New Jobs
What 6,000 Nurses Just Told Us About Nurse Life in 2025 - Nurse.org 19 AI-Powered RCM Solutions to Solve Healthcare Providers' Financial Woes - PharmiWeb.com In 1st physician job, onboarding needs to emphasize relationships How to Become a Medical Biller & Coder in Boston, MA - Research.com How to Crack Biotech Job Interviews – 2025 Edition! - BioTecNika Lauren Elizabeth Hostler | News, Sports, Jobs - Shepherdstown Chronicle Medical Billing / Coding Professor Jobs in Higher Education CodaMetrix Chosen by Health Systems Representing $180B in Net Patient Revenue Adult education to expand at Jefferson County JVS - The Herald Star Data Science Intern Needed at Eversana - Apply Online - BioTecNika Pfizer Internship Opportunity - MSc & PhD Apply Online - BioTecNika 3 Best Industries To Find a Remote Job With a Livable Wage 40 Real Ways to Earn Money From Home SMART Fellowships 2025 For Life Sciences, Apply Now - BioTecNika 10 States Where Nurse Burnout Is Out of Control — Is Yours on the List? Providence cuts 600 jobs in restructuring | Healthcare Finance News Medical Coding Career Paths Webinar Hosted Successfully by Biotecnika Top 10 Occupational Therapy Graduate Programs | 2025 - Nurse.org Project Associate Job at NIAB – MSc Agricultural Science Candidates Attend Walk-in Florida's Gilgal Medical Opens Strategic Warehouse Facility in Dallas, Adding 50 Jobs A Leading Medical Billing and Coding Company Empowering Healthcare Providers Nationwide YSU offers new degree focused on health information management - Tribune Chronicle Bayada Home Health cuts about 100 HQ jobs amid 'challenging environment' Prime Healthcare consolidating more than 100 jobs at Chicago-area hospitals Hundreds graduate from Goodwill of North Georgia's job training programs Nurse Practitioner Billing Loopholes Made Insurers $15B — Humana Calls for Medicare Reform Nurses were COVID heroes. Now they're being squeezed by Medicaid cuts YSU to launch online healthcare data degree program - WFMJ.com Top PMHNP Programs in Florida | 2025 - Nurse.org DeepSeek calls intern for AI medical data labeling jobs - Tech in Asia Medical Claims Officer at Marie Stopes Tanzania | AJIRA YAKO Upcoming Internships, Hands-On Training & Workshops at BioTecNika - Upgrade your Skills R&D- CDAIP- Sr. Medical Coding Specialist - CD at Sanofi Nurse Practitioners Gain Prescriptive Independence After Governor's Veto Override in OK In first physician job onboarding, look for gradual education | American Medical Assoc... The rise of new-collar jobs: 6 skill-based careers for the modern workforce - Times of... Clinical Data Management Webinar: A Fast-Growing Career - BioTecNika Healthcare High-Rollers: 15 Lucrative Medical Jobs That Don't Require a Bachelor's Degree Trump Pardons Nursing Home Owner Who Stole $7M From Staff Paychecks, Committed Tax Fraud How to Spot Medical Billing Errors - AARP CT university launches new way of learning, it's growing fast - Hartford Courant Remote/WFH Life Sciences Clinical Data Coding Job at Fortrea - BioTecNika Ambience Healthcare's AI Platform Surpasses Clinician Performance by 27% in Medical ... - CBS... Ambience Healthcare's AI Platform Surpasses Clinician Performance by 27% in ... - KGET.com Frederick County Job Hunt May 27, 2025 | WFMD-AM Ambience Healthcare's AI Platform Surpasses Clinician Performance by 27% in Medical ... Ambience Healthcare's AI Platform Surpasses Clinician Performance by 27 ... - Charlotte Observer Washington State College of Ohio graduates honored at commencement - Marietta Times At Amazon, some coders say their jobs have begun to resemble warehouse work | Hacker N... At Amazon, some coders say their jobs have begun to resemble warehouse work - MSN

Medical Coding Jobs

Find your dream Job in Medical Coding

Medical Coding Jobs
News

As Drug Prices Keep Rising, State Lawmakers Propose Tough New Bills to Curb Them


Use Our Content

It can be republished for free.

Fed up with a lack of federal action to lower prescription drug costs, state legislators around the country are pushing bills to penalize drugmakers for unjustified price hikes and to cap payment at much-lower Canadian levels.

These bills, sponsored by both Republicans and Democrats in a half-dozen states, are a response to consumers’ intensified demand for action on drug prices as prospects for solutions from Congress remain highly uncertain.

Eighty-seven percent of Americans favor federal action to lower drug prices, making it the public’s second-highest policy priority, according to a survey released by Politico and Harvard University last month. That concern is propelled by the toll of out-of-pocket costs on Medicare beneficiaries, many of whom pay thousands of dollars a year. Studies show many patients don’t take needed drugs because of the cost.

“States will keep a careful eye on Congress, but they can’t wait,” said Trish Riley, executive director of the National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP), which has drafted two model bills on curbing prices that some state lawmakers are using.

Several reports released last month heightened the pressure for action. The Rand Corp. said average list prices in the U.S. for prescription drugs in 2018 were 2.56 times higher than the prices in 32 other developed countries, while brand-name drug prices averaged 3.44 times higher.

