- 8 health systems, more than $1.4B in capital projects in May
- RFK Jr. visits Summa Health
- Kaiser Permanente plans 11K-square-foot MOB in Nevada
- Dentistry’s AI gold rush
- Community Health Network taps new CFO from Aspirus Health
- California creates $25M fund for at-risk hospitals
- Only 1 in 5 physicians is independent: 10 new numbers behind the collapse
- California physician group acquired by PRISM
- Behavioral health ED visits projected to rise by 1 million
- When your AI agent goes off script: What Moffitt Cancer Center caught early
- Utah physician, 2 nurses charged in $29M fraud scheme
- 3 Ascension CFO moves in 2 days
- The volume paradox costing ASCs millions
- Pediatric radiology leaders launch AI brain tumor dataset
- Inside SCA Health’s clinical nursing ladder — and how it helped cut turnover by 7%
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- 1 behavioral health leader’s playbook for staff retention and safety
- Centene executive to join Froedtert ThedaCare as chief nurse
- Behavioral health ED visits projected to rise by 1 million
- UPMC provides free RN-BSN degree to its nurses
- Physicians aren’t buying payers’ prior auth pledge: 5 survey notes
- 5 dental AI updates in 1 month
- 3 lawsuit settlements in dentistry
- Financial pressures shutter Iowa dental clinics: 4 notes
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- Independent autism research committee adds 7 members
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- 10 notes on the widening DSO performance gap
- CDC-linked autism researcher arraigned on fraud charges
- Nearly 1 in 3 boys under 14 discussed suicide in crisis conversations: Report
- How anesthesia became a financial liability for ASCs
- As Trump arrives in China, Big Pharma CEOs are notably absent
- Remarks at the MFA Legal & Compliance 2026 Conference
- GLP-1 Drugs May Improve Breast Cancer Outcomes
- CMS pauses hospice, home health Medicare enrollments in fraud crackdown
- NYU Langone Health says it received grand jury subpoena over gender-affirming care
- Merck KGaA looks to M&A to bolster its 'rather slim' pipeline
- Takeda, slimming down for 'new era,' plots 4,500 layoffs in latest restructuring drive
- BeOne Medicines’ Brukinsa TV ad 'Clarity' hit by FDA over 'misleading suggestions'
- Health systems are exploring AI-powered cardiac risk screening. New CMS reimbursement could unlock a business case for it
- Most mental health practitioners satisfied with work, financially stable, SimplePractice finds
- Ted Turner's Brain Disease More Common Than Previously Thought, Review Finds
- Novo, Lilly tout respective early response and weight loss maintenance data as GLP-1 rivalry intensifies
- Ivermectin Prescriptions Doubled After Mel Gibson Cancer Cure Claim
- Haleon tackles sports injuries with latest soccer play
- Eating Out Linked To Obesity Risk Worldwide
- Perimenopausal Women Face Greater Heart Risk, Study Finds
- Low Wages, Empty Plates, Heavy Toll: Rethinking Suicide Prevention
- RFK Jr. Swaps Vaccine Talk for Healthy Foods and Reading to Tots in Push To Woo Voters
- Trump and Kennedy Seek To Relax Safeguards for AI Healthcare Tools
- Valneva to lay off up to 15% of workforce in face of ‘adverse trend’ in travel vaccines
- California to award $111M for behavioral health supportive housing
- 6 new psychiatric residency programs to know
- USOSM adds New York practice
- NAMI partners on health crisis preparation hub
- Oklahoma enacts law expanding access to dental care
- Where dentists are leaving value behind in practice sales
- Why dental practices are closing in 2026
- Texas dental school to launch master’s program with orthodontic specialty
- Mayo Clinic CEO Gianrico Farrugia stepping down at year's end
- 988 calls are rising — what’s behind the surge?
