Cheap Ozempic? How millions of Americans with obesity may get access to
costly weight-loss drugs
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[November 27, 2024]
By AMANDA SEITZ
WASHINGTON (AP) — Millions of obese Americans would get access to
popular weekly injectables that would help them shed pounds quickly if a
$ 35 billion proposal from the Biden administration is blessed by
President-elect Donald Trump.
The rule, unveiled Tuesday by the Health and Human Services Department,
would require Medicare and Medicaid to cover weight-loss drugs like
Wegovy or Zepbound for a large segment of Americans who are obese.
But it's unclear if the proposal, which would not go into effect until
after Trump takes office, will have support from his new administration
— including from Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an opponent of the drugs whom
the president-elect has tapped to serve as head of HHS.
Here's what to know about the drugs and the Biden administration's
proposal:
The drugs work by regulating appetites
The weight-loss drugs, also called anti-obesity medications or GLP-1s,
mimic the hormone known as glucagon-like peptide 1, which regulates
appetites by communicating fullness between the gut and brain when
people eat.
The drugs include Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy and Ozempic as well as Eli
Lilly’s Zepbound and Mounjaro.
In clinical trials, most participants taking Wegovy or Mounjaro to treat
obesity lost an average of 15% to 22% of their body weight — up to 50
pounds or more in many cases. But a slice of “nonresponders” did not
lose significant body weight.
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Private health insurers have limited coverage of the drugs. Medicare has
been barred from covering them under a law that says the program cannot
pay for weight-loss products. Coverage through Medicaid, meanwhile, has
varied from state to state.
That's meant the drugs — which can cost upwards of $1,000 monthly — have
been largely unaffordable for many.
It would benefit millions, but cost billions
The rule announced Tuesday affects Medicaid, which provides health care
coverage for roughly 70 million of the nation’s poorest people, and
Medicare, the health insurance program for about 67 million older
Americans.
Under the proposal, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or
CMS, would reinterpret the federal law, to consider the drugs as a
treatment for obesity diseases.
The nation's top health agency estimates as many as 3.5 million people
on Medicare and 4 million on Medicaid could qualify for coverage of the
drugs. But research suggests far more people might qualify, with the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services estimating roughly 28 million
people on Medicaid are considered obese.
And the proposal would cost a lot of money — at least $35 billion over
the next decade.
It's not clear if Trump will support it
The drugs are popular — with a majority of Americans telling health firm
KFF in a poll earlier this year that Medicare should cover the drugs. A
bipartisan coalition of lawmakers, too, has lobbied for coverage of the
drugs.
But support is mixed in Trump’s inner circle.
Kennedy has railed against the idea of Medicare or Medicaid covering the
drugs. Instead, he's told Congress that they should expand coverage of
healthier foods and gym memberships through the government-sponsored
health care programs.
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Donna Cooper holds up a dosage of Wegovy, a drug used for weight
loss, at her home, March 1, 2024, in Front Royal, Va. (AP
Photo/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades, File)
 Meanwhile Dr. Mehmet Oz, who is
poised to take the helm of CMS, has said the drugs can be a helpful
tool. In a video posted to Instagram last year, Oz praised some of
the benefits of the drugs, but said the long-term effects should be
further studied.
“I think these new generation of medications offer us a huge
opportunity,” Oz said.
Trump or Kennedy could ultimately ignore Biden's proposal and not
implement it.
Some lawmakers praised the move on Tuesday, while others expressed
skepticism.
Rep. Brad Wenstrup, a Republican who sponsored a bill to have
Medicare cover the weight-loss drugs, has argued that covering the
drugs and other obesity treatments could save taxpayers in the long
run.
“I am encouraged to see the Administration support our efforts to
help make Americans healthier by allowing Medicare coverage of new,
physician prescribed and FDA approved anti-obesity medications,"
Wenstrup said in a statement.
He called for the Congress to pass a law that would help pay for
dietitians, nutritionists and behavioral therapy to treat obesity.
Sen. Bernie Sanders, however, warned that unless the government
required drugmakers to lower the price of the medications Medicare
premiums would “skyrocket" under the plan.
Doctors praise the drugs, but still have concerns
It's good for more Americans to have access to these drugs, which
have proven effective, but Dr. David Ludwig, a nutrition and obesity
expert at Harvard University, hopes that it doesn't become the
primary way obesity is treated in America.
He worries that not enough investment is being made to figure out
what is driving climbing obesity rates across the U.S., and the role
that healthy foods and exercise might play in solving that epidemic.
“It’s appropriate to treat the problems that we now face with drugs,
but let’s not stop there,” Ludwig said. “Let’s identify what’s
causing the problem, and ultimately rely on these drugs — which have
side effects — less and less over time.”
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Dr. Andrew Kraftson, who treats obese patients at the University of
Michigan, is happy that more of his patients might be able to afford
these drugs, which he has prescribed for patients and has had
successful results. But he, too, would like to see more research and
guidance from the government on prescribing the medications.
Kraftson also worries about some of the side effects for elderly
patients. The drugs, he points out, can lead to muscle loss, which
is a bigger problem for older Americans who are at risk of falling,
for example.
“I'm advocating for their thoughtful use,” Kraftson said. "Because
if you have a senior and you just write a prescription and the visit
takes five minutes, is that an appropriate level of care? Have we
defined that well?
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