Americans Ready To Crack Down On Drug Prices That Force Some To Skip Doses


Large majorities of Americans from both major parties support steps to control prescription drug costs such as showing prices in ads, removing barriers to generics and letting patients get less expensive drugs from Canada, a new poll shows.

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By a 9-to-1 ratio, Republicans, Democrats and independents favor making drug companies show list prices in their advertising,ย says a new surveyย from the Kaiser Family Foundation. Highly advertised medicines such as Humira, for arthritis, cost tens of thousands of dollars a year, even after discounts.

Although Republicans tend to frown on government control over commerce, 8 in 10 Republican respondents said they support giving negotiating power to the $700 billion Medicare program in order to lower drug prices for seniors.

More than 70 percent of all respondents back importing drugs from Canada and capping out-of-pocket Medicare costs. More than 80 percent said they favor making it easier for less expensive generics to compete with brand-name drugs.

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As President Donald Trump and Congressย vow to act againstย drug inflation and journalists chronicle patients experiencingย medicalย andย financialย shock from drug expenses, increasing numbers of Americansย blame pharmaceutical companiesย for high health care costs.

Expensive drugs are one of several factors in rising medical costs that strain government, employer and household budgets. In some health plans, drugย costs exceed inpatient hospital bills, accounting for a third of all spending.

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KFFโ€™s survey was done in mid-February, before this weekโ€™sย widely watched hearingย of seven pharma executives testifying before the Senate Finance Committee. (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the foundation.)

Americans deem prescription costs a big problem, even though most donโ€™t have trouble getting the medicine they need. Most of those using prescription drugs said itโ€™s easy or very easy to afford them. But one-fourth of adults said it is โ€œdifficultโ€ to afford their medicines and 1 in 10 said itโ€™s โ€œvery difficult.โ€ Nearly 3 in 10 said they havenโ€™t taken their medicine as ordered by a doctor because of high cost. They skip doses, leave prescriptions unfilled or take a non-prescription drug instead.

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Eight in 10 said prescription drug costs are unreasonable. Only 3 percent said they trust drug companies โ€œa lotโ€ to price products fairly. Another 22 percent said they trust them โ€œsomewhat,โ€ adding up to a quarter of respondents who placed trust in pharma โ€” down sharply from 41 percent a decade ago.

But support for cost-control measures isnโ€™t unconditional. When told that government negotiation could lead to Medicare leaving some drugs uncovered or to a cut in federal research investment, two-thirds of those polled opposed the idea.

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Six in 10 survey respondents also said profits from middlemen managing drug benefits are a major factor in high prices.

The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the lobbying group for brand-name drugmakers, has spent millions of dollars trying to shift the blame to pharmacy benefit managers, known as PBMs, which take a large cut of the revenue stream.

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Kaiser Health Newsย (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of theย Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundationย which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.