Health Plans to curb California insulin costs abound. Will anything get done this year?
As consumers, advocates and others prioritize their fight to lower prescription drug costs, insulin is usually first in line. Now, momentum to curb rising insulin costs seems to be building, with policymakers at the state and federal levels rolling out proposals seeking to provide diabetics some long-awaited financial relief. The questions now: What will materialize and how soon?
This week in
As part of that plan, the administration wants to spend
and Information.
The initiative is unique for a state, and it comes as
Meanwhile, the state Legislature is considering its own bill that would cap what Californians pay at the pharmacy counter. And one California county, looking to provide its residents more immediate relief, is piloting a grant program for residents struggling to afford their insulin.
In
The stories of people who have to ration their insulin because they can’t afford their prescriptions are commonplace. Between 2012 and 2016, the price of insulin doubled, prompting higher out-of-pocket costs for diabetics, according to the
Some people’s prescriptions come in the form of insulin pens. A package of five pens can go for as much as
For 10 years Gibson has watched the cost of insulin go up. She has also seen legislators enthusiastically roll out proposals to reduce costs, only to have those plans fizzle out.
Still, she is optimistic that her sons will never have to worry about unaffordable insulin prescriptions when they become adults. The projects and proposals currently in play, she said, give her some hope something can actually get done in the next few years.
“Dealing with diabetes is already extremely stressful. Providing some financial relief for people, it would make a huge difference,” Gibson said.
State to make its own insulin
In 2020, Newsom signed into law a bill that directed the state to seek partnerships with drug manufacturers to develop generics and biosimilars for a number of drugs— but plans have been slow to roll out and it’s unclear which other drugs will be prioritized. Insulin will be the first to be tested.
Insulin is a biologic drug, meaning it’s made from living cells. Medications that copy a brand-name biologic are called biosimilars. Like generics, they tend to be more affordable.
The state has yet to identify a drug manufacturer to partner with, but a Newsom administration official said this could happen in the next few months. The state’s insulin would be available to all Californians, publicly and privately insured, as well as to the uninsured. It’s unclear how soon this insulin could hit the market, but it would likely be at least a couple of years, an administration official said.
The goal is to provide “Californians with access to insulin products that are a fraction of the
Whether Newsom’s biosimilar initiative will result in significant savings for consumers is a maybe, some researchers say.
Drug manufacturing isn’t the only source of the problem, said
In a study published last fall,
“There’s a bunch of stuff that’s happening in the middle, between what the patient pays and what the manufacturer gets,”
The state’s plans to manufacture biosimilar insulin could help consumers to some extent, she said, but work also needs to be done to address the costs in other parts of the distribution process.
Insurance companies calling for drug price reforms are also looking for their own ways to get involved in the manufacturing of insulin.
According to Civica Rx, its insulin could be available starting in 2024, following approval from the
Because it could be years before any of these plans come to fruition, local governments are also looking for their own ways to provide some immediate relief to residents.
“It’s a very small local effort — a million dollars in a community like this is a very small piece of it, but it’s a step in the right direction,” Singh said.
Cost-sharing caps at play
Insulin affordability has been the focus of recent discussions at the federal level. The
The
A cost-sharing cap gets to the problem on the insurance side; it provides consumers consistency and relief at the pharmacy counter. But experts say it doesn’t lower the actual price of insulin and would not benefit people without insurance.
Capping costs would provide financial relief to at least 1 in 5 insulin users, according to the
Limits on out-of-pocket costs have become popular in recent years. At least 15 states have passed their own laws limiting insulin copays — from
Similar efforts have failed in
Assemblymember
“It wasn’t held because there isn’t support for it in the
“If the federal government does something, fantastic, but I feel embarrassed that a state like
Such bills usually also face strong industry opposition. In their pushback to price caps, such as the ones presented by Nazarian and Bates, health insurers have argued that
“Tell that to a single mother or father trying to make ends meet,” Nazarian said.
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