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Could Generic Drugs Be Even Cheaper Without The Middle Man? [Your Health]
The
WSJ Health Blog
says that
pharmacy benefit managers
are marking up the amount they charge your insurance company for generic drugs and keeping the difference. Often the mark-up isn't too severe, but the WSJ has one example where the difference was over a hundred dollars.
Here’s how it works: Many health insurers contract with PBMs to administer their drug plans. Among other functions, the PBMs negotiate lower drug prices with pharmacies. But some PBMs, under a practice allowed by Medicare, then charge a higher price to health insurers and, ultimately, both the government and patients. Though the opaque practice is common in the private insurance market, Medicare currently has a proposal to curb it, because the agency is worried the tactic, by inflating patients’ drug costs, is speeding their pace toward the “doughnut hole” coverage gap.
The differences between what the PBMs pay pharmacies and what they charge the plans can range from a few dollars to well over $100. In one case, a Medicare patient filled a prescription for a 90-day supply, or 270 pills, of the generic antinausea medication prochlorperazine. The difference between what the PBM, Express Scripts, paid the pharmacy and the price that showed up on the patient’s explanation of benefits was $146.53.
Well, that seems high. The PBM told the WSJ that mark-ups over $100 are rare, and that the money is used to help " fund programs that drive patients away from branded drugs and toward generics that ultimately still cost less."
Generics Are Cheap, but They Could Be Cheaper
[WSJ Health Blog]
(Photo:
Daquella Manera
)
read more
your health
Drugs
Insurance
Pbm
Pharma
Pharmacies
Wed, 23 Jul 2008 19:53:02 EDT
Meg Marco
-
What Common Household Products Are Potentially ... [Cancer]
What Common Household Products Are Potentially Killing Us Today?:
We bring you some panic over dryer sheets, fabric softeners, detergents, and solid, spray and plug-in air fresheners. "When UW engineering professor Anne Steinemann analyzed of some of these popular items, she found 100 different volatile organic compounds measuring 300 parts per billion or more — some of which can be cancerous or cause harm to respiratory, reproductive, neurological and other organ systems." Rats. [
Seattle P-I
]
read more
Cancer
Air fresheners
dryer sheets
Perfume
volatile organic compounds
Wed, 23 Jul 2008 18:59:38 EDT
Meg Marco
-
60's Ad: If Your Man Likes The Unexpected, Serve Rice [Advertising]
This 1960's ad for rice teaches us once again that if you pair a hot chick with any item and you can sell it. These days, probably the only thing unexpected thing about rice is its price: not nice. Full-size inside.
1960s ad for rice
[BoingBoing]
read more
Advertising
Blogs
commodities
Rice
Wed, 23 Jul 2008 13:39:54 EDT
Ben Popken
-
100 billion dollar bills from Zimbabwe will ... [Inflation]
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