- Providence hospital to lay off 40 workers amid behavioral health staffing overhaul
- BioMarin consolidates staff at Amicus HQ after closing $4.8B deal for rare disease peer
- US Monitors For Hantavirus As WHO Expects More Cases But 'Not Another COVID'
- University of California, union near May 14 strike deadline with no deal in hand
- 1 in 5 marketplace enrollees dropped their coverage in 2026: media report
- Hims & Hers posts $92M loss in Q1 as it shifts to branded GLP-1 medications
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- FDA Commissioner Marty Makary to resign, capping turbulent tenure
- FDA Commissioner Marty Makary to resign, capping turbulent tenure
- Providence puts years of losses in rearview with its third consecutive quarter of operating gains
- Millions of Women Suffer in Silence From Treatable Pelvic Organ Prolapse
- Eli Lilly pauses Indian obesity awareness campaign after regulatory notices: report
- Optum Rx unveils new transparent PBM model
- Fitness wearable Whoop adds on-demand clinician access, EHR syncing
- Alkermes’ Lumryz hits phase 3 mark in another sleep disorder, fueling momentum from $2.4B Avadel acquisition
- ACA exchanges take spotlight in Q1
- Bayer's Eylea declines by 24%, bearing the brunt of biosmilar competition
- Pfizer, Arvinas win $85M upfront in Rigel licensing pact for new breast cancer med Veppanu
- As public vaccine criticism quiets, RFK Jr. keeps safety inquiries running in background: NYT
- As public vaccine criticism quiets, RFK Jr. keeps safety inquiries running in background: NYT
- What's Fueling The High U.S. Death Rate? It Might Not Be What You Think
- Telemedicine Not Breaking The Bank, Also Not Expanding Patient Access
- After-School Sports An Overall Boon To Children And Teens, Study Shows
- Trump Promised Cheaper Drugs. Some Prices Dropped. Many Others Shot Up
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- EU advances scheme to bolster manufacturing autonomy, avert drug shortages
- Bicara Therapeutics hires Replimune, Sanofi alum as chief commercial officer
- The broken pipeline of mental healthcare for LGBTQ teenagers
- FDA Launches One-Day Inspectional Assessments to Strengthen and Expand Oversight
- FDA Launches One-Day Inspectional Assessments to Strengthen and Expand Oversight
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- FDA Expands AI Capabilities: Launches ELSA and Completes HALO Data Platform Consolidation
- FDA Expands AI Capabilities: Launches ELSA and Completes HALO Data Platform Consolidation
- Roche acquires PathAI to transform AI-driven diagnostics
- Roche acquires PathAI to transform AI-driven diagnostics
- Trump Planning to Fire FDA Commissioner Marty Makary
- Trump Planning to Fire FDA Commissioner Marty Makary
- Included Health launches AI-powered solution to connect members to providers
- FDA Green Lights Bizengri Drug To Treat Rare, Aggressive Bile Duct Cancer
- The Hidden Design Flaw in Medical Device Service Technology
- The Hidden Design Flaw in Medical Device Service Technology
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- An Endovascular Approach to Neurological Diseases Can Shift the Treatment Paradigm
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- Why Gen AI is a Win for MedTech: And, How to Unlock its Potential with the Right Policies
- Why Gen AI is a Win for MedTech: And, How to Unlock its Potential with the Right Policies
- Survey: Employers seeking greater transparency from pharmacy benefits
- Kaiser Permanente's investments pick up the slack as Q1 operating margin slims to 2.1%
- AMA unveils policy framework to combat AI deepfake physician impersonation
- The Medical Device Cybersecurity Gap Hiding in Plain Sight
- The Medical Device Cybersecurity Gap Hiding in Plain Sight
- CSL slashes revenue projection and takes $5B impairment as interim CEO flags R&D misses, market erosion
- Healthcare bankruptcies up 33% in Q1 2026: report
- Why Doctors Are Quitting At An Earlier Age
- Sharper Brains May Face Higher Depression Relapse Risk, Study Finds
- Older Adults Have Fewer Regrets, Study Says
- Partner's bispecific Bizengri nabs FDA national priority nod in rare bile duct cancer
- Daiichi Sankyo targets global top 5 oncology rank by 2035, $1.3B efficiency drive in new 5-year plan
- That Discount At The Pharmacy Counter May Pack Hidden Costs
- Nighttime Heat Waves Increase Asthma Risk
- As Ranks of Uninsured Grow, Minnesota’s Hospitals Are Among Least Charitable in Nation
- Watch: 8 Health Insurance Terms You Should Know
- OVID Health hires Edelman alum Davide Scalenghe to boost its international footprint
- Maintaining trust in medical AI: Monitoring and managing model lifecycle
- Maintaining trust in medical AI: Monitoring and managing model lifecycle
- Eli Lilly shoots for health in new Caitlin Clark ad campaign
- Omada Health posts 42% revenue jump in Q1, joins Eli Lilly employer weight loss program
- Journalists Shed Light on Deadly Hantavirus Outbreak and a Crisis in the Nation’s ERs
- The Make America Healthy Again Movement Comes for Hospital Food
- Remarks at the Conference on Financial Market Regulation
- Dad Jokes: Remarks at the 13th Annual Conference on Financial Markets Regulation
- RFK Jr. Launches Plan To Curb Antidepressant 'Overprescription'
- Skil-Care launches specialized healthcare product innovation program
- Remarks at the Special Competitive Studies Project AI+ Expo
- Plant-Based Foods May Help Lower Risk of High Blood Pressure
- Integrated CDO capabilities reduce early development complexity
- Targeted Protein Degradation and Novel Modalities: Getting on the Frontline
- Workplace safety is a top priority for 93% of healthcare leaders: Axon survey
- Super Shoes Might Increase Risk Of Running Injuries, Study Says
- TV, Movies Offer Flawed Depictions Of Autism, Add To Delayed Diagnosis, Study Says
- Opioid OD Survivors Have Triple Rate Of Repeat Overdoses Than Previously Estimated
- A New Medicare Option For Weight Loss Drugs: What Older Americans Should Know
- Exposure Therapy Can Successfully Ease Peanut Allergies
- Listen: A Federal Agency Is After Workers’ Health Data, and Critics Are Alarmed
- In California Governor Race, Single-Payer Is a Litmus Test. There’s Still No Way To Pay for It.
