Congress's $1.2 Million a Day Drug Habit—and Pharma's Phony "Gift" to Health Care Reform
Big Pharma pulled off a first-class PR coup last week with its widely celebrated pledge to support health care reform by offering up a package of discounts they claim will run to $80 billion over the next ten years. The highlight of the package, said to be worth about $30 billion, is a 50 percent discount offered to old and disabled people who fall into the "donut hole," the notorious coverage gap in the Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit, which leaves some of us paying as much as $3,000 out of pocket for our meds.
Announcing the agreement, President Obama hailed the drug-makers for
offering "significant relief" to a "continuing injustice that has
placed a great burden on many seniors," and for helping to reach "a
turning point in America's journey toward health care reform." AARP,
the mammoth old people's lobby, was right there at
Obama's shoulder, with head man Barry Rand trumpeting that industry's
progress: "This is an early win for reform and a major step forward. It
is a signal the process is working and will work." The deal was also
seen as a victory for Senate finance committee chair Max Baucus (D-MT),
who engineered negotiations in
his self-assigned role as champion compromiser in the reform debate.
But the real triumph belongs to the drug companies themselves, since
the supposedly magnanimous offer is just what we might expect it to be,
considering the source: another wolf in sheep's clothing from Big
Pharma.
When it comes to securing their interests against even the flimsiest of threats, the drug-makers' pockets appear bottomless. A look at last week's Center for Responsive Politics report on the industry offers an awe-inspiring view of the druggies in action: To begin with, we're not talking about a handful of lobbyists twisting the arms of members of Congress. Pharma had 1,814 flacks at work last year and 1,309 in the first 3 months of this year. That's 12 percent of all the lobbyists in Washington. Last year alone the drug industry spent $234 million on lobbying. In the first three months of this year, it spent more than $66.5 million-$1.2 million a day. And that doesn't include polling, advertising, and research. Among the top recipients of Pharma funds are several members of the Senate finance committee, including Baucus himself, who have positioned themselves as a "coalition of the willing" dedicated to promoting a bipartisan middle ground on health care reform-in other words, minor changes that won't seriously affect private sector profits.
While it continues to spend millions glad-handing elected officials, Big Pharma's latest PR pitch is designed to make the industry look beneficent while preserving-or even enhancing-its profits. As industry analysts quickly recognized, the Medicare discount program is unlikely to hurt the drug-makers' bottom line. Charles A. Butler, a pharmaceutical analyst at the investment bank Barclays Capital, told the New York Times that he did not think the deal would have "a material adverse impact" on drug company earnings. "Because of the discounts," he said, "Medicare beneficiaries are likely to continue filling prescriptions in the doughnut hole, whereas in the past many stopped taking their medications because the drugs were unaffordable to them."
There's a further twist as well, in that the agreement only promises cost reductions on brand name drugs, which account for an increasingly smaller percentage of all prescriptions-a trend that the discount program might actually help to reverse. Reuters business news pointed out that "concessions will be funneled in an area that could generate additional sales volume." Reuters quoted Deutsche Bank analyst Barbara Ryan, who said "roughly 20-25 percent of Medicare D patients reach the doughnut hole, and the majority of them either stop or switch their medications." So Big Pharma's scheme stands to not only keep the drugs flowing to oldsters, but also keep them from changing to lower-priced generic alternatives. It's even conceivable that some Medicare recipients, already struggling with the confusing morass of Part D benefits (which cover various drugs at different rates that can change at any time), might well ask their doctors to switch them from generics to brand name prescriptions, thinking it could save them money.
As a long-term strategy, this all makes good business sense for the drug manufacturers. A study released last year by Wolters Kluwer Health showed "clear evidence of a growing affinity for generics and a continual slide away from brands" since the institution of the Medicare prescription drug program. In 2007, the study found, generics accounted for 63 percent of the Part D market, up from 50 percent just three years earlier. "What's most striking," said a VP of the information services company, "is the fact that of those who discontinue their branded drug therapy in the coverage gap, only 6% return to them after leaving the gap." In other words, seniors keep taking the cheaper generics, even once the government starts picking up the bill again in the new calendar year. Since most Medicare recipients spend more time outside of the donut hole than in it, the drug-makers could actually see a big payoff from their discount program if it keeps a fair number of elders from switching off of brand name drugs.
