Families USA: The Voice for Health Care Consumers
    
Loading

Home

Tell Us Your Story

Sign Up

About Us

Action Center

Annual Conference

Donate

Contact Us



 

Report from Families USA
January 9, 2007

No Bargain: 
Medicare Drug Plans Deliver
High Prices


Key Findings

The lowest Part D plan prices are significantly higher than the prices obtained by the VA.

  • For each of the top 20 drugs prescribed to seniors, the lowest price charged by any of the top Part D insurers is higher than the lowest price secured by the VA.
  • Among those top 20 drugs, the median difference between the lowest Part D plan price and the lowest VA price is 58 percent.

The price differential between the lowest VA-negotiated price and the lowest price available from a Part D private plan is often substantial. For example:

  • For Zocor (20 mg), a lipid-lowering agent, the lowest VA price for a year’s treatment is $127.44, while the lowest Part D plan price is $1,485.96—a difference of $1,358.52, or 1,066 percent.
  • For Protonix (40 mg), a gastrointestinal agent, the lowest VA price for a year’s treatment is $214.52, while the lowest Part D plan price is $1,148.40—a difference of $933.88, or 435 percent.
  • For Fosamax (70 mg), an osteoporosis treatment, the lowest VA price for a year’s treatment is $250.32, while the lowest Part D plan price is $763.56—a difference of 513.24, or 205 percent.
  • For Toprol XL (100 mg), a beta blocker, the lowest VA price for a year’s treatment is $250.06, while the lowest Part D plan price is $395.52—a difference of $145.46 or 58 percent.
  • For Celebrex (200 mg), an anti-inflammatory, the lowest VA price for a year’s treatment is $632.09, while the lowest Part D plan price is $946.44—a difference of $314.35, or 50 percent.

The median difference between the highest Part D plan price and the VA price is 101 percent. In other words, for half of the 20 drugs, the highest price charged by a large Part D plan is at least twice as high as the lowest price secured by the VA. Many Medicare beneficiaries are in drug plans in which they pay even higher prices.

Each of the seven largest U.S. publicly traded pharmaceutical companies spent substantially more on marketing, advertising, and administration than it spent on research and development (R&D).

  • In 2005, five of the seven companies spent at least twice as much on marketing, advertising, and administration as they did on R&D.
  • On average, marketing, advertising, and administration comprised 32.0 percent of company revenues, while R&D represented 13.9 percent of company revenues.

Profits exceeded R&D expenditures for most of the large pharmaceutical companies.

  • Five of the seven companies generated more in profits than they spent on R&D in 2005.
  • On average, companies reported 17.4 percent of revenue as profits, whereas spending on R&D represented 13.9 percent of company revenues.

[Return to top]

Introduction

Full Report
(pdf version)

Tables

Press Release

Update Your Profile | Site Map | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Printer-Friendly Version | Copyright and Terms of Use