
Some of the most commonly advertised drugs cost between $503 and $11,000 a month. (Frankie Leon/Flickr)
That could change with a proposed change by the Trump administration to require drug companies to put prices in many of their TV ads.
The rule, announced by federal health regulators, would apply to drugs offered through Medicare or Medicaid that cost more than $35 per month, or for a course of treatment.
Frederick Isasi, executive director of the advocacy group Families USA, says if finalized, the rule could show people the real cost of some well-known prescription drugs.
“This is an important step forward because it gives consumers a sense of the magnitude of the drug,β he states. βIs this a drug that is going to cost them $30 a month, $300 a month, $3,000 a month, $30,000 or more, helping the American public understand the exorbitant prices being charged by drug companies?”
Some worry the proposal is only a pre-election perk designed to attract voters β one that could be dropped after the midterm election, Nov. 6.
The plan is opposed by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, a trade group that proposed instead to put up a website in the spring that discloses drug prices and co-pays.
Isasi says he’d like to see the Trump administration actually negotiate lower prices for consumers rather than hoping transparency will shame drug makers into charging less.
He adds that high drug prices affect everyone, even those who don’t take any medications.
“For people who may not use pharmaceuticals, what they don’t realize is, if there’s a $3,000-a-month drug that’s being used by patients within their insurance plan, then the cost of that drug gets ‘baked into’ everyone’s premiums,” he points out.
According to the health care research group Quintiles IMS Institute, the Americans spent $450 billion on prescription drugs in 2016 before rebates.
If the administration finalizes the rule, pharmaceutical trade groups say they won’t rule out litigation.