ICYMI: PBM exec admits choosing profits over patients
Recent remarks by one executive make clear that the PBM industry has a choice: protect its profits or lower costs for patients.
Recent remarks by one executive make clear that the PBM industry has a choice: protect its profits or lower costs for patients.
With Congress discussing policy changes that would lower drug costs for patients and rein in powerful middlemen, insurers and their PBMs are dusting off their old playbook and once again threatening to increase costs for employers if required to do their job and actually provide meaningful coverage to patients. But recent remarks by one executive make clear that the PBM industry has a choice: protect its profits or lower costs for patients. It seems the PBM industry prefers profits over patients. According to a new report by STAT News:
“As Congress considers wide-ranging reforms to pharmacy benefit managers, a top executive at CVS Health, which owns one of the largest PBMs in the country, said the company would find ways to maintain its level of profit if those reforms to things like drug rebates went into effect.
‘There’s other ways in the economic model that we can adjust to if one of those things changes,’ Shawn Guertin, CVS’ chief financial officer, said at an industry conference Wednesday. ‘The other important part of this, if some of these things change, it could lead to higher costs for employers and health plans.’” (emphasis added)
There you have it. PBMs putting profits before patients.
Sadly, the threat of higher costs or premiums is one that insurers and PBMs frequently use to block reforms that would rein in their abusive practices and make insurance work like it’s supposed to. But there are a few key facts to keep in mind whenever we hear these scare tactics:
With PBMs preferring profits over patients, let’s hope policymakers reject these scare tactics and continue to push for strong reforms that make medicines more affordable by holding PBMs accountable.