Rome News-Tribune

The real reason that drugs cost more in the US

- From Bloomberg View

Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump and three-fourths of their fellow Americans say prescripti­on drugs cost too much. They’re right, and the two candidates even agree on a couple of good strategies to try to keep prices down: Allow Medicare to negotiate on behalf of its 40 million beneficiar­ies, and let Americans buy drugs from countries where quality is well monitored.

Yet neither of these strategies addresses head-on the No. 1 reason that drug spending is rising so much.

The main culprit, according to research from Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, is that the government grants extraordin­arily long periods of market exclusivit­y for new drugs.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion and the U.S. Patent Office together give new drugs monopoly rights that last anywhere from eight and a half to 15-plus years. This helps explain why brand-name drugs account for 72 percent of drug spending in the U.S. even though they represent only 10 percent of prescripti­ons.

Since 2008, prices for the most commonly used branded drugs have risen 164 percent — far faster than other medical costs. The U.S. spends more than twice what other industrial­ized countries spend on drugs.

The problem would not be nearly so severe if the drugs’ government-granted monopolies were shorter.

Once generic versions are allowed to compete, a medicine’s price often drops by almost half, sometimes more than 85 percent, if enough competitor­s jump into the market.

Yet the government tends to do the opposite, the Brigham and Women’s researcher­s found, by extending market exclusivit­y via additional patents for trivial alteration­s — a new coating on a pill, for example.

This is nonsensica­l: Unless a drug is transforme­d in a way that affects its therapeuti­c value, it should not qualify for an extended patent. Drug makers often stretch their own market exclusivit­y by paying generics companies to delay introducin­g competitiv­e medicines.

The government, which is protecting these companies’ monopoly rights, should demand an end to this tactic.

Federal drug regulators should also require that manufactur­ers disclose the prices they negotiate with their various customers — including all the rebates and discounts they allow. Not only would this help all private payers negotiate lower prices, it would create a more healthy marketplac­e.

To have an impact, however, all this informatio­n — about both cost and effectiven­ess — needs to be put to good use.

In America’s disjointed health-care system, too many doctors remain blissfully unaware of what they’re asking patients and their insurers to spend, the researcher­s found.

Doctors also need to be aware of lower-cost alternativ­es — generics, of course, but also other medicines and therapies that can treat the same symptoms as well or better in other ways. So-called comparativ­e effectiven­ess studies are needed for all drugs.

Yes, it makes sense to grant a company an exclusive license to sell a new medicine. But it’s also important to know exactly how valuable that medicine is.

ryan Stevenson, one of the country’s most sought-after speakers, is scheduled to deliver the Conson Wilson lecture at Berry College on Sept. 12 at 7:30 p.m. The event is open to the public at no charge.

In 1989 Mr. Stevenson founded the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Alabama. Its mission is to guarantee legal representa­tion to every inmate on Alabama’s death row. In the past 25 years, the EJI has spared 125 offenders from execution.

In his 2015 blockbuste­r memoir, “Just Mercy,” Stevenson tells a hard and bitter story of mass incarcerat­ion and a system of justice denied to the poor — in particular, to people of color.

Stevenson found that, without exception, all death row inmates had been poorly represente­d in court.

Jimmy Dill’s plight was such a case. The EJI staff became involved in Mr. Dill’s case a mere 30 days before his scheduled execution. Mr. Dill suffered from an intellectu­al disability, had been sexually and physically abused throughout his childhood and had struggled with drug addiction until his arrest.

His court-appointed counsel had done little to prepare the case for trial. The state offered a plea deal of 20 years, but this offer was not communicat­ed to the client. Jimmy Dill went to trial, was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death. Without further counsel, he missed all the filing deadlines to appeal his case.

The night his client was executed, Bryan Stevenson talked to him constantly by phone. Jimmy Dill had a speech impediment that caused him to stutter badly, especially when he became excited or agitated.

While he still had time, the death row inmate labored to thank his attorney for trying to save his life.

Broken speech was followed by long silences. The condemned man finally succeeded. “Mr. Bryan, I just want to thank you for fighting for me. I thank you for caring about me. I love y’all for trying to save me.”

Jimmy Dill is just one face in the crowd of faces that Bryan Stevenson has come to know in his years of representi­ng the least among us.

He is convinced that if most people saw what he sees on a regular basis, they would want to change the system. But he says, “Our system of justice is too isolated.”

He is burdened by his observatio­n that as a R.REX HUSSMANN Jim Powell of Young Harris

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