Association of Health Care Journalists: Lawsuit Exposes Hidden Factors Driving Up Prescription Drug Costs - Insurance News | InsuranceNewsNet

InsuranceNewsNet — Your Industry. One Source.™

Sign in
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Home Now reading Newswires
Topics
    • Advisor News
    • Annuity Index
    • Annuity News
    • Companies
    • Earnings
    • Fiduciary
    • From the Field: Expert Insights
    • Health/Employee Benefits
    • Insurance & Financial Fraud
    • INN Magazine
    • Insiders Only
    • Life Insurance News
    • Newswires
    • Property and Casualty
    • Regulation News
    • Sponsored Articles
    • Washington Wire
    • Videos
    • ———
    • About
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    • Editorial Staff
    • Newsletters
  • Exclusives
  • NewsWires
  • Magazine
  • Newsletters
Sign in or register to be an INNsider.
  • AdvisorNews
  • Annuity News
  • Companies
  • Earnings
  • Fiduciary
  • Health/Employee Benefits
  • Insurance & Financial Fraud
  • INN Exclusives
  • INN Magazine
  • Insurtech
  • Life Insurance News
  • Newswires
  • Property and Casualty
  • Regulation News
  • Sponsored Articles
  • Video
  • Washington Wire
  • Life Insurance
  • Annuities
  • Advisor
  • Health/Benefits
  • Property & Casualty
  • Insurtech
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Editorial Staff

Get Social

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
Newswires
Newswires RSS Get our newsletter
Order Prints
March 7, 2024 Newswires
Share
Share
Tweet
Email

Association of Health Care Journalists: Lawsuit Exposes Hidden Factors Driving Up Prescription Drug Costs

Targeted News Service

COLUMBIA, Missouri, March 7 -- The Association of Health Care Journalists issued the following news:

Imagine having to pay almost $10,240 for 90 14 mg pills of teriflunomide, a generic prescription drug for patients with multiple sclerosis. Now imagine if the same strength of that 90-pill supply cost only $40.55 at a Wegmans pharmacy, $40.05 at ShopRite, less than $80 at a Walmart or Rite Aid pharmacy and as little as $28.40 at the Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Company.

This egregious example of how the U.S. health insurance system drives up prescription drug prices comes from a lawsuit filed Feb. 5 against the pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson (J&J) and against J&J's employee benefits committee.

The lawsuit has nothing to do with J&J's role as a maker of pharmaceuticals, reporters Bob Herman and Ed Silverman of STAT explained in this story: "A sweeping new lawsuit against J&J asks: Are employers liable if they overpay for drugs."

Instead, the case focuses on J&J as an employer that buys health benefits and prescription drugs for its workers and their family members. The lawsuit also shows how J&J may be liable for violating the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974. ERISA requires employers' health plans to protect the interests of employees and families enrolled in those plans. J&J has over 100,000 workers worldwide and provides many of them and its retirees in the United States with health care and prescription-drug benefits, the complaint says.

"The case could have sweeping ramifications, potentially opening the doors for any large, self-insured employer to face legal action," under ERISA, Herman and Silverman reported. And the nation's largest pharmacy benefit managers and employee-benefits consulting firms that employers pay to manage health and drug benefits could be named in similar lawsuits, experts told Herman and Silverman.

The power of journalism

This case is important for health care reporters for many reasons. First, the lawsuit highlights the power of journalism because it includes multiple mentions of a 4,000-word STAT investigation that Herman wrote in June. In that article, Herman explained that the nation's largest employers pay consulting firms to get the best deals possible from PBMs and to ensure that these middlemen are not ripping them off with unfair contracts.

"But a largely hidden flow of money between major consulting conglomerates and PBMs compromises that relationship, a STAT investigation shows," Herman wrote. "Some consulting firms often are getting paid more -- a lot more -- by the PBMs and health insurance carriers that they are supposed to scrutinize than by companies they are supposed to be looking out for."

In that same article, Herman explained that the United States spent over $633 billion on prescription drugs in 2022, adding that the conflicts of interest he cited cause employers to spend unknown billions of dollars for employee benefit consultants and PBMs, he added.

Second, the lawsuit alleges that by mismanaging J&J's prescription drug program, the defendants cost the company's benefit plans and its employees millions in higher payments for prescription drugs, higher premiums, higher deductibles, higher coinsurance, higher copays, and resulted in lower wages or limited wage growth.

When employers pay more for health care and pharmacy benefits, workers' take-home pay declines and job losses ensue, as Zack Cooper, Ph.D., an associate professor of public health and of economics at Yale University, testified in June to the U.S. Senate Finance Committee.

