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Opinion: Why negotiating drug prices won’t hinder new cures

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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved a nasal spray developed by Pfizer as a means to quickly treat the painful symptoms associated with suffering a migraine. (Dreamstime/TNS)




Big Pharma is pulling out all the stops to avoid lowering drug prices for seniors.

Several pharmaceutical companies, including Merck, Johnson & Johnson and Bristol Myers Squibb; the key pharma lobbying group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA); and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have recently filed lawsuits against President Joe Biden’s administration, arguing that the Inflation Reduction Act provision that allows Medicare to negotiate drug prices with pharmaceutical companies is unconstitutional.

Their legal strategy is tantamount to “throwing the kitchen sink at the government,” as one expert described it, with various lawsuits arguing violations to the First, Fifth and Eighth amendments.

The pharmaceutical industry has argued that negotiating Medicare prices with the federal government will force them to pull back on developing groundbreaking new treatments. As Eli Lilly CEO David Ricks said in an interview this summer with CNBC, “I’m really worried about the harm this will do to new cures and possibilities in medicine.”

This argument has long been parroted — invoked by the American Medical Association in the 1950s and again by the American Hospital Association in the 1970s — aiming to scare Americans into believing they will no longer have access to new cures and innovations if the government, in this case Medicare, negotiates over prices.

The argument relies on a central falsehood: that the government does not subsidize investments in pharmaceutical innovation. But evidence shows that public sector investments in basic and applied biomedical research — primarily from the National Institutes of Health — contribute substantively to the emergence of new drugs and drug-related patents.

Amazingly, given the pervasiveness of the industry’s argument, a recent study found that NIH funding contributed to nearly all (99.4%) of FDA-approved drugs from 2010 to 2019, and the magnitude of NIH investment in new drugs is comparable with that of the industry. These findings clearly suggest that the public deserves a more equitable return on its investment relative to the pharmaceutical industry’s investment.

The problem is that the public is largely unaware of the magnitude of its investment and the substantial role it plays in creating new and innovative medicines. This is just one example of a much larger grow-and-hide phenomenon in the U.S., in which the government increasingly funds an ever-growing health care system and yet hides its substantial role.

We Americans are told repeatedly that we have a predominantly private health care system. Official national health expenditure reports suggest the government funds 49% of total expenditures. But if you add up all hidden public subsidies to the private sector, the government funds at least 60% of total national health expenditures, and this is almost certainly an underestimate. Most point to public insurance to describe the government’s role in health care, but it is far more widespread — not only for pharmaceuticals but throughout health care infrastructure.

The public’s misunderstanding about the role of government in health care is not an accident. The scope of public funding is intentionally hidden from the American public. First, and not unexpectedly, most companies actively hide the subsidies they accept from government (and for which they often aggressively lobby). Pfizer, for example, misleadingly claims it did not receive any government research funding to develop its COVID-19 vaccine, but its partner, BioNTech, was founded based on the NIH-funded mRNA discovery. BioNTech also received $445 million from the German government to assist with vaccine development.

But, second, and much more surprising, the federal government consistently fails to advertise the important role it plays in subsidizing the U.S. health care system, including research and development for drug innovation.

It is time we rethink how and when the government communicates the true nature of its role. The public needs to know that it has already invested in new drug development, and the magnitude of that investment, so it can then understand that Medicare price negotiations must take into account public and private investments to ensure a fair return for the American people.

The first step toward true reform is to reveal what is currently hidden from the American public. Intentionally obscuring the public’s investment gives moneyed interests such as pharmaceutical companies the power to claim “new cures” will be imperiled if they are forced to negotiate. This fearmongering demands legislation aimed at transparency that would clearly detail all government subsidies to private actors, and a reformed discourse that debunks the myth that our health care system is “predominately private.”

Colleen Grogan is a professor of health policy at the University of Chicago and the author of “Grow and Hide: The History of America’s Health Care State.” ©2023 Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency.


Originally published at Colleen Grogan
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