REUTERS EVENTS-U.S. is talking to companies about drug price
negotiations
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[October 21, 2022]
By Bianca Flowers
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. government is holding talks with health
insurers and drugmakers as it sets up the framework for direct
negotiations of prescription drug prices for Medicare recipients, a top
Biden administration official said on Friday.
President Joe Biden in August signed into law the Inflation Reduction
Act, which among its provisions for the first time allows the federal
Medicare health plan for people age 65 and older and the disabled to
negotiate prices on some of the most expensive drugs.
"We're already beginning those conversations," U.S. Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure said at
a Reuters Events health conference in Chicago.
"We're in the process of figuring out what questions people need
answered from us, whether it's health plans who are trying to figure out
how are they going to incorporate what we're doing into the benefits for
people, thinking about the companies and how are they going to submit
the data," she said.
CMS needs to collect data so it can identify the first 10 drugs that
will be subject to negotiations, a list that will expand to 20 by 2029.
It has started hiring for a new negotiation team this fall, Brooks-LaSure
said, and will continue to do so over the coming months.
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Government negotiation of drug
prices represents a rare legislative defeat for the powerful
pharmaceutical industry and sets a precedent for curbing rising
prescription drug prices in the world's most lucrative market for
medicine. Still, Brooks-LaSure said the talks were so far
collaborative.
"The feeling that I get from the stakeholders that
we are meeting with right now is a feeling of we may not agree on
what the law asks us to do, but there is a desire for it to work
well," she said.
Health officials are also talking to insurers and drugmakers about
moving sales and distribution of COVID vaccines and treatments to
the private sector, she added. The government expects its supplies
to run out over the next year and is preparing for them to be sold
via the commercial market.
"That is a conversation that we are engaged with, and meeting with
payers, meeting with companies, and really trying to answer the
questions that will come when we get out of the public health
emergency."
Some experts have said they expect the official COVID-19 public
health emergency designation will expire in January.
"I don't know when the public health emergency will end, exactly,"
Brooks-LaSure said. "But we know that we are in a different place
than we were a couple of years ago."
(Reporting by Bianca Flowers in Chicago; Writing by Ahmed Aboulenein
in Washington; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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