In January, Caitlin Owens at Axios reported on a study in JAMA Network Open that showed how the rising cost of health insurance premiums has led to wage stagnation. "Families with workplace health insurance may have missed out on $125,000 in earnings over the past three decades as a result of rising premiums eating into their pay, according to a new JAMA Network Open study," Owens wrote.

See this Data Deep Dive for more on how high and rising health insurance costs lead to lower wages and increased disparities.

The question of employers' liability

The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court in New Jersey on behalf of the plaintiff, Ann Lewandowski, a J&J employee working as a health policy and advocacy director on leave due to a dispute regarding a reasonable accommodation for a medical condition, the complaint explains. Specifically, the lawsuit charges that J&J and its benefits committee mismanaged the prescription-drug benefits provided to J&J workers and violated the fiduciary responsibilities employers have to workers.

Under ERISA, employers have a fiduciary responsibility to manage benefits plans solely in the interest of workers and family members, the U.S. Department of Labor says. The lawsuit against J&J and its benefits committee is the first to involve plan members suing their employer for breach of fiduciary duty, according to a benefit consultant Herman and Silverman quoted.

Reporting on the J&J lawsuit for The Wall Street Journal, Melanie Evans and Anna Wilde Mathews quoted Elizabeth Mitchell, chief executive of the Purchaser Business Group on Health (PBGH), in San Francisco, a coalition of employers. "This is the first suit of its kind that we're aware of," Mitchell said. "It definitely will not be the last." For the past year or so, PBGH has been offered educational sessions to its employer members to explain the potential legal liability involved in providing health and drug benefits to workers, Mitchell added.

J&J didn't do enough to get a good deal on prescription drugs, and the employees overpaid for some generic drugs designated as specialty medications by millions of dollars, Evans and Mathews reported. "The lawsuit asks J&J to make good on losses to the employees' health plan from alleged mismanagement, but doesn't stipulate a sum," they wrote.

Most employers contract with PBMs

Like J&J, most U.S. employers contract with PBMs to manage workers' prescription drug benefits, a practice health policy experts, lawmakers and others believe is partly responsible for the nation's high drug prices, Herman and Silverman reported.

The lawsuit alleges that J&J contracts with Express Scripts, the PBM division of the health insurer Cigna, and with the benefits consulting company Aon. J&J allowed its selection of a PBM "to be guided or managed by a broker with a potential conflict of interest," the lawsuit adds.

An analysis of the prices that J&J and the benefits committee agreed to reveals "a staggering markup from prices charged to comparable plans by other traditional PBMs," the lawsuit says. Such high prices "exceed the prices that any prudent fiduciary would agree to pay," it adds.

Employee benefits consultants sometimes require PBMs to pay anywhere from $1 to $5 for every prescription that an employee, family member or retiree fills under an employer's contract, Herman and Silverman reported. In exchange, the consultants will recommend the employer choose that PBM, a fact that may not be disclosed to the employer, they added. "Because it receives payment, the consulting firm also may not closely scrutinize the PBM contract, which allows the PBM to profit more on certain drugs," they wrote.

Reporting resources

* "Fed up with exorbitant health costs, employers and workers are taking insurers to court," STAT News, June 12, 2023.

* "Untangling the Shifty Deals That Pad Pharma Prices," Freakonomics podcast interview with Bob Herman, Sept. 24, 2023.

* Osceola schools settle lawsuit over insurance consultant's 'secret commissions,' Florida Politics, Feb. 17, 2023.

* "National trends in prescription drug expenditures and projections for 2023," American Journal of Health System Pharmacy, July 2023.

* "The Drug Rebate Curtain," Axios, April 2, 2018

* 4 Steps for Large Employers to Meet Fiduciary Duties and Mitigate Legal Risk, Purchaser Business Group on Health (PBGH), San Francisco, Newsroom.

* Employers' Prescription for Affordable Drugs, PBGH, San Francisco

* ERISA Industry Committee, Washington, D.C.

* National Alliance of Healthcare Purchaser Coalitions, Washington, D.C.

* * *

Original text here: https://healthjournalism.org/blog/2024/03/lawsuit-exposes-hidden-factors-driving-up-prescription-drug-costs/

Older

Price Sensitive Medicare Advantage Enrollees Continue to Favor $0-Premium Plans and Lower Deductibles, eHealth Report Finds

Newer

What’s happening with homeowners insurance rates in Nevada?

