The Record (Troy, NY)

Congress mulls cap on what Medicare enrollees pay for drugs

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar Associated Press

WASHINGTON(AP) >> With health care a top issue for American voters, Congress may actually be moving toward doing something this year to address the high cost of prescripti­on drugs.

President Donald Trump, Democrats trying to retire him in 2020, and congressio­nal incumbents of both parties all say they want action. Democrats and Republican­s are far apart on whether to empower Medicare to negotiate prices, but there’s enough overlap to allow for agreement in other areas.

High on the list is capping out- of-pocket costs for participan­ts in Medicare’s popular Part D prescripti­on drug program , which has left some beneficiar­ies with bills rivaling a mortgage payment.

The effort to cap out- of-pocket costs for participan­ts in Medicare’s popular Part D program is being considered as part of broader legislatio­n to restrain drug prices.

Limits on high medical and drug bills are already part of most employer-based and private insurance. They’re called “out- of-pocket maximums” and are required under the Obama- era health law for in-network services. But Medicare has remained an outlier even as prices have soared for potent new brand-name drugs, as well as older mainstays such as insulin.

“The issue has my attention,” said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which oversees Medicare. “Out- ofpocket costs are a concern of ours, particular­ly at the catastroph­ic level.” His committee has summoned CEOs from seven pharmaceut­ical companies to a hearing Tuesday.

While Grassley said he hasn’t settled on a specific approach, the committee’s top Democrat,

Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, recently introduced legislatio­n that would cap outof- pocket costs at about $2,650 for Medicare beneficiar­ies taking brandname drugs. One co-sponsor is Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Democratic presidenti­al candidate.

In Des Moines, Iowa, retired special education teacher Gail Orcutt is battling advanced lung cancer due to radon exposure. Although she has Medicare prescripti­on coverage, she paid $2,600 in January for her cancer medication and will pay about $750 monthly for the rest of the year. She said it cost more last year for a different drug — $3,200 initially and then about $820 monthly.

Someday her current drug may stop working, said Orcutt, and then she’d have to go on a different

medication. “What if that is two or three times what I’m paying now?” she said. “It’s not sustainabl­e. The country needs more problem- solving for the common good and not the corporate bottom line.”

At a recent House Ways and Means Committee hearing, three expert witnesses with varied policy views concurred on limiting drug costs for Medicare beneficiar­ies. “This is still the only program that does not provide that protection to its beneficiar­ies,” testified economist Joe Antos of the business-oriented American Enterprise Institute. The House committee also oversees Medicare.

Before the hearing, the committee’s chairman and top Republican released a joint statement unusual in polarized times: “We agree that the time is now to take meaningful action to lower the cost of prescripti­on drugs in the U. S. health care system,” said Reps. Richard Neal, D-Mass., and Kevin Brady, R-Texas.

John Rother of the National Coalition on Health Care is a longtime participan­t in national health care debates, and his organizati­on represents a crosssecti­on of interest groups. “There is a common recognitio­n of a problem, and also a sense that they want to move something this year,” he said.

At issue is the Medicare prescripti­on benefit’s “catastroph­ic” protection. Experts say it was intended as a safeguard but isn’t working that way, either for beneficiar­ies or taxpayers.

Catastroph­ic protection was enacted before the advent of drugs costing $1,000

a pill. It kicks in after beneficiar­ies have spent about $5,100 on medication­s, under a complex formula.

After that, the beneficiar­y is only responsibl­e for 5 percent of the cost of the medication, and taxpayers’ share rises to 80 percent. The patient’s insurer covers the remaining 15 percent.

The problem for beneficiar­ies is that there’s no dollar limit to what they must pay. For example, 5 percent of a drug that costs $200,000 a year works out to $10,000.

Numerous experts also say there’s a problem for taxpayers.

Generally, the Medicare prescripti­on benefit is financed with a mix of government subsidies and beneficiar­y premiums. But in the catastroph­ic portion, most of the bill is passed directly to taxpayers. That neutralize­s the incentive for insurers to negotiate lower prices with drugmakers. Catastroph­ic is the fastest growing cost for Medicare’s Part D.

The administra­tion has supported an approach recommende­d by experts that would shift most of the responsibi­lity for high- cost medication­s onto insurers, while capping what beneficiar­ies must pay. That would force insurers to seek lower prices. But it may well raise premiums.

About 3.6 million Medicare beneficiar­ies with Part D coverage — or 9 percent — had “catastroph­ic” costs in 2015, according to the nonpartisa­n Kaiser Family Foundation. Of those, about 1 million had to pay their share in full because they didn’t qualify for financial assistance provided to lowincome beneficiar­ies.

“This affects people with serious conditions such as cancer and multiple sclerosis,” said Tricia Neuman, a Medicare expert with Kaiser. “People on Medicare can still face huge expenses for their medication because the Medicare drug benefit was designed without a hard cap on out- ofpocket costs.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL ?? Retired public school teacher Gail Orcutt, of Altoona, Iowa, holds some of the prescripti­on drugs she takes.
AP PHOTO/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL Retired public school teacher Gail Orcutt, of Altoona, Iowa, holds some of the prescripti­on drugs she takes.
 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL ?? Retired public school teacher Gail Orcutt, of Altoona, Iowa, looks over some of the prescripti­on drugs she takes. Orcutt pays $2,600the first month of the year, and then $750 every other month for a lung cancer medication. With health care a top issue for American voters, Congress may actually be moving toward doing something this year to address the high cost of prescripti­on drugs.
AP PHOTO/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL Retired public school teacher Gail Orcutt, of Altoona, Iowa, looks over some of the prescripti­on drugs she takes. Orcutt pays $2,600the first month of the year, and then $750 every other month for a lung cancer medication. With health care a top issue for American voters, Congress may actually be moving toward doing something this year to address the high cost of prescripti­on drugs.

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