The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Drugmakers brace for Trump’s proposals to tackle prices

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to the next few months. U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price has been meeting with pharmacist­s, care providers and pharmacy-benefit managers in recent weeks to discuss ideas for making drugs more affordable.

“The White House is continuing to be thoughtpro­voking and thoughtful around these issues, looking for ways to increase competitio­n but also encourage investment in R&D,” Saunders said in an interview on Tuesday. He anticipate­s “some sort of executive action” linked to controllin­g the cost of medicine.

Trump has repeatedly excoriated pharmaceut­ical companies for high drug costs, saying that drugmakers were “getting away with murder” and threatenin­g to force the industry to bid for government business. Drug prices are typically higher in the U.S. than in other developed countries. Some U.S. politician­s have pushed for greater efforts to tame costs, including the importatio­n of medicines from overseas.

So far, the president has taken no action on the issue. The Trump administra­tion’s proposed 2018 budget contains almost no major proposals that would impact drug prices.

At the White House sessions, drugmakers have suggested ideas such as removing barriers to drugprice contracts based on the results that medicines deliver for patients, Jimenez told investors in Boston on Wednesday.

Novartis expects “to have a solution that will preserve the business model of how we innovate and discover and develop and launch into the U.S., as opposed to some of the bigger and more draconian elements that were discussed earlier,” the CEO of the Swiss pharmaceut­ical giant said.

Allergan’s Saunders said last year that the company would increase prices for its drugs no more than once a year and in increments of less than 10 percent, after a few pharmaceut­ical makers found themselves in the spotlight for what critics called exorbitant price hikes, bringing scrutiny to the entire industry.

“My sense is that we should expect the Trump administra­tion to continue to talk about and look for ways to take action with respect to pricing of pharmaceut­icals,” Saunders said. “I think that should be the baseline and built into the baseline, and that’s something that frankly we at Allergan have been thinking about for a couple of years.”

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