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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Aug 11 2021

Full Issue

Fed Up With Waiting, Groups Make Their Own Lower-Cost Drugs

Read about the biggest pharmaceutical developments and pricing stories from the past week in KHN's Prescription Drug Watch roundup.

AP: Groups Make Own Drugs To Fight High Drug Prices, Shortages

Impatient with years of inaction in Washington on prescription drug costs, U.S. hospital groups, startups and nonprofits have started making their own medicines in a bid to combat stubbornly high prices and persistent shortages of drugs with little competition. The efforts are at varying stages, but some have already made and shipped millions of doses. Nearly half of U.S. hospitals have gotten some drugs from the projects and more medicines should be in retail pharmacies within the next year as the work accelerates. Most groups are working on generics, while at least one is trying to develop brand-name drugs. All aim to sell their drugs at prices well below what competitors charge. (Johnson, 8/10)

Also —

Modern Healthcare: Health Insurers Allegedly Use Biologic Shortage To Promote Biosimilars 

The American Academy of Ophthalmology has accused large health insurers of using a biologic drug shortage as a means to push patients into using biosimilars for a common retina disease, even though the drugs haven't been tested for that use. The San Francisco-based lobbying group called on seven health insurers to stop recommending the use of two biosimilars for Genentech USA's Avastin, a biologic drug used to treat eye diseases such as age-related macular degeneration and some cancers. The industry group has asked CMS to stop insurers from pressuring patients to take biosimilars Zirabev from Pfizer and Mvasi from Amgen for age-related macular degeneration, which is the leading cause of blindness in individuals over 60 and affects approximately 15 million people in the U.S. (Tepper, 8/5)

Fierce Healthcare: Study: Drug Utilization Costs Health Industry $93B A Year, With Patients Bearing Most Of The Cost

Drug utilization management such as prior authorization and stricter formularies cost the healthcare industry $93 billion annually, with patients bearing the largest share of the cost, a new study found. The study, published Monday in the journal Health Affairs, found that intense use of drug utilization measures has led to patients spending $35.8 billion a year in cost sharing. (King, 8/4)

Fierce Healthcare: GoodRx Inks Deal With Surescripts To Provide Information On Cash Prices For Drugs

GoodRx struck a deal with medication data giant Surescripts to provide doctors and clinicians with more information about the cash price of drugs at the point of care. The partnership will significantly expand GoodRx's footprint as Surescripts has relationships with most electronic health record (EHR) vendors. The deal also expands the information healthcare providers have on cash pay drug pricing information. (Landi, 8/6)

The Washington Post: PhRMA’s Misleading Description Of Medicare Drug-Price Legislation 

“They want to repeal a protection in Medicare that protects access to my medicines. They call it negotiation, but it really means the government decides what medicines I can get.”— Sue from Ohio, who says she had Type 1 diabetes, speaking in a television advertisement sponsored by Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA). This ad is appearing in heavy rotation on cable news networks and during public-affairs programs like CBS’s “Face the Nation” and NBC’s “Meet the Press.” It’s part of a PhRMA initiative called “Voters for Cures,” which features the voices of ordinary Americans. (Kessler, 8/10)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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