DALLAS COUNTY, IOWA – Today, Sen. Chuck
Grassley (R-Iowa), former chairman and current member of the Finance Committee,
held a question-and-answer discussion with employees and community members at
Sumpter Pharmacy in Adel. They discussed the
bipartisan bills Grassley is leading to lower insulin costs, hold pharmacy benefit
managers (PBMs) accountable and establish more competition to lower
prescription drug prices. Grassley is once again calling on Majority Leader
Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) to
hold votes on five bipartisan bills he is leading to bring down the cost of medication.
“Through bipartisan bills, hearings and
investigations, I’ve successfully fought to help Iowans afford their
medications – including by creating Medicare Part D, publishing an in-depth
report
exposing insulin pricing schemes and passing legislation like the
Right
Rebate Act and
CREATES
Act to lower costs.
But there’s still work to do, and that’s why I’ve continued pushing for a full
Senate vote on five of my bills that have already passed committee with
bipartisan support. I appreciated having the opportunity to discuss these
proposals in Adel today. I’ll keep working closely with local pharmacies to
ensure Iowans in every part of the state are able to get the medications they
need at an affordable price,”
Grassley
said.
“We appreciate the chance to share with
Senator Grassley the serious challenges threatening the viability of local
independent pharmacies all throughout Iowa and the U.S.,” said Leslie Herron, pharmacist and owner of Sumpter Pharmacy.
Grassley meets with Iowans at Sumpter
Pharmacy in Adel. Additional pictures are available here.
Grassley also talked about his concerns
over reduced access to pharmacies under TRICARE’s PBM contract with Express
Scripts. On
September 29, he joined with
his Senate colleagues seeking answers about TRICARE beneficiaries’ ability to
maintain access to local pharmacies. The Department of Defense (DoD) hasn’t
provided satisfactory answers. Grassley has followed-up with another letter to
DoD asking questions about TRICARE’s PBM and agency’s oversight over the PBM
contract. That letter can be found
here.
In addition to these proposals, Grassley
is the author of the
Prescription
Drug Pricing Reduction Act (PDPRA),
which includes 25 bipartisan provisions to establish accountability and
transparency in the pharmaceutical industry. He also supports Sens. Susan
Collins (R-Maine) and Jeanne Shaheen’s (D-N.H.) bipartisan bill that
establishes a $35 out-of-pocket cap on insulin.
Learn more about Grassley’s bipartisan
work to lower prescription drug prices
HERE.
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