Advisor News

  • Global economic growth will moderate as the labor force shrinks
  • Estate planning during the great wealth transfer
  • Main Street families need trusted financial guidance to navigate the new Trump Accounts
  • Are the holidays a good time to have a long-term care conversation?
  • Gen X unsure whether they can catch up with retirement saving
More Advisor News

Annuity News

  • Prudential launches FlexGuard 2.0 RILA
  • Lincoln Financial Introduces First Capital Group ETF Strategy for Fixed Indexed Annuities
  • Iowa defends Athene pension risk transfer deal in Lockheed Martin lawsuit
  • Pension buy-in sales up, PRT sales down in mixed Q3, LIMRA reports
  • Life insurance and annuities: Reassuring ‘tired’ clients in 2026
More Annuity News

Health/Employee Benefits News

  • Researchers at Columbia University Detail Findings in Managed Care (New York’s Basic Health Program Increased Subsidized Insurance Coverage From Preconception To The Postpartum Period): Managed Care
  • Researchers at University of Greifswald Report New Data on Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (Concept and feasibility of privacy-preserving record linkage of cancer registry data and claims data in Germany: results from the DigiNet study on stage IV …): Oncology – Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
  • New Findings from Andrew J. Epstein et al Broadens Understanding of Chronic Kidney Disease (Clinical and economic burden of chronic kidney disease in Medicare Fee-for-Service beneficiaries with and without comorbid type 2 diabetes and heart …): Kidney Diseases and Conditions – Chronic Kidney Disease
  • KDP STATEMENT ON CONGRESSIONAL REPUBLICANS' REFUSAL TO PREVENT HEALTH INSURANCE PREMIUM SPIKE
  • BALDWIN SLAMS REPUBLICAN PRICE HIKES ON HEALTH CARE AS OPEN ENROLLMENT ENDS FOR ACA MARKETPLACE COVERAGE
Sponsor
More Health/Employee Benefits News

Life Insurance News

  • Best’s Market Segment Report: AM Best Maintains Stable Outlook on Malaysia’s Non-Life Insurance Segment
  • Report Summarizes Kinase Inhibitors Study Findings from Saga University Hospital (Simulation of Perioperative Ibrutinib Withdrawal Using a Population Pharmacokinetic Model and Sparse Clinical Concentration Data): Drugs and Therapies – Kinase Inhibitors
  • Flawed Social Security death data puts life insurance benefits at risk
  • EIOPA FLAGS FINANCIAL STABILITY RISKS RELATED TO PRIVATE CREDIT, A WEAKENING DOLLAR AND GLOBAL INTERCONNECTEDNESS
  • Envela partnership expands agent toolkit with health screenings
More Life Insurance News

- Presented By -

Top Read Stories

More Top Read Stories >

NEWS INSIDE

  • Companies
  • Earnings
  • Economic News
  • INN Magazine
  • Insurtech News
  • Newswires Feed
  • Regulation News
  • Washington Wire
  • Videos

FEATURED OFFERS

Slow Me the Money
Slow down RMDs … and RMD taxes … with a QLAC. Click to learn how.

ICMG 2026: 3 Days to Transform Your Business
Speed Networking, deal-making, and insights that spark real growth — all in Miami.

Your trusted annuity partner.
Knighthead Life provides dependable annuities that help your clients retire with confidence.

Press Releases

  • National Life Group Announces Leadership Transition at Equity Services, Inc.
  • SandStone Insurance Partners Welcomes Industry Veteran, Rhonda Waskie, as Senior Account Executive
  • Springline Advisory Announces Partnership With Software And Consulting Firm Actuarial Resources Corporation
  • Insuraviews Closes New Funding Round Led by Idea Fund to Scale Market Intelligence Platform
  • ePIC University: Empowering Advisors to Integrate Estate Planning Into Their Practice With Confidence
More Press Releases > Add Your Press Release >

How to Write For InsuranceNewsNet

Find out how you can submit content for publishing on our website.
View Guidelines

Topics

  • Advisor News
  • Annuity Index
  • Annuity News
  • Companies
  • Earnings
  • Fiduciary
  • From the Field: Expert Insights
  • Health/Employee Benefits
  • Insurance & Financial Fraud
  • INN Magazine
  • Insiders Only
  • Life Insurance News
  • Newswires
  • Property and Casualty
  • Regulation News
  • Sponsored Articles
  • Washington Wire
  • Videos
  • ———
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Editorial Staff
  • Newsletters

Top Sections

  • AdvisorNews
  • Annuity News
  • Health/Employee Benefits News
  • InsuranceNewsNet Magazine
  • Life Insurance News
  • Property and Casualty News
  • Washington Wire

Our Company

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Meet our Editorial Staff
  • Magazine Subscription
  • Write for INN

Sign up for our FREE e-Newsletter!

Get breaking news, exclusive stories, and money- making insights straight into your inbox.

select Newsletter Options
Facebook Linkedin Twitter
© 2025 InsuranceNewsNet.com, Inc. All rights reserved.
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • InsuranceNewsNet Magazine

Sign in with your Insider Pro Account

Not registered? Become an Insider Pro.
Insurance News | InsuranceNewsNet