That's not news, of course. But a longread at
PhillyMag provides some insight into the bureaucracy and some ideas.
I’m on drugs for multiple sclerosis and have
been since 2004. MS meds are what are called maintenance drugs, meaning
you take them daily or weekly from the moment of diagnosis till death or
untenable side effects do you part. They’re also some of the most
jaw-droppingly expensive drugs on the market. Today, in 2019, the four
different name-brand medications I’ve been prescribed at different
points in my treatment list for between $75,816 and $98,899. Per year. Prices are indeed high. And they’re going up fast.
Like everyone else, I’d been hearing the
drumbeat: The cost of prescription drugs was out of control. But because
the insurance plans I’ve been on had decent-enough prescription drug
coverage — my meds had generally cost me a co-pay in the
$100-to-$150-per-month range — I’d been shielded from the issue. And a
few years back, I discovered that if you ask, some drug manufacturers
will actually pay your co-pays for you. So I was getting drugs that
listed for a decent annual salary for the cost of my
modest-by-comparison health-insurance premiums. I didn’t know who was paying how much of those prices — honestly, they seemed too absurd to be real. All I knew was that it wasn’t me.
But as I sat in the conference room for my company’s annual
benefits presentation last December, I got a cold dose of reality — and
became another of the millions of Americans incensed by the skyrocketing
prices pharmaceutical companies charge for their products and the
byzantine, competition-squelching health-care system that allows those
prices to escalate unchecked...
Thanks to secret negotiations, the prices that
pharmaceutical companies list are different from the prices for your
insurance company, which are different from the prices for your
pharmacy. America’s health-care system is the most expensive and
pointlessly complicated in the world...
Fact 7: Nobody outside of this
system knows what’s happening inside of it. And the fact that we know so
little suggests that it’s in the best interests of all involved to keep
quiet.
Fact 8: Pharmaceutical companies claim, rightly, that
developing drugs is an expensive business, and that for every drug that
eventually makes it to market, there are untold failures.
Fact 9: And yet we also know that pharmaceutical companies are some of the most profitable businesses on the planet...
Fact 10: As a result, everything
happens in a black box, and as any NTSB investigator will tell you,
nothing good comes out of black boxes. The whole system is a vicious
circle of plausible deniability. In the face of criticism, any one
entity in the supply chain can, and often will, point to the others and
say, essentially, “Not it.”
Way more at PhillyMag.
My cousins have a genetic disease that requires serious medication, to the tune of $10k per month. One is a school teacher, so 2-3 months was basically his annual salary. I was so grateful when the ACA made it harder for insurance to deny him what amounts to basically his right to exist (these maintenance medications).
ReplyDeleteLike college costs, the key to letting things spiral out of control is a needlessly complex system. But accountability is coming... my company is among many designing blockchains that will make transparency and accountability incapable.
"inescapable"?
ReplyDeleteLol darn autocorrect :P
ReplyDeleteThanks for translating!