- Cruise Ship Hantavirus Outbreak Kills 3 as WHO Says Risk Is Low
- Remarks at the 13th Annual Conference on Financial Market Regulation
- New Study Suggests The Brain Can Continue Learning While In An Unconscious State
When it comes to health policy, we should as "Why?" a lot more than we do.
Independent Institute republishes Forbes' thought-provoking explanation of Big Chess in pharma costs. See original article for hot link citations.
https://www.independent.org/news/article.asp?id=15123
Who Should Pay for Really Expensive Drugs?When is the last time you saw a news headline about cancer patients who died because they were unable to afford a drug that could have saved their lives?
I bet you haven’t. One reason is that drug companies that make expensive drugs can’t afford the political backlash that would follow such a headline. Another reason is that large employers who provide health insurance can’t afford such a headline, either.
Yet, despite the fact that Big Pharma and big business agree on the end result (people get the lifesaving drugs they need), they don’t always agree on who should bear the bulk of the cost. In fact, in the modern era there has been a continuing tug of war between the two that has been largely unreported.
Enter the politicians to tilt the scale. A letter signed by a number of Democrats and Republicans in Congress supports a Biden administration proposed regulation that would remove many employer options.
Instead of allowing normal market forces to play out, this regulation would allow drug companies to sell brand-name drugs at monopoly prices for virtually all patients with employer-provided health insurance. The result would be higher drug company profits and lower employee wages.
Specialty Drugs
The most expensive drugs are generally called “specialty drugs.” These are primarily used to treat chronic, complex, or rare conditions such as cancer, autoimmune disorders, and genetic diseases. They can also cost thousands of dollars. For example, among the top ten most prescribed specialty drugs, the monthly expense ranges from $3,587 to $33,981.
Including the treatment of HIV infection, only 5.9% of the US population uses a specialty drug. But those drugs now account for over 50% of total drug spending in the United States.
Within the U.S., people with private health insurance tend to face very high out-of-pocket costs when it comes to specialty drugs. If a drug costs $2,000 a month, for example, an employee might have to pay the full cost for 3 or 4 months before reaching the deductible; then the employee’s health insurance takes over. For many people, this out-of-pocket cost may pose a significant barrier to obtaining the prescribed drug.
Drug Companies
To overcome that obstacle (at least in the short run), drug companies issue copay cards to use at a pharmacy to cover the initial cost. This gets patients started on the drugs their doctors say they need. Although it is not generally known, just about anyone starting out on an expensive drug regime can get copay cards for the first few months of treatment—regardless of income.
(Remarkably, in issuing copay cards, drug companies are doing something that would be completely illegal if done by doctors and hospitals. If a doctor or hospital waived the patient’s out-of-pocket portion of the bill, they would be violating anti-kickback laws.)
The drug companies’ second line of attack is the creation of Patient Assistance Programs. These are charitable enterprises that give financial assistance to people who are uninsured or underinsured. The amount of help generally depends on the patient’s income—with the goal of making the drug affordable.
Large Employers
In a free market for health insurance, a typical plan would leave the enrollee responsible for small expenses for which patient discretion is affordable and desirable, and have the health plan pay for large expenses that would otherwise be unaffordable.
However, government regulation (which has become more onerous with the passage of time) forces employers to ignore the health condition of prospective employees. These regulations, along with the rising cost of health care, have induced employers to adopt health plans that turn traditional health insurance principles upside down. That means, for example, low out-of-pocket costs for primary care and high out-of-pocket costs for hospitalization. This is the type of plan that appeals to potential employees who are healthy and does not appeal to those who expect to need a lot of care.
Drug coverage often fits this pattern. No employer wants to hire an employee whose family member needs a specialty drug. The employer could end up paying more in medical costs than in wages. Since it is illegal for the employer to ask about expected medical expenses at the point of hiring, the same end can be achieved by not covering the drug in the first place, or by covering it with a high deductible. This makes employment at the firm unattractive to anyone who needs the drug.
The Tug of War
We saw above how drug companies try to get private group health plans or health insurance to pay most of the cost of expensive drugs. Employers have been using strategies of their own.
One straightforward approach is to not cover a specialty drug in their health plan or to cover it with high patient cost-sharing (which large, self-insured companies are allowed to do). When a doctor prescribes the drug, the employee is then directed to the drug company’s Patient Assistance Program (PAP) as someone who is not fully insured for the needed drug. Some advocacy companies actually specialize in helping the employee fill out the paperwork and navigate the byzantine PAP system.
What happens if patients are rejected by the PAP, say, because their income is too high to qualify for financial assistance? Then the employer often makes a hardship exception and pays for the drug through its health plan.
The congressional letter signers (noted above) want to put an end to these employer options. They want to force large employers to cover expensive drugs the way they cover other drugs—giving the drug companies a big win. And since employer health insurance benefits are ultimately paid for by lower employee wages, the drug company win would be an employee loss.
There is no right or wrong solution when a monopoly seller clashes with buyers trying to avoid paying a monopoly price. That’s why government regulators should be held at bay and normal market forces should be allowed to play out.
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