Obama, drugmakers forge $80B discount deal-WEB ONLY

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President Barack Obama today welcomed the pharmaceutical industry’s agreement to help close a gap in Medicare’s drug coverage, calling the pact a step forward in the push for an overhaul of the nation’s health care system.

Obama said that drug companies have pledged to spend $80 billion over the next decade to help reduce the cost of drugs for seniors and pay for a portion of Obama’s health care legislation.

The companies will discount the cost of brand-name medicines by as much as 50 percent or more, according to PhRMA, the Washington- based industry trade group that represents major drugmakers such as Indianapolis-based  Eli Lilly and Co. and Pfizer Inc.

“This is a significant breakthrough on the road to health care reform, one that will make a difference in the lives of many older Americans,” Obama said in the White House’s Diplomatic Room.

He was joined by Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee who struck the deal with the White House; Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), and Barry Rand, head of the senior citizens’ advocacy group AARP. Notably absent was a representative from the pharmaceutical association.

“It was always designed to be an AARP event,” said Ken Johnson, spokesman for the association. “We don’t think we should have been invited to it.”

Billy Tauzin, the group’s president and a former Republican congressman from Louisiana, will attend a town hall meeting on health care that Obama is staging at the White House on Wednesday, Johnson said.

The president used the opportunity to make his sternest call yet for action, saying the drug agreement is one piece of “health care reform I expect Congress to enact this year.”

Obama said the move on Medicare will help correct an anomaly in the program that provides a prescription drug benefit through the government health care program for the elderly and disabled. Under the deal, drug companies will pay part of the cost of brand name drugs for lower and middle-income older people in the so-called “doughnut hole.” That term refers to a feature of the current drug program that requires beneficiaries to pay the entire cost of prescriptions after initial coverage is exhausted but before catastrophic coverage begins.

Obama said some Medicare beneficiaries will find at least a 50-percent discount on prescription drugs. Obama says drug companies stand to benefit when more Americans can afford prescription drugs.

The drug companies’ investment would reduce the cost of drugs for seniors and pay for a portion of Obama’s proposed revamping of health care.

“This is an early win for reform,” Rand said.

Johnson said there are other parts to the agreement that have still not been completed, but he declined to provide details.

“There are a lot of discussions going on right now, there are a lot of moving pieces, there are a lot of elements to it that have not been finalized,” Johnson said.

Others following the health care debate said they understood that as part of the agreement, the drug group was also discussing additional savings for low-income people, but details were unclear. Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA, which favors a health overhaul, said he understood the additional cost reductions would be for lower-income seniors.

On a parallel track, the White House and Senate Democrats have been holding private, separate talks with representatives of doctors, hospitals, insurers and medical device manufacturers in hopes of finding specific savings those groups would be willing to produce. None of those negotiations have yet to yield an agreement.
Under the agreement Obama discussed today, part of the $80 billion would be used to halve the cost of brand name drugs for Medicare recipients when they are in a coverage gap of the program. AARP, which represents 40 million older Americans, has long lobbied to eliminate that coverage gap completely.

The deal would affect about 26 million low- and middle-income recipients of the program’s enrollees, AARP said. It would apply to brand name and biologic drugs, but not generics, the group said, and likely take effect in July 2010, assuming drug overhaul legislation becomes law.

Under Medicare’s Part D prescription drug program, recipients pay about 25 percent of the cost of their drugs until they and the government have paid $2,700.

At that point, beneficiaries must cover the full cost of drugs until they have spent $4,350 from their own pockets. When they reach that amount, Medicare’s catastrophic drug benefit takes effect, and recipients only pay 5 percent of their drugs’ costs until the end of the year.

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