Wednesday, July 10, 2019
Prescriptive Solutions
Under one of the best universal
healthcare plans in the world, only 7% of German residents say they have issues
in paying their rather minimal contributions to their universal healthcare plan,
which is fully accessible but still relies on both private health insurers and
private doctors. Contrast that to the United States, which lacks such a
universal plan, where one third of all Americans struggle with healthcare
costs. “A study done at Harvard
University indicates that [the inability to pay medical costs] is the biggest
cause of bankruptcy [in the United States], representing 62% of all personal
bankruptcies. One of the interesting caveats of this study shows that 78% of
filers had some form of health insurance, thus bucking the myth that medical
bills affect only the uninsured.” Investopedia.com.
We
also have the highest costs for prescriptions in the developed world. When the
Affordable Care Act (ACA – Obamacare) was passed in 2010, in order to placate
the powerful pharmaceutical lobby, the bill promised not to challenge what
these drug manufacturers charged for their prescriptions. Large and powerful
healthcare exchanges were barred from using that power to negotiate lower drug
prices. To make matters worse, the anti-government-supported healthcare stance
of the GOP and the Trump administration – through Health & Human Services
rulings and exemptions, executive orders, judicial action and legislation –
have forced healthcare costs to skyrocket.
Prescription
costs are still absurdly higher than what other nations charge for the same
drugs. Trump’s jawboning and asking pharmas to publicly post their prices have
done little if anything to mitigate that problem. Wink-wink. After all, Trump
is a combination “President for the business and the rich” and crumb-thrower to
social conservatives to hold his populist base intact. But those pharmas
appreciate the tax cuts and allowing them to charge their scandalously high
prices. They also know how to make political contributions to both sides of the
aisle.
Claiming
that clamping down on drug prices will stifle research, a myth that Republicans
rely on, you have to ask if perhaps there just might be another way. Germany
seems to have answered that question with a program that just might work here
as well, one where government actually uses private insurers and private
doctors, with supportive rules and subsidies along the way. Costs are
absolutely controlled and limited.
“The German government doesn’t set
drug prices, as some European nations do. And the country — home to some of the
world’s largest drug makers — has a robust pharmaceutical market… ‘Germans
don’t believe the government should run the healthcare system,’ said Franz
Knieps, a former senior government health official who now heads an association
of large German insurers. ‘But they wanted a system that’s affordable.’
“Building that wasn’t easy, but
politicians, healthcare leaders and industry officials settled on a compromise
that has saved billions of dollars and won the acceptance of even many drug
makers… ‘We had a lot of doubts about the system when it first started,’ said
Dr. Markus Frick, a senior official at Germany’s leading pharmaceutical
industry group, the VfA. ‘Now we see it works for many, though not all, cases.’
“Germany’s drug pricing initiative
was born of widespread fears — not unlike those driving today’s U.S. debate —
that the rising cost of new specialty drugs would make health coverage
unaffordable… With roots that date to the 19th century when industrial
employers offered health protections to head off a threat of socialism, the
German healthcare system is built on a tightly regulated market of private,
nonprofit insurers, known as sickness funds… Germans are required to enroll in one
of these funds, which are similar to U.S. health insurers.
“There are strict limits on how much
patients must pay for their medical care — a major difference from the U.S.,
where patients’ deductibles have been soaring. Co-pays, for example, are limited
to 10 euros per prescription. There are no deductibles… Sickness funds must
cover new drugs as soon as they become available.
“Importantly, the funds also must
collect enough in premiums to cover the costs of their members’ medical care… That
meant that when drug prices started shooting up in the 2000s, sickness funds
began running deficits and faced pressure to hike premiums… ‘It was a situation
we couldn’t accept,’ said Daniel Bahr, a former minister of health. ‘We needed
change.’
“On the left, politicians clamored
for government price controls. Germany’s powerful pharmaceutical industry, in
an echo of arguments made in the U.S, warned that would choke off innovation… Chancellor
Angela Merkel’s right-of-center government chose a middle path… New drugs would
have to go through a system of rigorous evaluation. Using the evaluations,
sickness funds — not the government — would then negotiate prices with drug
makers.
“Under this new system — known by its
German acronym AMNOG — sickness funds must pay drug companies the list price
for new drugs for one year after they are introduced, an important feature of
the system designed to ensure patient access to new therapies… But the
foundation of the system is an independent, transparent assessment of new drugs
that is undertaken when the drug enters the market… Manufacturers must submit
information about new drugs to a nongovernmental agency that compares them to
existing therapies.
“The system ‘asks a very basic
question: Is there an added benefit from a new drug? And it’s on drug makers to
prove their case,’ said Dr. Jürgen Windeler, head of the Institute for Quality
and Efficiency in Health Care, or IQWiG, the agency that conducts the analysis…
“[Thus,] Germany’s ability to provide
citizens access to the latest drugs while keeping patients’ costs so low is
made possible by a novel strategy launched in 2011 to rein in exploding prices
that were threatening to bankrupt the nation’s healthcare system.
“Mixing free-market incentives to
encourage innovation with regulation and lots of transparency, Germany’s drug
review process gives manufacturers the chance to bring new products to market
and charge higher prices — but only if they can show the new medications are
better than existing ones.” Noam N. Levey writing for the June 20th
Los Angeles Times.
Bottom line: Germans almost never pay
more than $11 for a prescription. We should learn and listen. The National
Conference of State Legislatures tells us that: “Prescription drugs account for 10 percent of overall health spending in the
United States, totaling $328 billion annually. (Also calculated as $450 billion
when list prices and middle-man transactions are included).” Don’t you
love all those prescription drug ads? Wonder who pays for all that.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and since most legislation is drafted to favor the biggest
campaign contributors, guess what kind of healthcare support we actually have
in government?
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