July 23,2019
Grassley, Wyden Introduce Major Prescription Drug Pricing Reform to Lower Costs for Americans
Grassley, Wyden Introduce
Major Prescription Drug Pricing Reform to Lower Costs for Americans
Bipartisan Bill to be
Debated in Committee This Thursday
Legislation Modernizes,
Improves Medicare Part B, Part D and Medicaid
Bill Saves Taxpayers More
Than $100 Billion, Lowers Medicare Beneficiaries’ Out-of-Pocket Costs by $27
Billion and Premiums by $5 Billion, CBO Says
Commercial Market Also
Sees Lower Costs
Washington – Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley
(R-Iowa) and Ranking Member Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) today introduced a chairman’s
mark, the Prescription Drug Pricing Reduction Act (PDPRA) of 2019, to
lower the price of prescription drugs for Americans. The committee also
announced a markup for the legislation will be held on Thursday, July 25 at
9:30 a.m. ET.
“The
cost of many prescription drugs is too high. Without action, we’re on an
unsustainable path for taxpayers, seniors and all Americans. A working class
family shouldn’t have to pick between making their rent or mortgage payment and
being able to afford their kids’ medications. A single mother with diabetes
shouldn’t have to pick between groceries and insulin. A senior citizen who’s
paid into the system their entire life shouldn’t have to cut pills in half to
be able to make it to the next refill. The time to act on prescription drug
prices is now,” Grassley and Wyden said.
“We’ve
been working on a bipartisan basis for more than six months to craft
legislation that begins to address the broken prescription drug supply
chain. Pharmaceutical companies play a vital role in creating new and
innovative medicines that save and improve the quality of millions of American
lives, but that doesn’t help Americans who can’t afford them. Similarly,
pharmacy benefit managers and insurance companies have the opportunity to
negotiate lower prices, but the American people don’t know how much these
middlemen pocket for themselves. This legislation shows that no industry
is above accountability. Passing these reforms, especially those that will
affect some of the most entrenched interests in Washington, is never easy. But
Americans are demanding action and reform is long overdue. We’re looking
forward to working with our colleagues on the Finance Committee and with other
committees in Congress to pass this prescription drug pricing overhaul very
soon.”
Congressional
Budget Office (CBO) Score:
·
Taxpayers save $85 billion in Medicare: The combination of the
Part D redesign and the inflation-rebate policies would save Medicare
approximately $85 billion over the 2019-2029 period ($35 billion and $50
billion, respectively).
·
Beneficiaries save $27 billion in out-of-pocket costs: The combination of the
two policies would reduce beneficiaries’ spending for cost-sharing, also known
as out-of-pocket expenses, by approximately $27 billion over the same 10-year
period ($20 billion and $7 billion, respectively).
·
Beneficiaries save $5 billion in premiums: The combination of the
two policies would reduce beneficiaries’ spending on premiums by approximately
$5 billion over the same 10-year period ($1 billion and $4 billion,
respectively).
·
Taxpayers save $15 billion in Medicaid: Clarifying how prices
are calculated and increasing the maximum rebate amount in Medicaid save the
federal government approximately $15 billion.
·
Americans in the commercial market would see savings: The inflation-rebate
provision would reduce costs for prescription drug benefits offered by
commercial insurance plans and the redesign provision would not have a
substantial effect on prescription drug benefits offered by commercial
insurance plans.
Details
of the legislation can be found below. Text of the chairman’s mark can be found
HERE.
Medicare:
·
Modernize
and improve the successful Part D program by:
o
Simplifying
the program’s design;
o
Protecting
beneficiaries with high costs and providing peace of mind through an on
out-of-pocket spending cap;
o
Improving
incentives to increase negotiation between prescription drug plans and
manufacturers;
o
Protecting
the program from rampant manufacturer drug price increases; and
o
Benefiting
patients and taxpayers through lower government spending, premiums, and
out-of-pocket costs.
·
Increase
transparency into pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) practices and manufacturer
drug pricing decisions;
·
Improve
how Medicare calculates Part B prescription drug payment amounts to lower
spending and beneficiary out-of-pocket costs; and
·
Eliminate
excess Part B drug payments that drive up beneficiary and program costs.
Medicaid:
·
Increase
transparency and make manufacturers more accountable to federal taxpayers;
·
Allow
Medicaid to pay for gene therapies for rare disease through new risk-sharing
value-based agreements, which will increase access to life-saving, miracle
treatments for the most vulnerable;
·
Apply
pressure on manufacturers to lower list prices and report more accurate
calculations of their rebate obligations; and
·
Prevent
spread pricing and gaming in the Medicaid program by PBMs to ensure that
beneficiaries, states and the federal government are getting the best deal
possible.
OPEN EXECUTIVE SESSION
Notice
July 23, 2019
The Chairman wishes to inform Members that the Committee on Finance will meet in Open Executive Session on Thursday, July 25, 2019, in 215 Dirksen Senate Office Building, at 9:30 a.m., to consider an original bill entitled The Prescription Drug Pricing Reduction Act of 2019. The Chairman requests that an electronic copy and at least 1 hardcopy of each amendment be filed with the Chief Clerk, Joshua LeVasseur in SD-210, no later than 12:00 p.m. on Wednesday, July 24, 2019.
The Congressional Budget Analysis will be
distributed at a later date.
The Chairman urges every Member to attend.
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