This is an especially well-timed ploy for Big Pharma, since the patent clock is ticking down on a number of its biggest cash cow drugs, which are taken primarily by older people: The patent on Lipitor-the number one drug in retail sales, with annual sales in 2008 of $7.8 billion-expires next year, along with the patent on the Alzheimer's drug Aricept. Plavix, which weighs in a number three with $4.9 billion, is not far behind, with its patent running out in 2011. And the list goes on (courtesy of a reader on my Unsilent Generation blog).
And suddenly, Big Pharma's generous "concession" starts to look like nothing more or less than a pitch to keep people taking expensive brand name drugs, and keep the government-and the taxpayers-funding them. All this points to the fact that despite their protestations, the drug companies, like the insurance companies, have no real objection to health care "reform," as long as it happens on their terms. The Republican-penned Medicare prescription drug bill, for example, was a huge boon to both industries, opening up a mammoth new market for their products, with the government footing the bill.
What the drug-makers want to avoid, then and now, is an end to what Dean Baker calls "their government-granted monopolies," which allow them "to charge whatever they want. As a result, we pay nearly twice as much for our prescription drugs as people in countries like Canada and Germany." By making voluntary "concessions," the industry positions itself to combat any real change that might affect its profit margins. And with drug spending estimated to total $3.3 trillion over the next decade, $80 billion in discounts is a small price for Big Pharma to pay to preserve its stranglehold on the American health care system. So is $1.2 million a day to preserve its friends in high places in the United States Congress.
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36 Comments so far
Show AllFree public health care and medications for everyone wanting it and this dual choice public/private system will save taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars annually.
Businesses that choose public care for their employees would have no financial obligations or any other responsibilities concerning health care.
If you like private care, keep it, no change.
Ask the President and your representative’s to include this dual public/private option in the health care reform discussion.
The cheapest way to collect money to pay for health care is through a national sales tax, and not by forcing people and companies to purchase questionable insurance to pay excessive costs for services in a failed system.
50 million uninsured people along with everyone else, who wanted to drop private care and receive free public care and medications, including seniors on Medicare, could do so and the annual costs would still be hundreds of billions of dollars less than the $2.5 trillion spent last year
Isn't it a 'conflict of interest' for Congress-critters (and their families) to be involved in any legislation concerning products where they received monies, campaign contributions, and other perks (such as promises of jobs when they retire from Congress) ???? Why aren't these 'connections' being used to bar them from voting on any measures to which they are already biased by way of influence that is NOT in the public interest?
This is CORRUPTION - absolute, undeniable, and indefensible. Why aren't these people being charged for engaging in collusion, price-fixing, extortion, and other related crimes so obviously being committed in full view of the public - not to mention all those deals made - 'behind closed doors' or 'under the table' - for the sole purpose of lining the pockets of both the corrupt corporations and the corrupt politicians that openly admit that 'our' government is owned and controlled by the very corporations Congress is charged with regulating? Has EVERYONE gone INSANE???
Quoting netminnow at 9;53 pm:
Is my medicine re-legalized yet? My grandfather was a runner between pharmacies in the '20s and '30 in Savannah, GA. He told me that many, many times he had to run several ounces at a time of cannibis sativa to various neighboring pharmacies that ran out or go pick some up if his employer ran out. The reason the pharmacies would run out is because it comprised approximately 50% of the ingredients in the formularies dispensed at that time. The pharmacists told him this was because it was the safest drug known and effective for over 3,300 major conditions. Nobody called it marijuana in those days, that was propaganda instituted after alcohol was re-legalized so that the 'revenuers would have guaranteed continued employment in the midst of the Great Depression. He knew it was a crock then and we know it now. End Prohibition Now!!!
..........................................................
support H.R. 2943, the Personal Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults Act of 2009.
.........................................................
Today here is a different angle but the result is to legalize what is an effective medicine for MANY ailments..
Introduced by Congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass.), H.R. 2943 aims to reduce the number of non-violent prisoners and free up law enforcement resources by eliminating federal criminal penalties for possession of up to 3.5 ounces of marijuana, and the not-for-profit transfer of an ounce of marijuana.
For 70 years, our punitive marijuana laws have failed to curb marijuana use. Today, more than 800,000 arrests are made for marijuana offenses every year. 89% of these arrests are for possession, not sale or manufacture. Despite U.S enforcement efforts, our marijuana use rates are the highest of any nation surveyed by the World Health Organization, according to its most recent reports.
