For
Immediate Release:
July 15, 2003, 10 AM |
Contact:
Jen Mueller or Liz Hitchcock
202-546-9707
|
Uninsured
Consumers Pay Too High a Price For Prescription Drugs In Washington, DC Area
and Across the U.S.
Uninsured consumers in the
Washington, D.C. area are charged 80 percent more for 10 common prescription
drugs than the best available market prices, according to a
survey released today by U.S. PIRG. The survey found that, nationally, uninsured
consumers were charged 72 percent more on average for 10 common prescription
medications than the federal government.
The group criticized most
leading administration and Congressional reforms in favor of better alternatives
such as urging state governments to establish prescription drug buying pools
and urging Congress to enact legislation requiring testing of the effectiveness
of differently-priced drugs and eliminating barriers to lower-cost generic alternatives
for high-priced prescription drugs.
"When the 41 million
uninsured Americans go it alone at the drug store, they pay the price-sometimes
more than double what government agencies pay to buy the same drugs in bulk
for large groups of consumers," said U.S. PIRG Consumer Program Director
Ed Mierzwinski.
"HMOS and the federal
government use their buying power to negotiate fairer prices for the drugs they
purchase," continued Mierzwinski. "Unfortunately, uninsured consumers
have no one doing the same on their behalf so drug companies are making money
hand over fist from chronically-ill Americans without prescription drug coverage."
Using a list of ten frequently
prescribed medications, U.S. PIRG and the state PIRGs surveyed more than 500
pharmacies in 18 states and the District of Columbia to determine how much more
uninsured consumers are charged for these medications compared to one of the
pharmaceutical industry's "most favored" customers, the federal government.
Among the key findings
are:
On average, uninsured
consumers in Washington, DC and the northern Virginia cities of Arlington, Alexandria
and Fairfax are charged 80 percent more for the 10 common prescription medications
than the federal government.
Uninsured DC consumers
paid more than double the federal supply schedule price for several surveyed
drugs, including the popular, and expensive, anti-cholesterol medication, Zocor.
DC area consumers paid $146.71, or 116 percent more than the federal supply
schedule price of $67.81 for a month's supply of Zocor.
Nationally, uninsured
consumers pay 72 percent more on average for the 10 common prescription medications
surveyed than the federal government.
Of the major metropolitan
areas surveyed, the four most expensive cities in which to buy prescription
drugs were Baltimore, Washington, DC, Philadelphia and Boston.
In June, both the House
and Senate passed versions of the Bush administration's Medicare reform bill
that would establish a prescription drug benefit for Medicare recipients. The
bills require recipients to join regional private health insurance plans to
obtain the new drug benefit.
"These bills fail to
address the skyrocketing cost of prescription drugs and do nothing to help the
millions of Americans without prescription drug coverage who do not qualify
for Medicare," said Mierzwinski.
U.S. PIRG called on Congress
to enact bi-partisan proposals such as the Prescription Drug Comparative Effectiveness
Act (H.R. 2356) sponsored by Rep. Tom Allen (ME) and Rep. Jo Ann Emerson (MO),
which would require federal agencies to study the cost-effectiveness of different
drugs used for the same treatment. Similar legislation has already been enacted
in Oregon, Mierzwinski said.
"PIRG's report is a
timely reminder that pharmaceutical companies charge the highest prices in the
world not only to seniors but to any American who lacks prescription drug coverage,"
said U.S. Representative Tom Allen (ME). "This price discrimination forces
many of our nation's most vulnerable consumers to pay full price for their medications
without the leverage over price that those with private health insurance, including
federal employees and Members of Congress, receive. The Medicare bills just
passed by the House and Senate actually forbid the federal government from negotiating
lower prices for seniors," concluded Rep. Allen.
U.S. PIRG also urged enactment of the bi-partisan Greater Access To Affordable
Pharmaceuticals Act (HR 2491/S 54) to close the loopholes that allow drug companies
to block lower-priced generic versions of their drugs from reaching the marketplace.
A version of that bill has been included in the Medicare reforms, noted Mierzwinski.
The state PIRGs are also campaigning to establish state prescription drug buying
pools that would allow businesses, the government and individuals of all ages
to use their combined buying power to negotiate lower drug prices.
"Prescription drug
buying pools are simply good medicine for runaway health care costs," concluded
Mierzwinski.
U.S. PIRG is the national
advocacy office for the state Public Interest Research Groups. State PIRGs are
non-profit, non-partisan public interest advocacy organizations. www.uspirg.org