In this podcast we interview Rep. Sharon Treat, and look at how Maine handles drug price controls, and what the federal government is doing for prices as well.
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2009
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April
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- Revenue from a prescription.
- Graphs of IMS Health industry sales data
- 3 Quick Reasons for high Drug Prices
- "Price Controls On Prescription Drugs Could Have A...
- Paul Dragsten Interview
- Policies abroad
- Value-based pricing: the future of drug pricing?
- Despite advances in biomedical sciences, the flow ...
- Some quick facts from the Kaiser Family Foundation.
- NIH’s funding of small public and private biotech ...
- Lowering prescription drug prices not likely to cu...
- Pharmaceutical representatives - "essential for ph...
- Interview with Alan Cassels
- Ways to reduce your drug costs
- Interview with Rep. Sharon Treat
- Birth of a Drug
- Interview with Merrill Goozner
- Potential Initiatives for Containing the Costs of ...
- Subsidy Plan Seeks to Cut Malaria Drug CostThe New...
- Reducing the Cost of Prescription DrugsIn March 20...
- How Does Drug Advertising Affect Prices?
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April
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Rep. Treat's work in Maine is very admirable. The expansion of Maine's Rx Plus program nationwide could be huge in transforming the landscape of paying for prescription drugs. The notion that the US (much less a single state) cannot negotiate drug prices for its citizens is asinine. Worldwide countries negotiate drug prices for their citizens, which is in part why other countries have such significantly lower health care expenditures (and, ironically, more effective health care systems).
ReplyDeleteFor more information on Rep. Bernard Sanders's Medical Innovation Prize Act of 2007, check out this site: http://olpa.od.nih.gov/legislation/109/pendinglegislation/medicalinnovation.asp
ReplyDeleteFor more information on prescriber education (or academic detailing), aka providing doctors with voluntary consultation and unbiased information about prescription drugs, check out this fact sheet: http://www.prescriptionproject.org/tools/fact_sheets/files/0007.pdf
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