Congressman Frank's legislation is a step in the right direction.
No one has died from Marijuana. How many overdoses has big Pharma made possible.
A fool is he or she who believes that pharma, health insurances, banks, Wall Street and even governments, is out to look for the publics' well-being.
seems like you say the same thing that you say to a virgin
thanks for nothing! i hope all these bastards in the congress
and the senate get really sick and then maybe in prison
or some other vile place and have the same shitty insurance
that alot of us are reduced to!talk about a karmic moment!
or perhaps they could die like lee attwater and find out how
many friends they have when the shit hits the fan!
I can't forget that it's our "premiums" and "co-pays" and "out of pockets" that are the source of the profits they use to bribe the politicians to vote against our best interests. Pay or die. The whole thing is nuts.
I have just today become aware of Codex Alimentarius.
Have you heard of it? More and more the truth of Corporate take over is coming out.. Or is it I am becoming more and more aware? How do we fight this?
Would someone tell me if the lobbyists spend hundreds of millions lobbying, and it ain't for advertising, how is it spent? Wining and Dining? Wouldn't they all be dead from alcohol poisoning? My dream.
Lately I don't know what hoops I am supposed to jump through to get get my comments posted. Half of them disappear.
Sorry for the triple post, but I was only doing my best to be heard.
Nietzsche, sometimes patience pays off.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
My Dad is ninety years old today. He and my Mom have spent most of their time in the 'donut hole' since it was a part of health care in the greatest country on earth.
They pay insurance premiums that most people could live on if they had to.
Thanks to the good old USA. Cheers for the grand old flag.
I just hope the poorest taxpayer's back doesn't break before the insurance lobby hires its next troop of lobbyist.
If insurance, health care, and the military had some minimal controls our fiscal problems would shrink to a manageable size.
I suppose this is change we can believe in. By God we are living it.
My Dad is ninety years old today. He and my Mom have spent most of their time in the 'donut hole' since it was a part of health care in the greatest country on earth.
They pay insurance premiums that most people could live on if they had to.
Thanks to the good old USA. Cheers for the grand old flag.
I just hope the poorest taxpayer's back doesn't break before the insurance lobby hires its next troop of lobbyist.
If insurance, health care, and the military had some minimal controls our fiscal problems would shrink to a manageable size.
I suppose this is change we can believe in. By God we are living it.
My Dad is ninety years old today. He and my Mom have spent most of their time in the 'donut hole' since it was a part of health care in the greatest country on earth.
They pay insurance premiums that most people could live on if they had to.
Thanks to the good old USA. Cheers for the grand old flag.
I just hope the poorest taxpayer's back doesn't break before the insurance lobby hires its next troop of lobbyist.
If insurance, health care, and the military had some minimal controls our fiscal problems would shrink to a manageable size.
I suppose this is change we can believe in. By God we are living it.
The article makes it sound like there is a generic for everything. Try being a diabetic on insulin or asthmatic. The cost of the brand name insulin, etc. is high, which puts me into the doughnut hole by June. If I can pay 50% of the cost instead of 100%, I will welcome it. Of course, they will find a way to exempt these drugs.
Banting, Macleod, Best and Collip invented the process for insulin in 1922.
Why are we still paying an arm and a leg for insulin, eh?
"Banting, Macleod, Best and Collip invented the process for insulin in 1922.
Why are we still paying an arm and a leg for insulin, eh?"
The process was for the production of pig or bovine insulin from animal pancreas. Since 1982 human insulin, produced in bacteria from the isolated patented human gene, has been available.
A lot of popular drugs (OxyContin comes to mind...oxycodone was discovered in the late 1800's) have been around forever, but had a minor modification made to them that allowed them to be patented, and thus marked up in price exponentially in relation to the cost of the modification. Corporatism at its best!
Is my medicine re-legalized yet? My grandfather was a runner between pharmacies in the '20s and '30 in Savannah, GA. He told me that many, many times he had to run several ounces at a time of cannibis sativa to various neighboring pharmacies that ran out or go pick some up if his employer ran out. The reason the pharmacies would run out is because it comprised approximately 50% of the ingredients in the formularies dispensed at that time. The pharmacists told him this was because it was the safest drug known and effective for over 3,300 major conditions. Nobody called it marijuana in those days, that was propaganda instituted after alcohol was re-legalized so that the 'revenuers would have guaranteed continued employment in the midst of the Great Depression. He knew it was a crock then and we know it now. End Prohibition Now!!!
