
Clinton plans to issue a response plan after hearing the story of Martin Shkreli, CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals, who, overnight, jacked up the price for the medication Daraprim from $13.50 per pill to $750. (Photo: Getty Images)
Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Clinton on Tuesday will propose a $250
monthly cap on prescription drugs for patients with chronic or serious
medical conditions in a drive against what she calls “excessive profiteering” by pharmaceutical companies.
At
a campaign stop in Iowa, Clinton will outline a plan to encourage the
development and use of generic drugs and also would end drug companies’
ability to write off consumer-directed advertising as a business
expense.
Under Clinton’s plan the monthly cap would limit what insurance companies could ask patients to pay for drugs.
On
Monday, Clinton vowed during a campaign stop in Little Rock, Arkansas
that, “It is time to deal with sky-rocketing out-of-pocket costs.”
Shares
of biotech companies such as Immunogen and Gilead Sciences on Monday
dropped after Clinton tweeted that steep prices for specialty drugs were
“outrageous.”
Critics
of marketing drugs to consumers say it encourages the use of costly
brand names over generics and can be confusing or misleading. A series
of court decisions has determined the practice cannot be banned outright
because it is a form of commercial speech protected by the U.S.
Constitution.
Clinton
says the government could save billions of dollars by no longer
allowing pharmaceutical companies to deduct what they spend marketing
drugs to consumers and those funds could be redirected into encouraging
research and development.
The
largest pharmaceutical companies are collectively earning $80 billion
to $90 billion per year at higher margins than other industries, while
average Americans struggle to pay for medicine, Clinton’s campaign said.
While
Clinton has maintained her front-runner status, she has been under
pressure to take more populist stances to widen her lead over U.S.
Senator Bernie Sanders, her second-place rival for the Democratic
nomination.
Clinton’s
plan would encourage the development and use of generic drugs. Her plan
would redirect funds to a U.S. Food and Drug Administration office with
a backlog of generic drugs awaiting approval.
She
would also prohibit what the campaign called “pay-for-delay
agreements,” in which the company of a brand-name drug pays a generic
competitor to keep its product off the market for a period of time,
usually as part of a litigation settlement.
Clinton
wants Medicare, the U.S. government’s health insurance program for the
elderly, to be able to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies over drug
prices and require more generous rebates, driving down overall costs.
Consumers
would also be allowed to purchase drugs from other countries, where
medicine is often less expensive, so long as there are sufficient safety
standards in place, Clinton’s campaign said.
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