ICYMI: HEALTH CARE LEADERS LAUNCH LOW-COST INSULIN INITIATIVE

Non-Profit and Private Sector Partners Work Together to Help Provide Relief from Big Pharma’s Insulin Price-Gouging

Last week, non-profit Civica Rx and the organization’s private sector partners announced plans to manufacture and sell affordable insulin for no more than $30 per vial — demonstrating how health care leaders can work together to help deliver relief from Big Pharma’s price-gouging. As a U.S. Senate Finance Committee report revealed last year, three Big Pharma companies dominate 99 percent of the insulin marketplace, engage in tactics to undermine competition and worked in lockstep to repeatedly hike prices by more than 700 percent.

Civica Rx’s partners include Arnold Ventures, Beyond Type 1, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association and 12 independent BCBS companies (Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Hawaii, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont, Blue Cross of Idaho, Blue Shield of California, CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield, Excellus BlueCross BlueShield, Florida Blue, Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield, Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, Independence Blue Cross), Gary and Mary West Foundation, Glen Tullman Family Foundation, Intermountain Healthcare, JDRF, Kaiser Permanente, Peterson Center on Healthcare, Providence, The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust, Transcarent and Trinity Health.

Big Pharma has repeatedly hiked insulin prices at rates far out-pacing inflation, despite little or no improvement to the life-saving drug. Between 1996 and 2006, the price of insulin increased by 700 percent. And in 2016, the average price per month reached $450, leaving one-in-four American patients prescribed this medication struggling to afford it.

Meanwhile, the three largest manufacturers of insulin – Novo Nordisk, Sanofi and Eli Lilly – have engaged in egregious practices to keep prices rising at the expense of American patients. These brand name drug companies control 99 percent of the marketplace and face little competition to drive down prices.

Read more on Big Pharma’s lead role in increasing insulin prices HERE.

Read more on actions being taken by others in the supply chain to make insulin more affordable HERE.

Read more on bipartisan, market-based solutions to hold Big Pharma accountable HERE.

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