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Fixing Potholes Shouldn’t Cost Seniors More at the Pharmacy Counter

July 19, 2021 05:21 PM Eastern Daylight Time

WASHINGTON--()--The Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease (PFCD) has issued the following statement in response to news that Congress may increase costs for Medicare beneficiaries to pay for an infrastructure proposal:

“Lowering out-of-pocket costs improves medication adherence, which in turn lowers total healthcare spending and reduces the burden of illness. Enhancing people’s health and 'human infrastructure' is at least as important to America’s long-term growth as physical infrastructure.”
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“Modernizing the U.S. infrastructure is a needed and important effort, but should not be undertaken at the cost of chronically ill Medicare beneficiaries. Delaying or eliminating Part D rebate reforms aimed at lowering out-of-pocket costs for seniors at the pharmacy counter is not a defendable 'pay for' to fund infrastructure.
 
“Rebate reforms help patients. Rebates lower drug costs for insurers, but patients taking the medicines often do not benefit from rebates or other discounts. In 2019, rebates and other discounts on prescription drugs reduced drug spending by $175 billion,1 but drug costs for Medicare beneficiaries continue to rise.
 
“With rebate reforms, Medicare beneficiaries would finally see their drug spending go down at the pharmacy counter as savings from rebates and other discounts on medicines have to be shared with beneficiaries.
 
“Lowering out-of-pocket costs improves medication adherence, which in turn lowers total healthcare spending and reduces the burden of illness. Enhancing people’s health and 'human infrastructure' is at least as important to America’s long-term growth as physical infrastructure.”


1 drugchannels.net/2020/08/the-gross-to-net-bubble-hit-175-billion.html