CBO reaffirms our innovation ecosystem leads to improved lives, long-term savings
CBO’s findings reaffirms that the biopharmaceutical lifecycle is working exactly as intended.
CBO’s findings reaffirms that the biopharmaceutical lifecycle is working exactly as intended.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) recently released a new report looking at trends in spending, prices and use of prescription drugs. While some politicians are trying to use the report to justify a flawed policy that would let the federal government set the price of medicines, a closer, less partisan look at CBO’s findings reaffirms that the biopharmaceutical lifecycle is working exactly as intended.
Even with the introduction of many new treatments and cures, the CBO found that the average net price per prescription fell from $57 in 2009 to $50 in 2018 in the Medicare Part D program and from $63 to $48 in the Medicaid program.
Here are a few key points to keep in mind when reviewing the report:
The fact is the system of innovation we have today works extremely well. The CBO report confirms it. New treatments and cures are reaching patients, improving lives and generating savings across the health care system. Total spending on medicines remains a small share of U.S. health care spending and is expected to remain just 14% of total health spending over the next decade.
This doesn’t mean there aren’t patients who are struggling to afford their medicines, and that’s why the biopharmaceutical industry continues to urge Congress to pass patient-centered solutions that will lower out-of-pocket costs and preserve patient access to medicines and future innovation
But adopting extreme proposals like government price setting will upend our innovation ecosystem without delivering meaningful relief to patients at the pharmacy. There's a better way.