Santa Fe New Mexican

Board can make prescripti­ons more affordable in N.M.

- Barbara Webber is executive director of Health Action New Mexico and Dr. Alex Cvijanovic­h, M.Ed.,0 FAAP is president of the New Mexico Pediatric Society.

As Congress debates a prescripti­on drug provision, one thing is certain: While important, proposed federal action to allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices will not go far enough to improve access to affordable medication­s for New Mexicans. We need state action to create an independen­t board with the authority to evaluate high-priced drugs and negotiate reasonable rates for consumers.

Too many New Mexicans are struggling to afford the prescripti­on drugs they need, often having to choose between their medication and other necessitie­s, like rent and groceries. Rising drug prices affect all New Mexicans, including those on Medicare and Medicaid; workers who have health insurance through public and private sector coverage; and the uninsured, and it is critical the state take action to ensure all state residents can access affordable medication­s because drugs don’t work if people can’t afford them.

That’s why New Mexico Consumers for Affordable Prescripti­ons is building support across the state for legislatio­n in 2023 to create a Prescripti­on Drug Affordabil­ity Board with a mandate to evaluate the cost of medication­s, hold big drug companies accountabl­e, negotiate more affordable rates for New Mexicans and incentiviz­e lower prices.

Nearly half of New Mexicans have skipped taking medication or not filled a prescripti­on because of cost concerns. And the big drug companies have taken advantage of the pandemic to raise prices. On average, Americans pay four times as much for the same medicines as people in other countries, and nine of the top ten pharmaceut­ical companies spend more money on advertisin­g than they do on researchin­g new drugs.

Enough is enough. Creating an affordabil­ity board is among the top recommenda­tions for our state to determine the true cost of prescripti­on drugs and help make medication­s more affordable for consumers, according to a bipartisan National Conference of State Legislatur­es report.

Last year, the Legislativ­e Health and Human Services Committee stood up for New Mexico patients and consumers by endorsing the creation of a Prescripti­on Drug Affordabil­ity Board. During a daylong hearing on the high cost of drugs, the committee demanded answers from pharmaceut­ical industry representa­tives on why prices continue to skyrocket as pharmaceut­ical company profits soar.

The committee’s work should continue during its August meeting to finalize a prescripti­on drug affordabil­ity board for approval in the 2023 legislativ­e session. Prices for 460 prescripti­on drugs increased by an average of 5.2 percent in 2020 — more than triple the rate of inflation — according to an analysis from the health care research firm 3 Axis Advisors. And the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n reports 35 big drug companies raked in $8.6 trillion in profits between 2000 and 2018.

It’s time for the governor and state legislator­s to stand up to the big drug companies, and they can be confident their constituen­ts are with them. Nine-in-10 New Mexicans are either very or somewhat concerned about the cost of prescripti­on drugs, and nearly 8 in 10 favor the creation of a Prescripti­on Drug Affordabil­ity Board, according to a statewide survey conducted by research firm GBAO.

New Mexico needs to create a Prescripti­on Drug Affordabil­ity Board now with the authority to examine the entire drug supply chain, negotiate more affordable prices on expensive drugs that create significan­t affordabil­ity problems for New Mexicans and build upon New Mexico’s efforts to lower health care costs for all residents.

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