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Dean's announces program to reduce cost of prescription drugs

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Pavlovs DiOgie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-14-03 10:59 PM
Original message
Dean's announces program to reduce cost of prescription drugs
Governor Dean Announces Program To Reduce the Cost of Prescription Drugs

COUNCIL BLUFFS--Speaking last night at a town meeting here, Governor Dean, announced his plan to lower prescription drug costs in the United States.

"Today U.S. citizens spend approximately $200 billion on prescription drugs, twice as much as just five years ago. Government programs and large healthcare providers negotiate deep discounts on prescription drug prices, and Canadian citizens pay far less for prescription drugs than U.S. citizens. Yet senior citizens and other Americans who have no health insurance coverage pay the highest prices for prescription drugs," Governor Dean said.

He sharply criticized the Bush administration's lack of progress on prescription drug coverage, explaining that, as president, he would make prescription drugs affordable for all Americans by allowing the reimportation of prescription drugs from Canada, closing loopholes that allow drug companies to block cheaper generic drugs and using preferred drug lists to steer doctors toward lower cost equivalents drugs. He also called for limits on direct-to-consumer advertising of drugs and disclosure of pharmaceutical company gifts to doctors.

"The Bush administration's policies have little to do with helping average Americans afford prescription drugs and everything to do with the drug industry's massive campaign contributions to the Republican Party," Governor Dean said.

Continued at www.blogforamerica.com

Another great proposal by Dean!
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Feanorcurufinwe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-14-03 11:03 PM
Response to Original message
1. A little short on the details...
this is just an anouncement. Can we see the actual plan?
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Pavlovs DiOgie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-14-03 11:14 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Here is the rest of the announcement from the blog
Dean's plan contains six major initiatives:

1) Permitting Reimportation of Prescription Drugs from Canada

"Today U.S. citizens spend approximately $750 million on prescription drugs from Canada. In some cases, they travel to Canada, but more commonly they purchase Canadian drugs through the internet. Canadian drug prices are often 30% - 80% less than the U.S. prices. These drugs are made by the same companies with the same ingredients as drugs sold in the U.S., and there is no evidence that Canadian drugs are inferior in any way. Just as U.S. citizens may today purchase prescription drugs from U.S. pharmacies by mail order (after supplying a prescription from a U.S. physician), our citizens should be permitted to realize the substantial savings of purchasing drugs by mail order from Canadian pharmacies. In contrast to the Bush Administration, which has been cracking down on Canadian drug importers, I would direct the Food and Drug Administration to facilitate this proven strategy for achieving significant savings on prescription drugs.

2) Closing Loopholes That Allow Brand Drug Companies to Extend Their Monopolies

"I recognize the importance of the patent system as an incentive for drug manufacturers to undertake research that in recent years has led to important discoveries in the pharmaceutical field. Some of the most innovative research by pharmaceutical companies, however, has been in the field of law, as companies have exploited legal loopholes to block generic competition. This is wrong: once legitimate patents have expired, the field should be open to generic drug competition. I was a founder of Business for Affordable Medicine (BAM), a coalition of Governors, major national employers (Wal-Mart, GM, Kellogg, etc.) and labor organizations. Prior to efforts of BAM, all efforts to close those loopholes had failed, but this year the reform amendment to the Medicare drug benefit legislation sponsored by BAM passed the U.S. Senate by a vote of 94-1 and has also been included in the House's version of the Medicare drug benefit legislation. If enacted, this legislation would make cost-effective generic drugs available earlier."

3) Using Preferred Drug Lists to Save Prescription Drug Dollars

"In treating particular medical conditions, physicians often have a choice of several drugs with a broad price range. For example, a pediatrician treating an ear infection may use a generic antibiotic costing a few cents a pill or an expensive brand antibiotic costing several dollars. For many patients, the two choices are medically equivalent. Not surprisingly, drug companies spend billions of dollars in advertising directed at physicians to convince them to prescribe the brand product. Vermont and other states have successfully used Preferred Drug Lists (PDLs) to steer physicians to less expensive, equally effective medicines The federal government and many health care plans use a form of PDLs to save unnecessary medical expenses. I support expanding the use of PDLs so that senior citizens and other consumers can get the same prices for prescription drugs as big institutional purchasers.

