In the past few years, bipartisan legislation
I’ve championed into law has saved taxpayers $9.6 billion. Despite opposition
from Big Pharma, I’m leading the Prescription Drug Pricing Reduction Act, a comprehensive and bipartisan drug pricing
bill that would save taxpayers $95 billion and seniors $72 billion. It caps
pharmaceutical drug increases at inflation, lowers out-of-pocket costs and holds
the drug industry accountable.
Lowering Insulins
Costs & Reining in Powerful Middlemen
We’ve got more work to do.
I support a bipartisan plan by Senators Collins and
Shaheen that establishes a $35 out-of-pocket cap on insulin for patients with
private insurance, while also reforming
PBMs, the powerful middlemen who are behind rising drug prices.
In my two-year bipartisan insulin
investigation, we found that a drug’s list price is tied to rebates and other
fees that drug companies have to pay to PBMs. The scheme encourages drug makers
to spike the list price of the drug to offer a greater rebate, and in turn,
secure priority placement on a health plan’s list of covered medications, at
the expense of many patients. Failing
to address the PBM scheme will only
shift patients’ costs instead of reducing them.
Delivering
Affordable Insulin to the Most Vulnerable
In August, I voted to make insulin available for
pennies on the dollar for millions of Americans who are uninsured or have a
high-deductible health plan. These individuals are most likely to pay out of
pocket for their insulin at $142 a month on average. More than 31 million
Americans are uninsured and nearly half of all private sector employees are on
a high deductible plan. Ensuring these folks have access to affordable insulin
is the right thing to do.
Unfortunately, this vote ended in a
50–50 tie, with all Republicans voting in favor and all Democrats voting
against. Only
one Democrat was needed to advance this provision, but not a
single one voted for it. Sadly, this important vote hasn’t gotten much
attention.
Instead, the media has largely
focused on a separate proposal to cap insulin at $35 for people on private
insurance without addressing the
cause of rising insulin prices and without any assistance for uninsured Americans. The
Senate’s nonpartisan parliamentarian determined that this proposal violated the
Senate’s budget rules. Democrats demanded a vote to ignore the rules. The vote
was not whether Republicans support lowering insulin costs (we do) or whether
the price cap should be “stripped out” of the bill (it already was removed by
the parliamentarian). The vote was on whether the Senate should break the
budget rules for a partisan spending bill. I and many of my colleagues opposed
this approach, in favor of better alternatives.
We should pass policies that
address the cost of insulin for the one in five diabetics with private
insurance who pay more than $35 a month for their insulin, as well as those
with no insurance at all.
Accountability for Big Pharma & PBMs
To effectively lower drug prices, we have to
hold PBMs accountable. For years, I’ve
pushed
the bureaucracy to examine
how consolidation in the pharmaceutical supply chain effects
drug prices. I also introduced the Prescription Pricing for the People with Senator Cantwell to force the executive
branch to review anticompetitive tactics that harm patients and consumers. This
bill was unanimously approved by the Judiciary Committee last year. While we
need more sunshine on PBMs, we don’t need to wait to take some action. Senator
Cantwell and I also introduced the PBM Transparency Act, which cleared the Commerce Committee on a vote of 19-9. The
bill prohibits PBMs from engaging in spread pricing and clawbacks. Both actions
game the system and hurt consumers.
I’ve also led out of
the Judiciary Committee three bipartisan bills to establish more competition to
lower prescription drug prices. Those bills alone would save a combined $1.9
billion.
I’ve gotten results on lowering drug costs.
I’ll continue fighting for you to lower insulin costs, hold Big Pharma and PBMs
accountable and establish more competition to lower prescription drug prices.