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		U.S. Senate Democrats advance deal to lower drug prices
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		 [July 07, 2022] 
 By Ahmed Aboulenein and Richard Cowan
 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrats in the U.S. Senate are advancing a deal 
		that would allow the government's Medicare health plan for older and 
		disabled Americans to negotiate lower prescription drug prices, Senate 
		sources said on Wednesday.
 
 The plan, which could potentially lower government health costs by 
		billions of dollars, has long been a goal of President Joe Biden's 
		Democrats and is popular with voters.
 
 Affected drugs could include Bristol-Myers Squibb Co's top-selling 
		cancer drug Revlimid, AbbVie Inc's rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira, and 
		Bayer AG's blood thinner pill Xarelto, according to the Kaiser Family 
		Foundation (KFF).
 
 The plan has been held up by contentious intra-party negotiations on 
		taxes, climate change and other elements of a proposed domestic policy 
		bill.
 
 The sources said all 50 Senate Democrats support the drug plan, 
		including Senator Joe Manchin, who is often at odds with other members 
		of his party.
 
 "His support for this proposal has never been in question," Manchin 
		spokesperson Sam Runyon said in a statement.
 
 A source familiar with the proposal said Senate Democrats were still 
		working on the provisions to tackle climate change and raise taxes, 
		which would be coupled with the Medicare proposal.
 
 While negotiations continue, the Medicare portion was to be submitted to 
		the Senate parliamentarian to ensure it complies with complex budget 
		rules that would allow Democrats to bypass Republicans and pass it with 
		a simple majority in the 100-seat chamber with Vice President Kamala 
		Harris breaking the tie.
 
		
		 
		The Democrats' plan would allow the Medicare health program for the 
		disabled and people aged 65 and older to negotiate discounts for some of 
		the costliest drugs and penalize companies that raise prices faster than 
		inflation.
 
 It also introduces a $2,000 annual cap on out-of-pocket costs for 
		Medicare beneficiaries.
 
 Medicare could annually negotiate prices for 10 of the most expensive 
		single-source drugs starting in 2026, with that number increasing to 20 
		drugs by 2029, according to Juliette Cubanski, a KFF analyst.
 
 Newer drugs would not be eligible, she said.
 
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			 REDUCING THE BUDGET DEFICIT
 The plan would reduce the federal budget deficit by $297 billion 
			over 10 years, according to a November report from the nonpartisan 
			Congressional Budget Office.
 
 AARP, an influential advocacy group for Americans over the age of 
			50, said it backed the plan.
 
 But PhRMA, a lobbying group for the pharmaceutical industry, said 
			the price controls would threaten future drug development.
 The Biotechnology Innovation Organization, another 
			industry group, also said it opposed the plan. 
			
			 It was unclear when legislation bundling the three initiatives would 
			be complete. Democrats hope to pass the legislation before the Nov. 
			8 midterm election, when Republicans could win control of one or 
			both chambers of Congress.
 The Senate's top Republican, Mitch McConnell, has threatened to hold 
			other legislation hostage if the Democrats advance their package.
 
 SCALED BACK
 
 Biden and Democrats promised voters sweeping drug price reform but 
			agreed in November to move ahead with a far less ambitious proposal 
			after facing opposition in Congress.
 
 It still allows Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices, but they 
			would not apply to people with private health insurance, a provision 
			included in an earlier, more ambitious, proposal.
 
 It would allow the government to negotiate the price of up to 20 of 
			the single-supplier drugs on which it spends the most, rather than 
			the 250 drugs progressives had sought.
 
 Other weakened provisions include an inflation cap that does not 
			reverse previous price hikes, something the old framework would have 
			done.
 
 The Senate's proposed text does not include Medicare negotiation of 
			insulin prices or a $35 monthly cap on out-of-pocket insulin costs, 
			both present in the House version.
 
 Democrats are proposing a separate insulin bill that would include 
			the $35 cap.
 
 (Reporting by Richard Cowan and Ahmed Aboulenein in Washington, 
			Moira Warburton in Miami and Michael Erman in New Jersey; editing by 
			Andy Sullivan, Chizu Nomiyama and Howard Goller)
 
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