4) Allowing States Wide Latitude to Experiment in Ways of Controlling Drug Costs

"This year the United States Supreme Court rejected a challenge by pharmaceutical companies to a bold program initiated by Maine and Vermont to control prescription drug prices. Under a 1990 federal law, pharmaceutical companies must pay states rebates on their Medicaid purchases, which have the effect of lowering the price of prescription drugs to the states. In recent years some states have required additional rebates. Maine and Vermont have taken the additional step of making these savings available to citizens who are not covered by Medicaid (which is limited to citizens whose income is below a certain level). Under the Maine/Vermont program, drug companies were required to make lower-cost drugs available to all citizens in order to obtain preferred treatment under the state Medicaid program. I support federal initiatives that would give states wide latitude in experimenting with innovative approaches to cutting prescription drug prices.

5) Limitations on Direct-to-Consumer Advertising of Drugs

"Since 1991, drug companies have increased their advertising to consumers from $55 million to approximately $2 billion per year. Occasionally, this advertising has a legitimate purpose of informing consumers about a new product that can benefit them. More commonly, it simply increases the demand for these products, dramatically increasing the nation's prescription drug bill. I support a ban on direct advertising of prescription drugs to consumers (television advertising was banned until 1997) except for situations where there is a compelling public health justification for the advertising.

6) Disclosure of Gifts to Physicians

"One way that pharmaceutical manufacturers persuade physicians to prescribe their more expensive products is to give doctors expensive gifts, free meals, and trips or to pay physicians to undertake simple research. Last June, I signed a bill which made Vermont the first state in the nation to require pharmaceutical manufacturers to disclose the value, nature, and purpose of any gift or other economic benefit provided to any physician, hospital, or other healthcare provider in Vermont. As president, I would propose a national gift disclosure requirement.

"As governor of Vermont, I sought creative solutions to help senior citizens and other Vermonters obtain affordable prescription drugs. If I am elected president, I will work on behalf of the American people, and particularly seniors who have the greatest need for prescription drugs and who pay the highest prices, to reduce drug costs and to make health care more affordable," Governor Dean said.
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Feanorcurufinwe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-14-03 11:04 PM
Response to Original message
2. John Kerry's Plan to Cut Costs in prescription Drugs
Edited on Tue Oct-14-03 11:16 PM by Feanorcurufinwe
(1) CUT GREED OUT OF RX PRICES. Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) process hundreds of millions of pharmaceutical claims per year giving them the clout to get discounts from bulk buying and extra rebates for using their power to make sure certain drugs are covered or figuring market share. Some estimates show that rebates and incentives may account for as much as 10 percent of the $161 billion that Americans are estimated to have spent on prescription drugs in 2002. However, PBMs often do not pass these savings on to consumers.

John Kerry’s plan would require transparency rules for PBMs that do business with the Federal government to clearly show what savings they are receiving from the industry and from bulk purchasing.

(2) END LOOPHOLES THAT PREVENT GENERICS FROM COMING TO THE MARKET. In 2000, the average brand name prescription cost $45.96 (238%) more than the average generic prescription ($65.29/brand Rx minus $19.33/generic Rx). Eleven successful patent challenges saved consumers $27.4 billion in costs by getting more affordable prescriptions to the market. But there are still loopholes.

* One painkiller received 3 years of exclusivity for minor changes in dosage (one patent for 25 mg increments and another for 50 mg). These additional patents alone cost consumers $727 million.
* One popular antibiotic has been sued for unlawfully paying its competitors up to $200 million to stop developing and marketing a generic alternative.

(3) ASSURE THOSE WITHOUT PRESCRIPTION DRUG COVERAGE DON’T PAY MORE. Americans without drug coverage pay at least 50 percent more for the exact same medication as their insured neighbors because they do not get the benefits of bulk purchasing. Some states, like Maine, have tried to extend the same discount that Medicaid beneficiaries receive to other populations. The Supreme Court ruled that the pharmaceutical industry could not shut down the Maine program before it starts. As President, John Kerry would help states provide discounts on prescriptions drugs. Kerry would also give states incentives to contract with companies for better rates for prescription drugs.