I think it was the late great bible thumping propagandist/Bureau of Narcotics Chief Harry Anslinger that made the name 'marijuana' both popular and feared by society.
This is from my neighbor who is now retired from the industry
"Hey...this is pure bullshit....someone with a resentment against big pharma...
I quote here..
"So Big Pharma's scheme stands to not only keep the drugs flowing to oldsters, but also keep them from changing to lower-priced generic alternatives. It's even conceivable that some Medicare recipients, "
This individual doesn't know anything about Medicare D at all....bottom line The dispensing pharmacist must dispense the generic as the only product medicare will pay for....and further 47 of the 50 states insist upon generic first...thus no trade name product can be used ...
The Pharma industry is saying they will discount the cost to donut hole RXs where their product is the only product available....
The people who are against big pharma should stop taking any drug developed or supplied by big pharma if they are really serious...let them go without and lets see how they cope....
They are nothing more than chronic complainers who add nothing to society except hot air and manure ."
Actually, most drugs are developed by the National Institutes of Health, at taxpayer expense, and then the patents are GIVEN to the pharmaceutical companies, with the understanding that they will produce and market the drugs. And rip us off.
Wow! Are we making progress or what? First the insurers save us many billions by raising prices 25% less - that is, a 10 billion dollar increase would be a mere 7.5 billion increase.
Such savings! And all the while protecting the old bottom line.
It's a miracle.
Now big PHRMA is on a cost-cutting kick, maybe (or maybe not) saving seniors a few dollars while increasing their market on higher priced pharmaceuticals.
We may not survive all this largesse.
If Barack Obama really believes this baloney, somebody please send him a calculator - or someone who knows how to use one.
Obama is no dummy, he is just counting on the same people who voted for two terms of George Bush to stay as gullible and reliable as they were for the last eight years. So far that seems to be the case. This man has done a complete about face on just about every issue he brought up during his campaign and few people seem to have noticed. More Kool-Aid for everyone!
"concessions will be funneled in an area that could generate additional sales volume."
Never mind that big pharma is perpetrating a classic racket that across various sectors snookerered generations of USans again and again.
In case anyone is still skeptical of the far-left position for single payer healthcare, look at the following quote from an article on laborforsinglepayer.com. The authors were trying to be as objective as possible in presenting data confirming administrative costs are out of control.
"Although it is expensive for physicians to deal with multiple health plans, each with its own requirements for authorizations, formularies, billing, and so on, it can be argued that having multiple plans generates the benefits that can flow from competition, including innovation and increased patient choice."
Nice intent, guys, but the elite's arguments are as bogus as their ethics are dubious. While it's true that benefits may flow from competition, it's only for products/services that share a user interface (e.g. cars). But insurance forms are highly complex and non-standardized and thus present great burdens on doctors' staffs.
Standard payment forms comes to mind for anyone who has noticed the benefit of standard controls e.g. in cars, but the truth is the elites don't want to streamline healthcare admin. They want the added mammon churn of inefficiency. They are desperate to grow their oppressive economy at all cost.
And yet the real problem is much deeper than non-standard interface. Standard interface is valuable to promote competition and the benefits therein, but only when competition makes sense. But competition doesn't make sense in insurance because it's like telephone - a natural monopoly. Telephone is a natural monopoly because duplicated infrastructure is monstrously inefficient. Insurance is a natural monopoly because multiple-payer destroys the risk pooling.
If you want to build a better economy you have to identify the natural monopolies, identify where competition benefits, and a few other issues, and apply the logic. If you want self-governance, self-determination, you have to put the regulatory task in the hands of the people, via demand-drive in markets & policy. Get busy building the alter-society, people. This one is wrecked.
for profit medicine doesn't work any more than for profit schools, for profit police forces,for profit military
(speaking of which why do allow for profit lawyering, they make all their money with the full force of the government)
docs by the ama ethics code are precluded from entering the for profit side of it, ie the 'free market' they must take the interest of the patients first and have no financial conflicts.... some don't follow this but most do
despite the ama's stance the VAST majority of docs are for single payer
but docs are controlled and licensed by the power structure and so they are limited in what they can do, if they want their children to keep a house to live in and food to eat
change must be grass roots....... people need to see throught to bs........
