Current:Home > BackSenators ask CEOs why their drugs cost so much more in the U.S.-InfoLens
Senators ask CEOs why their drugs cost so much more in the U.S.
View Date:2025-01-09 08:17:45
Sparks flew on Capitol Hill Thursday as the CEOs of three drug companies faced questions from the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions about why drug prices are so much higher in the United States than they are in the rest of the world.
The executives from Bristol Myers Squibb, Johnson & Johnson and Merck spent almost three hours in front of the committee going back and forth about pricing practices and how the companies spend their money.
"We are all aware of the many important lifesaving drugs that your companies have produced," said a noticeably subdued Sen. Bernie Sanders, Vermont Independent and the committee chairman. "That is extraordinarily important. But as all of you know, those drugs do nothing for anybody who cannot afford it."
Merck's cancer drug Keytruda costs $100,000 more in the U.S. than it does in France, according to a committee analysis. Bristol Myers Squibb's blood thinner Eliquis costs almost 10 times more in the U.S. than in Germany. Johnson & Johnson's arthritis drug Stelara costs five times more in the U.S. than it does in Japan.
Patients turn to GoFundMe
The executives made familiar arguments that the U.S. pays more for drugs but also gets new drugs faster. The drugmakers also said that middlemen called pharmaceutical benefit managers, or PBMs, take a big share of the list prices for themselves.
"Their negotiating strength has increased dramatically," Merck CEO Robert Davis said. "In contracting with them, Merck continues to experience increasing pressure to provide even larger discounts. And the gap between list and net price continues to grow, and patients are not benefiting from the steep discounts we provide."
However, the legislators were prepared and often shot back, for instance, that while drugs take longer to get on the market in Japan and Canada, for instance, that hasn't hurt those countries' life expectancies. In fact, people in Japan and Canada live longer, on average, than they do in the United States.
Sanders asked Merck's Davis if he had ever searched GoFundMe to see if anyone was trying to raise money to pay for Keytruda. He said he hadn't. Sanders said his staff had.
"We have found over 500 stories of people trying to raise funds to pay for their cancer treatments," he said. "And one of those stories is a woman named Rebecca, the school lunch lady from Nebraska with two kids who died of cancer after setting up a GoFundMe page because she could not afford to pay for Keytruda. Rebecca had raised $4,000 on her GoFundMe page, but said the cost of Keytruda in a cancer treatment was $25,000 for an infusion every three weeks."
Drama behind the scenes
The CEOs of Merck and Johnson & Johnson initially declined to testify. Sanders said they told his staff they didn't have the expertise to talk about drug pricing.
"Merck went so far as to tell our staff that their CEO is a tax attorney who is not an expert on prescription drug prices," Sanders told reporters on Jan. 25, calling the reasons companies offered for declining to testify "laughable to absurd."
The committee was about to vote on subpoenaing the CEOs when they agreed to testify voluntarily.
The trade group PhRMA, which stands for Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, emailed a preemptive statement Wednesday that said comparing drug prices in the U.S. to those abroad doesn't tell the whole story. The trade group said that new medicines launch earlier in the U.S. than in the rest of the world, giving Americans faster access. It also pointed the finger at other high health care spending and PBMs.
"Allowing foreign governments to influence U.S. prices won't fix America's health care system," PhRMA wrote.
Senate report documents drugmakers' financial choices
Early this week, the HELP Committee released a report that found Bristol Myers Squibb, Johnson & Johnson and Merck spend more on executive compensation, stock buybacks and dividends than they do on research and development.
"In other words, these companies are spending more to enrich their own stockholders and CEOs than they are in finding new cures and new treatments," Sanders reiterated in his opening statement at the hearing. "Now, the average American who hears all this is asking a very simple question. How does all of this happen? "
The report showed that these companies make more money selling their popular drugs in the U.S. than selling them in the rest of the world combined. The report also found that while some drug prices climb in the U.S., they go down or stay the same elsewhere.
veryGood! (58932)
Related
- Federal judge blocks Louisiana law that requires classrooms to display Ten Commandments
- Watch livestream: Duane Davis to appear in court for murder charge in Tupac Shakur's death
- Biden suggests he has path around Congress to get more aid to Ukraine, says he plans major speech
- Day care operator heads to prison after misusing child care subsidy and concealing millions from IRS
- Jake Paul's only loss led him to retool the team preparing him to face Mike Tyson
- EV battery manufacturing energizes southern communities in Battery Belt
- Julia Ormond sues Harvey Weinstein saying he assaulted her; accuses CAA, Disney, Miramax of enabling
- Khloe Kardashian Addresses Tristan Thompson’s “Traumatic” Scandal After He Calls Her His “Person”
- Nelly will not face charges after St. Louis casino arrest for drug possession
- Police raid on a house in western Mexico uncovers workshop for making drone-carried bombs
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Good Try (Freestyle)
- Future of Ohio’s education system is unclear after judge extends restraining order on K-12 overhaul
- Trains collide in northern Polish city, injuring 3 people, local media reports
- Honolulu airport flights briefly paused because of a medical situation in air traffic control room
- Angels sign Travis d'Arnaud: Former All-Star catcher gets multiyear contract in LA
- Georgia election case defendant wants charges dropped due to alleged paperwork error
- Charmin changes up its toilet paper, trading in straight perforations for wavy tears
- $1.2 billion Powerball drawing nears after 11 weeks without a winner
Recommendation
-
Louisiana mom arrested for making false kidnapping report after 'disagreement' with son
-
Duane Keffe D Davis, suspect charged in Tupac Shakur's murder, makes 1st court appearance
-
War and political instability will likely take center stage at a summit of European leaders in Spain
-
Dozens of women in Greenland ask Denmark for compensation over forced birth control
-
'Cowboy Carter' collaborators to be first country artists to perform at Rolling Loud
-
Prosecutors accuse rapper YNW Melly of witness tampering as his murder retrial looms
-
Duane Keffe D Davis, suspect charged in Tupac Shakur's murder, makes 1st court appearance
-
Bangladesh’s anti-graft watchdog quizzes Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus in embezzlement case