polled favorably for at least the past six years, according to Ashley Kirzinger, associate director of public opinion and survey research at KFF.

Still, congressio­nal lawmakers have yet to reach a consensus on whether to include such a provision in the major reconcilia­tion bill aimed at funding President Joe Biden’s domestic policy agenda and enhancing social programs. Republican lawmakers generally oppose efforts to impose price restraints on prescripti­on drugs. Democrats in the House are pushing a bill that would allow changes in Medicare drug policies, including negotiatio­ns of prices for some medication­s. The bill passed the House last year but has run into opposition this fall. A few moderate Democrats have introduced a narrower approach.

The KFF poll found 83 percent of the public — including 91 percent of Democrats, 85 percent of Independen­ts, 76 percent of Republican­s and 84 percent of seniors — initially favored the federal government negotiatin­g lower drug prices for both Medicare and private insurance. These opinions were relatively unchanged by the arguments in favor or against the policy, the poll found. Even Republican support remained relatively steady, at 71 percent, after hearing concerns about how negotiatio­ns could upend the pharmaceut­ical industry. However, the share of Republican­s who “strongly” favored the plan dipped from 44 percent to 28 percent.

For example, large majorities regardless of party identifica­tion and age found the following argument convincing: “Those in favor say negotiatio­n is needed because Americans pay higher prices than people in other countries, many can’t afford their prescripti­ons, and drug company profits are too high.”

A third, including a slight majority of Republican­s 65 or older, found the following argument convincing: “Those opposed say it would have the government too involved and will lead to fewer new drugs being available in the future.”

In addition, 93 percent — including 90 percent of Republican­s — said even if prescripti­on prices were lower “drug companies would still make enough money to invest in the research needed to develop new drugs,” while just 6 percent said “drug companies need to charge high prices in order to fund the innovative research necessary for developing new drugs.”

These findings represent a change from a June KFF poll, which found attitudes changed after hearing assertions allowing the federal government to negotiate Medicare prescripti­on drug prices could lead to less research and developmen­t or limited access to newer prescripti­ons.

“This (latest) poll did a better job of representi­ng what’s happening in the debate,” said Kirzinger. “The public is hearing both sides of the argument.”

Pharmaceut­ical companies have spent a lot of money on messaging. PHRMA, the industry’s trade group, launched a seven-figure ad campaign against legislatio­n to lower drug prices through negotiatio­n. Pharmaceut­ical companies have spent the most of any single industry on federal lobbying this year and donated sizable sums to House Democrats opposed to the plan, according to Open Secrets.

But the Medicare drug-pricing negotiatio­n plan outlined in H.R. 3 (or the “Elijah E. Cummings Lower Drug Costs Now Act”) is estimated to save roughly $500 billion in federal spending for Medicare drugs over 10 years, according to a Congressio­nal Budget Office estimate. Many Democrats hope to use the savings to expand coverage in Medicare and Medicaid as they piece together their larger spending plan.

The KFF poll also found most people have little or no confidence Biden or Congress will “recommend the right thing” for the country on prescripti­on drug prices. The vast majority expressed the same about drug companies. A slight majority reported confidence in what AARP recommends — and the advocacy group backs the negotiated Medicare prices.

The KFF Health Tracking Poll was conducted from Sept. 23 to Oct. 4 among a nationally representa­tive sample of 1,146 adults, including an oversample of adults 65 and older. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 4 percentage points for the full sample.

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