January 03,2020
Grassley, Murkowski op-ed: Let Americans unwrap savings on prescription medicine
By Sens. Chuck Grassley
and Lisa Murkowski
These
days it’s seems there’s scant agreement about much of anything in Washington.
However, outside of the nation’s capital, Americans share full-throated
agreement on an issue that really matters: the sky rocketing prices they pay
for prescription medicine.
From
all across the nation, inexplicable price spikes for prescription drugs are
gouging consumers, putting patient health at risk and soaking the taxpayer.
Drug prices are hitting the budgets of everyday Americans and squeezing our
government programs, taking away from health programs that serve older people
and individuals with disabilities.
We
regularly hear from families who worry about paying for life-saving insulin and
from seniors who struggle to pay for their prescription medicine to manage
chronic illnesses and debilitating conditions.
Although
it’s hard to break the partisan sound barrier, we’ve gotten the message and are
working to deliver drug pricing reform that will make prescription medicine more
affordable for tens of millions of Americans.
After
months of bipartisan deliberation and discovery in the Senate Finance
Committee, the Senate is pushing to get the Prescription Drug Pricing
Reduction Act across the legislative finish line.
This
bill puts patient health and pocketbooks first. For the first time ever, it
would place a $3,100 annual cap for out-of-pocket drug costs for seniors and
spread out payments for high-cost drug expenses. It lowers the amount that
Medicare beneficiaries have to pay for drugs before they hit this out-of-pocket
cap. During congressional hearings of the Senate Finance Committee, testimony
from pharmacy executives, drug chain middlemen, patients and other stakeholders
affirmed a stark reality. Rising drug prices in America require reforms.
The
Prescription Drug Pricing Reduction Act continues to build bipartisan
support and has the best chance to deliver real relief. President Donald Trump
supports the bill. He’s ready to sign it into law and deliver on his promise to
lower drug costs for Americans.
The
murky drug supply chain needs stronger transparency tools that will bring
accountability and competition to the system. This bill would require Part D
plans and middlemen to work with pharmacies to reduce costs for consumers. It
would apply rebates and fees to improve cost accountability. For example, the
bill would set an inflation penalty that requires pharmaceutical companies to
pay rebates if they increase prices faster than the rate of inflation. This
common sense solution would help curb runaway cost-inflation at taxpayer
expense.
The
Senate bill would not derail innovation or undermine America’s system of free
enterprise, which has helped launch lifesaving cures and treatment from one
generation to the next. We’re trying to fix what’s broken, not to break what’s
working. Americans don’t want or deserve government-run controls that would
trim access to life-saving cures and treatments.
Between
our strong fishing heritage in the Last Frontier and proud agrarian heritage in
the Hawkeye State, we know when it’s time to fish or cut bait. We’re calling on
members of Congress to climb aboard our bipartisan boat to help reel in the
win.
Let’s
end the partisan bickering and the big-money influence that gets in the way of
the people’s business. This bill would lower drug costs, hold Big Pharma
accountable and protect medical innovation. Getting the Prescription Drug
Pricing Reduction Act to the president’s desk would make a great New Year’s
resolution for Congress.
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