HomeOpinionOp-EdGovernment price-setting harms patients, prevents cures

Government price-setting harms patients, prevents cures

Among our many learnings from the COVID-19 pandemic is that a robust and effective medical innovation ecosystem is essential to researching and developing treatments, vaccines and cures for new and emerging threats to human health, as well as finding life-saving innovations for existing, but still unmet, medical needs.

Instead, we are spiraling in the opposite direction. A new study by the research firm Vital Transformation concludes that the government price-setting embodied in the Inflation Reduction Act’s first-ever government price controls in Medicare Part D — if compounded by recent proposals contained in the president’s proposed budget and other proposed congressional legislation — will cause an estimated 230 fewer FDA approvals of new medicines over a 10-year period. This astounding figure would most heavily impact the therapeutic areas with the greatest unmet needs: cancer drugs, neurological treatments, therapies for rare diseases and critical pharmaceuticals that can prevent the spread of infectious disease.

The consequences to human health will be devastating. Such onerous policies threaten to stunt — and in some cases, halt — many promising advances in medical research and treatment. The IRA — which imposes government price-setting nine or 13 years after a drug’s FDA approval — has already prompted some life sciences companies to withdraw new medicines from clinical trials because of the likelihood there won’t be a sufficient return on their significant investments in research, development and manufacturing to reinvest in new projects.

The additional proposals being considered would shorten the price-setting time period to just five years — an even more aggressive move carrying serious potential consequences before we even know the ramifications of the IRA’s current time frames. The new Vital Transformation study concludes that, if this shortsighted five-year proposal had been enacted a decade ago, more than 80 currently available drugs likely would never have been developed — drugs that today save and improve countless lives in New Jersey, the U.S. and around the world.

The reason is because every advance in human health requires an enormous financial investment, often more than $2 billion, to create a single, new breakthrough product. Most of these efforts fail — in the laboratory, in clinical trials, in the FDA approval process — meaning none recoups the billions of dollars invested in the many failed initiatives. Allowing manufacturers only five years to recover their investment in the small handful that do succeed will drive dollars away from biopharmaceutical research and development in the U.S., and, consequently, result in fewer promising treatments moving forward, fulfilling Vital Transformation’s chilling projection.

In addition to the impact on patients and global human health, potentially devastating impacts to jobs and state economies — New Jersey’s and others’ — are likely. Vital Transformation estimates that these policies would result in losses around the country over a 10-year period of between 146,000 and 223,000 direct biopharmaceutical jobs and 730,000 to 1.1 million total U.S. jobs. In New Jersey alone, the study projects a loss of between 10,987 and 16,743 direct biopharmaceutical jobs and total job loss of 55,241 to 84,180, coupled with a negative economic impact of between $15.1 billion and $23 billion that would be second only to California’s.

New Jersey residents shouldn’t have their lives, their jobs and our state’s economy ravaged by misguided government price-fixing policies that are already having injurious consequences that were foreseeable. While there is an undeniable need to make health care more affordable, there are better solutions than government-mandated drug-pricing policies that, while designed to save the government money in the short term, will negatively impact patients. As we’ve often said, we can start by requiring pharmacy benefit managers and other middlemen to pass on the billions of dollars in negotiated rebates to benefit patients directly at the pharmacy counter.

We will continue working with all stakeholders — innovators, policymakers and other health care sectors — to find ways to increase access and affordability that will not jeopardize future medical advances, treatments and cures. If we don’t succeed, our future will be far less healthy than it ought to be.

Dean J. Paranicas is CEO and president of the HealthCare Institute of New Jersey.

Related Articles

Finding the Right Pediatrician for Your Baby and Your Family

Choosing a pediatrician is one of the earliest and most important decisions you make as a parent. Many parents research online, read reviews, and...

Heights University Hospital readies for suspension of emergency services

Heights University Hospital, in anticipation of suspending emergency department services on Saturday, March 14, at 7:30 p.m., will continue to provide various community health...

Rowan University’s Shreiber School to offer Master of Science in One Health

Beginning in fall 2026, Rowan University’s Shreiber School of Veterinary Medicine will offer a Master of Science in One Health (MSOH) to meet growing...

Bergen New Bridge Medical Center launches physician-led medical group

Bergen New Bridge Medical Center said March 12 that it launched One Bergen Health, PC, a physician-led medical group designed to deliver high-quality, community-based...

Health Monitor Network appoints Bellonia to EVP, chief human resources officer

Health Monitor Network, the trusted leader and innovator in point of care (POC) marketing based in Montvale, announced the appointment of Louise DeBellonia as...

Basking Ridge-based fertility company forges partnership with Costco, health care platform Sesame 

Basking Ridge-based fertility leader IVI RMA North America announced it signed a strategic partnership with Costco and Sesame to transform how fertility care is...

Latest Articles

What an ‘AI-proof’ job entails — and who’s at risk of losing out

The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ February jobs report revealed 92,000 losses in nonfarm sectors. For job seekers, this paints an abysmal picture — a continuation...

AAA: N.J.’s gallon of gas average jumps to $3.53 — 16th-highest in the nation

Voorhees-based AAA reports that the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline in New Jersey rose 33 cents over the last week to...

Florham Park law firm Schenck Price adds Moon to firm 

Schenck Price, Smith & King LLP, located in Florham Park, said Elizabeth Moon has joined the firm as a partner in its Labor and...

ICON Real Estate Advisors arranges $7.95M sale of East Orange multifamily property 

ICON Real Estate Advisors has arranged the $7.95 million sale of a 58-unit garden-style multifamily property at 223 Prospect St. in East Orange. ICON represented...

Finding the Right Pediatrician for Your Baby and Your Family

Choosing a pediatrician is one of the earliest and most important decisions you make as a parent. Many parents research online, read reviews, and...
00:29:27

Our Infrastructure Matters – Episode 8

In Infrastructure Matters – Episode 8, industry analysts discuss how the technology landscape around infrastructure and mainframe computing is evolving through open-source collaboration and new...

Latest Articles

What an ‘AI-proof’ job entails — and who’s at risk of losing out

The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ February jobs report revealed 92,000 losses in nonfarm sectors. For job seekers, this paints an abysmal picture — a continuation...

AAA: N.J.’s gallon of gas average jumps to $3.53 — 16th-highest in the nation

Voorhees-based AAA reports that the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline in New Jersey rose 33 cents over the last week to...

Florham Park law firm Schenck Price adds Moon to firm 

Schenck Price, Smith & King LLP, located in Florham Park, said Elizabeth Moon has joined the firm as a partner in its Labor and...

ICON Real Estate Advisors arranges $7.95M sale of East Orange multifamily property 

ICON Real Estate Advisors has arranged the $7.95 million sale of a 58-unit garden-style multifamily property at 223 Prospect St. in East Orange. ICON represented...

Finding the Right Pediatrician for Your Baby and Your Family

Choosing a pediatrician is one of the earliest and most important decisions you make as a parent. Many parents research online, read reviews, and...