The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review found that drugmakers raised the list prices for seven widely used, expensive drugs in 2019 despite the lack of evidence of substantial clinical improvements. ICER, an independent drug research group, estimated that just those price increases cost U.S. consumers $1.2 billion a year more.

Democratic legislators in Hawaii, Maine and Washington recently introduced bills, based on one of NASHP’s models, that would impose an 80% tax on the drug price increases that ICER determines in its annual report are not supported by evidence of improved clinical value.

Under this model, after getting the list of drugs from ICER, states would require the manufacturers of those medicines to report total in-state sales of their drugs and the price difference since the previous year. Then the state would assess the tax on the manufacturer. The revenue generated by the tax would be used to fund programs that help consumers afford their medications.

“I’m not looking to gather more tax dollars,” said Democratic Sen. Ned Claxton, the sponsor of the bill in Maine and a retired family physician. “The best outcome would be to have drug companies just sell at a lower price.”

Similarly, Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker, a Republican, proposed a penalty on price hikes for a broader range of drugs as part of his new budget proposal, projecting it would haul in $70 million in its first year.

Meanwhile, Republican and Democratic lawmakers in Hawaii, Maine, North Dakota, Oklahoma and Rhode Island have filed bills that would set the rates paid by state-run and commercial health plans — excluding Medicaid — for up to 250 of the costliest drugs to rates paid by the four most populous Canadian provinces. That could reduce prices by an average of 75%, according to NASHP.

Legislators in other states plan to file similar bills, Riley said.

Drugmakers, which have formidable lobbying power in Washington, D.C., and the states, fiercely oppose these efforts. “The outcomes of these policies would only make it harder for people to get the medicines they need and would threaten the crucial innovation necessary to get us out of a global pandemic,” the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the industry’s trade group, said in a written statement.

Colorado, Florida and several New England states previously passed laws allowing importation of cheaper drugs from Canada, an effort strongly promoted by former President Donald Trump. But those programs are still being developed and each would need a federal green light.

Bipartisan bills in Congress that would have penalized drugmakers for raising prices above inflation rates and capped out-of-pocket drug costs for enrollees in Medicare Part D drug plans died last year.

“If we waited for Congress, we’d have moss on our backs,” said Washington state Sen. Karen Keiser, a Democrat who sponsored the state’s bill to tax drug price hikes.

Based on ICER data, two of the drugs that could be targeted for tax penalties under the legislation are Enbrel and Humira — blockbuster products used to treat rheumatoid arthritis and other autoimmune conditions.

Since acquiring Enbrel in 2002, Amgen has raised the price 457% to $72,240 for a year’s treatment, according to a report last fall from the House Committee on Oversight and Reform.

In a written statement, Amgen denied that Enbrel’s list price increase is unsupported by clinical evidence and said the company ensures that every patient who needs its medicines has “meaningful access” to them.

The price for Humira, the world’s best-selling drug, with $20 billion in global sales in 2019, has gone up 470% since it was introduced to the market in 2003, according to AnalySource, a drug price database.

In contrast, AbbVie slashed Humira’s price in Europe by 80% in 2018 to match the price of biosimilar products available there. AbbVie patents block those biosimilar drugs in the U.S.

AbbVie did not respond to requests for comment for this article.

Manufacturers say the list price of a drug is irrelevant because insurers and patients pay a significantly lower net price, after getting rebates and other discounts.

But many people, especially those who are uninsured, are on Medicare or have high-deductible plans, pay some or all the cost based on the list price.

Katherine Pepper of Bellingham, Washington, has felt the bite of Humira’s list price. Several years ago, she retired from her job as a management analyst to go on Social Security disability and Medicare because of her psoriatic arthritis, diabetes and gastrointestinal issues.

When she enrolled in a Medicare Part D drug plan, she was shocked by her share of the cost. Since Pepper pays 5% of the Humira list price after reaching Medicare’s catastrophic cost threshold, she spent roughly $15,000 for the drug last year.

Medicare doesn’t allow drugmakers to cover beneficiaries’ copay costs because of concerns that it could prompt more beneficiaries and their doctors to choose high-cost drugs and increase federal spending.

Many patients with rheumatoid and other forms of arthritis are forced to switch from Enbrel or Humira, which they can inject at home themselves, to different drugs that are infused in a doctor’s office when they go on Medicare. Infusion drugs are covered almost entirely by the Medicare Part B program for outpatient care. But switching can complicate a patient’s care.

“Very few Part D patients can afford the [injectable drugs] because the copay can be so steep,” said Dr. Marcus Snow, an Omaha, Nebraska, rheumatologist and spokesperson for the American College of Rheumatology. “The math gets very ugly very quickly.”

To continue taking Humira, Pepper racked up large credit card bills, burning through most of her savings. In 2019, she and her husband, who’s retired and on Medicare, sold their house and moved into a rental apartment. She skimps on her diabetes medications to save money, which has taken a toll on her health, causing skin and vision problems, she said.

She’s also cut back on food spending, with her and her husband often eating only one meal a day.

“I’m now in a situation where I have to do Russian roulette, spin the wheel and figure out what I can do without this month,” said Pepper.

This article is part of a series on the impact of high prescription drug costs on consumers made possible through the 2020 West Health and Families USA Media Fellowship.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

USE OUR CONTENT

This story can be republished for free (details).

Syndicated from https://khn.org/news/article/as-drug-prices-keep-rising-state-lawmakers-propose-tough-new-bills-to-curb-them/