Thank you djb. You ae right on the money.
**The highlight of the package, said to be worth about $30 billion, is a 50 percent discount offered to old and disabled people who fall into the "donut hole,"**
It's also a stealth tax cut. By doing it this way Pharma can deduct the $30B discount from taxable income.
You ever heard of a lawsuit,
called
Qui Tam?
here you go:
http://www.truthout.org/article/logjam-war-contractor-fraud-suits
check out this one...
you can also check out
truthout.org, and click on
"qui tam"
in the search box...
follow the money
I sure wish the local medical marijuana store would drop it's prices also. And did somebody mention donuts?
Does the 50% discount come at the beginning or the end of the doughnut hole?
As stated above 20 - 25% of patients "reach" the doughnut hole. If the discount is on the front-end, less than 10% of the patients will enter the doughnut hole. If it is on the back end, all 20-25% will remain in the doughnut hole.
What is more insidious is the construction of the dough nut hole. With Part D coverage, the first $295 plus any deductibles are paid by the patient. No savings.
The doughnut hole continues to $2600 where the patient pays 25%. The full $2600 from the patient AND the company are used to reach the "no coverage" zone.
The no coverage zone or doughnut hole continues to $6,154 OOP expense, the patient pays $4350.25 plus deductible
This is close to 75% of the cost of medications - hell of a deal. With this proposal, the cost is reduced by $1727 - the patient still pays 43% of the drug cost plus any deductibles.
Many seniors are living on less than $1000 per month in Social Security. For them to pay $350 - $400 per month for drugs is beyond belief -
I appreciate the fact that Mr Ridgeway is giving us some information on this proposal. He has done a terrible job of painting the reality of the situation.
Many seniors retired in the 1970s and 1980s when Social Security benefits were low. Their benefits have not kept up with drug inflation.
The reason why seniors use rabbit ear televisions - they cannot afford cable.
The reason why seniors suffer from hypothermia - they cannot afford heat and medications.
Imagine living out your final years of life in a cold, dark apartment where you cannot afford cable TV and you have to choose between food and drugs
Mr Obama, you are a fraud - millions of seniors should be cursing you !!
Ducksawce,
Millions of children, millions of Iraquis, millions of unemployed, millions of foreclosed,millions of Afghanis, millions of Pakistanis, millions of Appalachians, millions of uninsureds, millions of Katrina survivors, the list goes on.
More and more seniors are unable to afford a cold, dark apartment and are living under bridges.
When AARP CEO Robert Novelli recently retired he marked the 2003 Medicare Drug Extortion Act as one of the highlights of his career. Big pharma loves Novelli.
I burned my AARP card in 2003.
I've never signed up. I never will.
q
Big Pharma, the same gang that successfully conspired with Big Oil and other vested interests to outlaw hemp and yet spread their violence poison pills. Big Pharma would make a perfect delivery batch for the Roman god of war Mars. I hope Big Pharma fails just like Big Auto !
Judging from the number of big pharma mergers currently in the works, it is apparent that big pharma is taking a cue from the banks and insurance companies by creating companies that are too big to fail, thereby assuring big taxpayer-funded bailouts if they are not satisfied with their boatloads of corporate welfare.
Medicare Part D was the greatest gift the repugs. could have given to big pharma and the health insurance industry. Part D prohibits Medicare from negotiating drug prices, insures seniors and the disabled (I am disabled and have Part D) to $2,400 before hitting "the donut hole", at which the "insured" pays 100% of the cost of their prescription drug. Taxpayers pickup the cost prior to hitting the donut hole. The donut hole continues until the insured pays $3800 out of pocket (but continues to pay monthly premiums), at which point the taxpayers take over again (except for co-pay). Now they are giving a 50% discount on drugs that they themselves mark up as much as 200,000% from the cost of the materials used to make that drug? That means that 1 Cymbalta tablet for example (antidepressant) will only cost $3.00/pill instead of $6.00. After being hospitalized for pneumonia, I received a prescription for 1 tablet of an antibiotic (Leviquin?). The cost of ONE TABLET was $121.00!!! Okay, I guess $66.00 per pill is more reasonable?
Obama, Baucus, and about 99.9% of the "people's" representatives are doing a damn good job...repesenting their cash cows.