San Antonio Express-News

Biden overstated the monthly Medicare cost for insulin

- By Samantha Putterman Politifact copy chief Matthew Crowley contribute­d to this report.

The claim: President Joe Biden told the crowd at a March 19 campaign reception in Reno, Nev., that he’s fought for years to allow Medicare to negotiate with drug companies.

“How many of you know someone who needs insulin?” Biden asked. “OK, well, guess what? It was costing 400 bucks a month on average. It now costs $35 a month.”

The ruling: Half true. Biden said Medicare beneficiar­ies used to pay an average of $400 per month for insulin and are now paying $35 per month.

The Inflation Reduction Act capped the monthly price of insulin at $35 for Medicare enrollees, starting in 2023. The change built in price predictabi­lity and helped insulin users save hundreds of dollars a year.

However, most Medicare enrollees were not paying a monthly average of $400 before these changes, according to experts and government data. Costs vary, so it is possible some people paid that much in a given month, depending on their coverage phase and dosage.

Research has shown that patients with private insurance or Medicare often paid more than $35 a month for their insulin, sometimes much more, but not as high as the $400 average Biden cited.

Discussion

The cost of insulin in the United States has risen considerab­ly in recent years, with some estimates finding that Americans have paid around 10 times more for the drug than people in other developed countries.

But recent changes by the government and drug manufactur­ers have started to drive insulin prices down.

We’ve heard Biden make this point several times on the campaign trail — in other instances, he has said beneficiar­ies were paying “as much as” $400 a month — so we wanted to look into it. The Inflation Reduction Act, which Biden signed in 2022, caps out-of-pocket insulin costs at $35 a month for Medicare enrollees. The cap took effect in 2023. In response, three drug manufactur­ers said they planned to reduce the price of insulin to $35 through price caps or savings programs.

The legislatio­n also helped patients by clarifying how much they would have to pay for insulin and other drugs.

But Biden overstated the average monthly cost that Medicare beneficiar­ies were paying before the law. One government estimate for out-of-pocket insulin costs found that people with diabetes enrolled in Medicare or private insurance paid an average of $452 a year — not a month, as Biden said. That’s according to a December 2022 report by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services using 2019 data. Uninsured users, however, paid more than twice as much on average for the drug, or about $996 annually.

More than 37 million Americans have diabetes, and more than 7 million of them need insulin to control their blood sugar levels and prevent dangerous complicati­ons. Of the Americans who take the drug, about 52% are on Medicare.it’s unlikely that many Medicare enrollees were paying the $400 out-of-pocket monthly average Biden referred to, though it could be on target for some people, especially if they’re uninsured, drug pricing experts told us.

“It would be more accurate to say that it could cost people on Medicare over $400 for a month of insulin, but the average cost would have been quite a bit lower than $400 on Medicare,” said Stacie Dusetzina, a health policy professor at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.

Medicare Part D, also called the Medicare prescripti­on drug benefit, helps beneficiar­ies pay for self-administer­ed prescripti­ons. The benefit has several phases, including a deductible, an initial coverage phase, a coverage gap phase and catastroph­ic coverage. What Medicare beneficiar­ies pay for their prescripti­ons often depends on which phase they’re in.

“It is confusing, because the amount that a person was supposed to pay jumps around a lot in the Part D benefit,” Dusetzina said. For example, Dusetzina said that Medicare beneficiar­ies would be more likely to pay $400 a month for insulin during months when they hadn’t yet met their deductible.

Dr. Mariana Socal, an associate scientist at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said it’s also difficult to estimate insulin’s precise cost under Medicare because individual prices hinge on other factors, such as how many other prescripti­on medication­s patients take. “Because the Medicare program has multiple instances where the patient is required to pay a coinsuranc­e (percentage of the drug’s cost) to get their drug, it is very likely that patients were paying much more than $35 per month, on average, before the cap establishe­d by the Inflation Reduction Act went into effect,” Socal wrote in an email.

There are different ways to administer insulin, including through a pump, inhaler or pen injector filled with the medicine.

In a 2023 report, U.S. Health and Human Services department researcher­s estimated that about 37% of insulin fills for Medicare enrollees cost patients more than $35, and 24% of fills exceeded $70. Nationally, the average out-of-pocket cost for insulin was $58 per fill, typically for a 30-day supply, the report found. Patients with private insurance or Medicare paid about $63 per fill, on average.

For people with employer-sponsored insurance, the average monthly out-of-pocket spending on insulin in 2019 was $82, according to an October 2021 report by the Health Care Cost Institute, a nonprofit that studies health care prices. The study found that the majority were spending an average of $35 a month, or lower, on the drug. But among the “8.7% of individual­s in the highest spending category,” the median monthly out-of-pocket spending on insulin was about $315, the study said.

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