Conference Coverage

Payers part of the drug-pricing problem, says FDA commissioner


 

REPORTING FROM AHIP 2018


His comments received a quick rebuttal from AHIP.

“There is a lot of blame being pushed around,” Daniel Nam, AHIP executive director of federal programs, said in an interview. “Along with the blame are a lot of distractions, misdirections, and these easy one-off fixes or problems that pop their head up and come and go. ... We try to stay focused on what is the real problem and that is essentially the starting price.”

He noted that if a treatment has a high starting price, such at coming gene therapies that could cost $1 million per patient, “it creates a pressure on the industry and it threatens our health care system to be unsustainable in the long term. What we are worried about is that there is no check on [the pharmaceutical industry’s] ability to set high list prices and even subsequently increase them.”

Mr. Nam noted that there is a fine balance that needs to be achieved to allow manufacturers to profit while at the same time ensuring access to therapies at reasonable prices.

Recommended Reading

Preoperative penicillin allergy tests could decrease SSI
MDedge Internal Medicine
Supreme Court declines to hear DACA case
MDedge Internal Medicine
Expert argues for improving MACRA, not scrapping it
MDedge Internal Medicine
Americans support the right to affordable health care
MDedge Internal Medicine
Never too late to operate? Surgery near end of life is common, costly
MDedge Internal Medicine
Study finds AD accounts for hundreds of thousands of annual ED visits
MDedge Internal Medicine
Risking it all on the miracle of teamwork
MDedge Internal Medicine
CMS issues split decision on Arkansas Medicaid waiver
MDedge Internal Medicine
Preparing to respond to workplace violence
MDedge Internal Medicine
Breast cancer care delayed when patients have high deductibles
MDedge Internal Medicine