(4) SAVE BILLIONS AND IMPROVE CARE BY REDUCING PRESCRIPTION DRUG ERRORS. Nearly $76 billion in annual health care costs are due to patients incorrectly taking their medications. Taking medications incorrectly accounts for 10 percent of all hospital admissions, and 25% of hospital admissions among the elderly and 23% of nursing home admissions. John Kerry believes we must institute an aggressive patient education programs, develop new technologies to help patients understand their prescriptions, and help health providers know when patients are not taking prescriptions correctly. Kerry will also set a goal to implement Computerized Prescription Order Entry (CPOE) in every hospital in the country by the end of the decade. CPOE alerts physicians to the possibility of drug interaction, allergy, and overdose and eliminates the problems posed by illegible handwritten prescriptions.

(5) A QUALITY PRESCRIPTION DRUG BENEFIT. Many politicians have a prescription drug plan to benefit pharmaceutical companies not seniors. John Kerry supports a real meaningful affordable drug benefit that:

* Doesn’t force seniors into HMOs;
* Run by Medicare – not private insurance companies who can charge seniors whatever they want;
* Doesn’t undermine drug coverage that seniors have today.
http://www.johnkerry.com/issues/prescriptions.html#b1


I see Dean has borrowed the 'closing loopholes' part of Kerry's plan - hey, at least they agree on something!

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KaraokeKarlton Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-15-03 06:14 AM
Response to Reply #2
6. Dean has already passed laws to combat this problem in Vermont
while Kerry just talks about it. As usual, Kerry is all talk and Dean is all action.
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Pavlovs DiOgie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-15-03 08:13 AM
Response to Reply #6
7. Great point!
Dean isn't a guy full of empty promises. One of the reasons I can't bring myself to get behind Clark is that there is no record behind him to prove to me that he will do what he says (although he may very well intend to). I just don't want to have to take a leap of faith when so much is at stake. To know what will be priorities to Dean, all you have to do is look at his 11 year record in Vermont. Success by Six, prescription drugs for seniors, education, balanced budget, and the list goes on and on. I can only hope that the entire country could be governed as well as Dean governed Vermont.
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Demobrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-14-03 11:20 PM
Response to Original message
4. Love how the man just says it.
"The Bush administration's policies have little to do with helping average Americans afford prescription drugs and everything to do with the drug industry's massive campaign contributions to the Republican Party," Governor Dean said.

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Feanorcurufinwe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-15-03 01:48 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. Kerry assails Bush for more lies
“Over and over again, this president has put partisan politics above scientific and medical advancement,” Kerry said in a speech at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. “Whether it is global warming or stem cell research or AIDS, President Bush has appeased his party's right wing by ignoring scientific fact and slowing progress.”

Kerry, who underwent successful prostate cancer surgery early this year, said Bush's decision in 2001 to limit federally funded stem cell research only to existing lines hampers important research. Bush and some religious leaders have expressed discomfort with stem cell research because it involves using human embryos. Scientists say the embryos' undifferentiated cells are useful in studying how cancer and birth defects occur, and as a source of potentially therapeutic cells for a variety of serious diseases.

The Massachusetts Democrat also said Bush misled the country in saying two years ago that 60 stem cell lines were available for research, when the National Institute of Health's stem cell registry only listed 11 such lines.

“Nothing illustrates this administration's antiscience attitude better than George Bush's cynical decision to limit research on embryonic stem cells,” Kerry said. “It was wrong for George Bush to mislead America about Iraq's search for uranium in Africa and other aspects of war. But to mislead the country about America’s search for hope for their loved ones and for cures for diseases is unconscionable.”

<snip>

“Health care is not for the fortuitous. It is a right,” said Kerry
http://www.vnews.com/10142003/1362104.htm


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revcarol Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Oct-15-03 10:11 AM
Response to Original message
8. Gee, what a shock. Kucinich leads, others try to follow
with half-baked programs.

Yeah, Dean, the states can sure afford to try to cut prices when they're undercut by you as President not approving a national plan.

And Kerry's plan makes just as much NONsense.
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