The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Fix the cost of drugs — or lose the business

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The high cost of prescripti­on drugs and that market’s maddening complexity have become almost more than the private sector can bear. A fight taking place in Washington right now is over how much control the federal government should exert over the prices of drugs that Medicare buys for its millions of clients.

Under the famous agreement that George W. Bush made to fund Medicare Part D more than a decade ago, Medicare was barred from negotiatin­g drug prices. This was done because Medicare all by itself is the biggest buyer of drugs in the world, and it would be able to essentiall­y dictate the price of prescripti­on drugs.

Drug makers have threatened in response that they’ll refuse to sell drugs to Medicare if they can’t negotiate a fair price for them. The ability to refuse to sell, just like to right to refuse to buy, is a key component of negotiatio­n.

Bills offered by Democratic U.S. senators, including Sherrod Brown of Ohio, would require drugmakers to negotiate under a gun.

If drug makers refuse to sell a drug at what Medicare considers a fair price, the federal government would be able to award a license to a competing drug maker to make that same drug as a generic at a price that Medicare considers fair.

The Republican-controlled Senate is balking at the government taking over the prescripti­on drug business.

But the Senate cannot refuse to act. Nor can President Trump, who has promised to find ways to address the high cost of prescripti­on drugs, if he wants to have a record of legislativ­e success to run for re-election on.

The President has attempted a rule requiring drug prices to be posted in advertisem­ents, just like in car ads. A federal judge blocked it.

The administra­tion withdrew a proposed rule to pass savings from manufactur­er rebates on to Medicare recipients when it was determined that the policy would contribute to higher premiums for senior citizens.

Bringing sanity, access, cost control, and transparen­cy to the prescripti­on-drug market demands a more vigorous role for the government.

There’s just no way around it.

A Republican bill pending in the Senate would add an out-of-pocket maximum for beneficiar­ies. And it would penalize pharmaceut­ical companies if the price of their drugs rise faster than inflation.

We are told that would lead to lower costs for seniors on Medicare by adding an outof-pocket maximum for beneficiar­ies at $3,100 starting in 2022.

The public is demanding action. A poll by Kaiser Family Foundation found 90 percent support for listing the prices of drugs in advertisin­g and 86 percent in favor of allowing the government to negotiate drug prices for Medicare.

The pharmaceut­ical industry is set to have its wings clipped, eventually, and should negotiate a program that brings some predictabi­lity and reasonable pricing to the cost of prescripti­on drugs. The alternativ­e is, quite simply, creeping expropriat­ion of the industry.

Read the full editorial from the Toledo Blade at bit. ly/33vf7aP

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