Why Are Drug Prices Rising So Much? Pharma Exec Admits 'No Other Rationale' But Profit-Making
September 10, 2020 | News | No Comments
Corporations’ quest for profits is what “is driving up drug prices and nothing more.”
That’s according to Dennis Bourdette, M.D., chair of neurology in the Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) School of Medicine, who co-authored a study published Monday that sought to find out companies’ rationale for the escalating prices on medications for patients with multiple sclerosis.
Prices for those drugs, an accompanying press release notes, have jumped up by 10% to 15% every year for the past decade.
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The study by a team of researchers at OHSU and the OHSU/Oregon State University College of Pharmacy, which appears in the journal Neurology this month, was based on interviews with four current and former pharmaceutical industry executives who had direct involvement in the pricing or marketing of MS drugs.
The executives, who were not named, laid bare the motivating factor for the surges.
“I would say the rationales for the price increases are purely what can maximize profit,” sad one executive. “There’s no other rationale for it, because costs [of producing the drug] have not gone up by 10% or 15%; you know, the costs have probably gone down.”
Such statements, said the researchers, counter the industry’s narrative that the high drug prices are an effort to recoup their research and development costs.
“The industry executive said the quiet part out loud,” said Zain Rizvi, law and policy researcher with Public Citizen’s Access to Medicines project, in a statement to Common Dreams. “Price-gouging is central to the industry business model.”
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