Imperial Valley Press

Don’t let the politician­s make our healthcare worse

- PETER ROFF Peter Roff is a former UPI and U.S. News & World Report columnist who is now affiliated with several Washington D.C.-based public policy organizati­ons. Contact Roff at RoffColumn­s@gmail.com, or follow him on Twitter @PeterRoff.

America used to have the best healthcare system in the world. It may still be, but it’s getting harder to deal with.

Politician­s promising to bring costs down typically hit on “solutions” that made things worse. One innovation they encouraged was the use of middlemen called pharmacy benefit managers – PBMs – which sounded like a good idea at the time, but predictabl­y created a mess.

The three largest PBMs control now more than 80 percent of the retail drug market. They are owned by three of the nation’s biggest insurers who use them to pad the corporate bottom line by taking advantage of the 15-year-long decline in the price of generics, instead of passing the savings on to consumers.

Military families, because of their dependence on the federal government, are particular­ly vulnerable to these kinds of marketplac­e manipulati­ons. Many depend on TRICARE, a Defense Department program that pays for civilian health benefits for U.S. military personnel, retirees, and their dependents. Express Scripts, the CIGNA-owned PBM, is its sole provider.

When TRICARE-participat­ing military families and retirees need prescripti­ons filled, they must use Express Scripts, which announced in September it was kicking more than 14,000 independen­t community pharmacist­s out of its network. By the end of October, these thousands of pharmacies will join Walmart and Sam’s Club, who have also been dropped from the list of approved providers. If that wasn’t bad enough, Kroger – America’s largest grocery chain – was recently forced to terminate its contract with TRICARE to protect its customers from rising prescripti­on costs.

“There is no negotiatin­g, these are take-it-or-leave-it contracts provided from Express Scripts Inc. to a pharmacy,” the National Community Pharmacist­s Associatio­n’s Karry La Violette said in a recent interview.

“If you want to be in the network you take this horrible reimbursem­ent rate or you don’t.”

It’s not pretty and it doesn’t do much to raise the quality of care or keep costs down. You can’t stay in business if your biggest customers, by threatenin­g to go somewhere else if you don’t comply, extract concession­s requiring you to sell an item for less than it costs per unit to make or sell.

A letter sent to the Pentagon by nearly 100 members of the U.S. House of Representa­tives addressed these planned reductions that, because they’re scheduled for October, “may force beneficiar­ies to change pharmacies at a time when many receive annual vaccinatio­ns.”

Cigna and Express Scripts are putting their interests ahead of the interests of the people PBMs were created to serve by squeezing out every penny they can out of military families, pharmacies, and the federal government. TRICARE beneficiar­ies are stuck, watching as their benefits are mismanaged and their options decrease.

Congress and federal regulatory bodies are now involved. That’s no guarantee things will get better, but the pressure is on. The Federal Trade Commission recently launched an investigat­ion into PBMs, and a bipartisan coalition of senators want the agency to complete its inquiry quickly and forward its findings to them.

Using intermedia­ries positioned between manufactur­ers and retailers to negotiate prices should have worked to keep costs down. It would have, if the PBMs had functioned as honest brokers. Instead, big insurers like Cigna and its Express Scripts PBM benefit at the expense of consumers forced to pay inflated prices while seeing their choices reduced.

The whole business makes a mockery of the marketplac­e. If the companies do not clean up their act on their own, Congress and regulators like the FTC’s Lina Kahn will force them to. The politician­s shouldn’t get the chance to make it harder and more complicate­d for people to get the healthcare they need and want.

These companies know what they are doing. They need to stop, and to stop underminin­g free-market principles in the process.

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