White House yanks drug ‘rebate’ plan to ease costs for some
The once-highly promoted plan from Health and Human Services Secretary
Deere said Trump is not backing away from his promise to lower drug prices, and the administration is setting its sights on bipartisan legislation in
"The Trump administration is encouraged by continuing bipartisan conversations about legislation to reduce outrageous drug costs imposed on the American people, and
The administration's about-face was the second setback in a week for the president's drive to lower drug prices.
A federal judge in
Thursday's reversal on rebates appeared to be a win for insurers, employers, and middlemen called "pharmacy benefit managers" who administer prescription drug plans for large blocks of insured patients.
Shares of several big companies that manage prescription benefits started climbing early in the day.
For the pharmaceutical industry, it looked like a defeat. Drugmakers preferred the consumer rebate approach to other ideas that lawmakers are considering. Those include "inflation rebates" that drugmakers would be pay directly to Medicare if they raise prices beyond a yet-to-be-determined measure.
"The administration has abandoned one of the only policy solutions that would have truly lowered what patients are forced to pay out of pocket for the medicines they need,"
Overall prescription drug inflation seems to have stabilized, with more monthly declines than increases recently. The
Rebates are a largely unseen part of the complex world of drug pricing.
Under the administration's plan, drugmaker rebates now paid to insurance companies and their middlemen would have gone directly to seniors in Medicare's Part D program when they filled their prescriptions.
But congressional analysts concluded that drug companies were unlikely to lower list prices across the board in response to the plan. Instead, they would reimburse pharmacies for discounts provided to individuals as they fill their prescriptions. Analysts also questioned how quickly and smoothly the program could have been rolled out.
Budget hawks within the administration saw their hand strengthened by the report.
The analysts did say that seniors who cannot afford their copays now would be clear winners. They would be better able to stay on their medications, and that could reduce Medicare hospital and outpatient spending by about
But without insurers getting the rebates, the bottom line would have been an increase in premiums. Because the government subsidizes about 75% of the premium, that would add
The administration's reversal was first reported by Axios.



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