Democrat
Clinton to unveil plan to fight drug 'price gouging'
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[September 22, 2015]
By Emily Stephenson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will unveil a plan this week to
cap out-of-pocket costs for specialty drugs, she said on Monday, after
her tweet accusing companies of "price gouging" sent biotech stocks
tumbling.
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"I'm announcing a detailed plan to crack down on these abuses,"
Clinton said during a campaign stop in Little Rock, Arkansas.
"There's no excuse," she added.
Clinton is expected to discuss the specifics in Iowa on Tuesday.
While Clinton has maintained her front-runner status among Democrats
seeking their party's nomination for the November 2016 election, she
has been under pressure to take more populist stances to widen her
lead over the current second-place Democratic candidate, U.S.
Senator Bernie Sanders.
She could face more hurdles if Vice President Joe Biden enters the
race. Clinton led a recent Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll with 48
percent support.
Sanders already has introduced legislation in the Senate to crack
down on what he called "skyrocketing" increases in prescription drug
prices.
On Monday, shares of biotech companies such as Immunogen and Gilead
Sciences dropped after Clinton tweeted that steep prices for
specialty drugs were "outrageous."
Clinton pointed to a New York Times story about a 62-year-old drug
to treat a deadly parasitic infection that soared in price to $750 a
tablet from $13.50 after the drug was bought in August by a start-up
pharmaceutical company.
"It's disgraceful," Clinton said in Arkansas, referencing the drug
prices in the story.
"Big Pharma" companies have long been criticized for steadily
raising prices of prescription medicines in the United States,
unrestrained by price controls that are common in other countries.
Also controversial has been a strategy by some companies to raise
prices for older drugs that they acquire. Examples include the heart
medications Nitropress and Isuprel, which were bought by Valeant
Pharmaceuticals Inc this year.
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Specialty drugs are typically defined as high-cost prescription
medications used to treat chronic or life-threatening conditions
such as cancer.
Clinton's comments on Monday were her first about how to tackle high
drug prices, but she has talked about the problems facing consumers
before.
In June, Clinton said drug companies that benefit from a Pacific
trade pact should offer bulk discounts on products to U.S.
government programs such as Medicare.
The iShares Nasdaq Biotech ETF, which tracks an index of
biotechnology and pharmaceutical stocks, was down about 4.3 percent
at 341.48 on Monday afternoon. The Nasdaq biotech index skidded 4.3
percent.
For more on the 2016 presidential race, see the Reuters blog, "Tales
from the Trail" (http://blogs.reuters.com/talesfromthetrail/).
(Additional reporting by Ransdell Pierson in New York and Amanda
Becker in Little Rock, Arkansas; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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