Latest News | Apr 24, 2023

The Week in Review in Prescription Drug Pricing

Looks like PhRMA has a gold check on Twitter now, which costs $1,000 per month — an easy price for corporations to pay off the back of patients when drugs like Sovaldi are priced at $1,000 per pill.

Welcome To The Week In Review.

1. Up Next: Drug Price Reforms On The Horizon

 2. The Inflation Reduction Act Keeps Helping Patients

3. Big Pharma Myth Busters

BONUS: Check out patient advocate Kat Schroeder’s interview in Virginia Dogwood, where she shares her personal experience with rationing insulin due to high prices and comments on the power of advocacy to finally see the prices of insulin lowered. Thanks for your wise words, Kat!

Have a great weekend, everyone!

Welcome To The Week In Review.

1. HELP Is On The Way

 2. More Money In Patients’ Pockets Thanks To The Inflation Reduction Act

3. No Innovation Found Here

Have a great weekend, everyone!

July is a big month for people who love pumps: The live-action comedy film Barbie comes out AND the Inflation Reduction Act’s $35 monthly insulin copay cap will extend to people on Medicare who use pumps!

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Welcome To The Week In Review.

1. Momentum For Bipartisan Drug Price Reforms

 2. “How Long Can We Go Through Our Savings To Pay For A Drug?”

3. Popular Provisions In The Inflation Reduction Act

Have a great weekend, everyone!

Drugs work best when people can’t afford them … APRIL FOOLS!?

Welcome To The Week In Review.

  1. More Bipartisan Pressure On PBMs

 2. “Saving Money Due To The Inflation Reduction Act”

3. Big Pharma Keeps Gaming The Patent System

BONUS: Another bill to hold Big Pharma accountable! Senators Catherine Cortez Masto and Amy Klobuchar introduced the Lower Drug Costs for Families Act, which would build on the Inflation Reduction Act by extending the inflationary rebate penalty to protect patients with private insurance as well as Medicare. ?

Have a great weekend, everyone!

What do the Princeton Tigers and patients fighting for lower drug prices have in common? They’re both underdogs that recently scored against powerful opponents. ?

Welcome To The Week In Review.

  1. Much More Than A Ban On QALYS

 2. Pandemic Profiteering: Moderna CEO Fails To Justify Vaccine Price Hikes

3. The Hill Fights For Future Reforms

BONUS: People on Medicare are continuing to feel relief thanks to the drug price reforms in the Inflation Reduction Act, including the $35 monthly insulin copay caps and free vaccines

Have a great weekend, everyone!

P4ADNow-H.R.-485-Letter-March-2271

 Patients’ lucky charm this year? The drug price reforms in the Inflation Reduction Act. Less gold in Big Pharma’s coffers and more in the pockets of the people. ?? 

Welcome To The Week In Review.

  1. Savings On The Way Thanks To The Inflation Reduction Act

 2. ? Two More Insulin Manufacturers Bend To The Pressure of Advocates ?

3. Patients Can’t Afford Prescriptions — And PBMs Aren’t Helping

Over one third of Americans say that cost has prevented them from filling a prescription they need, according to a survey published this week. Results showed a sharp discrepancy between men and women, with 43 percent of women saying they have skipped filling their prescriptions due to cost compared to 30 percent of men. One of the reasons patients face such high costs? Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs). PBMs are supposed to negotiate lower drug prices on behalf of patients, but right now it appears that the middlemen pocket their undisclosed rebates from drug manufacturers as profit and leave patients suffering. “PBMs are largely unregulated – and no one really knows what kind of savings are being negotiated on patients’ behalf,” wrote Beverly Goodell, executive director of the Lupus Foundation of New England. We are glad Congressis taking on the issue, and we will keep fighting for PBM reform — along with other drug price reforms — until cost is no longer a barrier to accessing medications patients need. — (The HillPortland TribuneCommonwealth MagazineCitrus County Chronicle)

Have a great weekend, everyone!

“I’m On Medicare, So The Inflation Reduction Act Is Critical To Me”

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Ginny Boynton, a retired lawyer and advocate with Patients For Affordable Drugs Now, met with President Biden last week to share how the Inflation Reduction Act will lower her drug costs. The White House released a new video yesterday that highlights Ginny and President Biden’s conversation just ahead of the president’s speech where he rolled out his 2024 budget that seeks to build upon the new drug price reforms in the Inflation Reduction Act.

“I’m on Medicare, so the Inflation Reduction Act is critical to me,” Ginny, a mother of two who lives with Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome, told the president in Philadelphia last week. “I have a drug that costs $600,000 a year and another that’s $700 a month – and I can’t turn over in bed without it.” 

Ginny’s out-of-pocket costs will total close to $36,000 this year. But thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act, starting in 2025, Ginny and millions of people on Medicare will have their out-of-pocket costs capped at $2,000. The new law also allows Medicare to negotiate the price of some of the most expensive drugs, caps Medicare insulin copays at $35 a month, and curbs drug company price gouging which will lower prices and stop Big Pharma’s monopoly pricing power.

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The White House video featuring Ginny is available on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

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