Insider’s Report: Time is running out to lower prescription drug prices
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Seniors’ living costs have been escalating — especially for medical and long-term care. The prices of prescription drugs have skyrocketed to the point where many seniors are forced to cut pills in half or skip vital medications altogether.
The lack of access to affordable home care and prescription medications creates a difficult burden for workers who are also trying to meet family caregiving needs. With a national average wage of less than $60,000 per year, everyday working Americans are faced with impossible choices like staying in their jobs to pay for necessary prescription medications or staying home to provide the care that their loved ones need but can’t afford. This decision forces many out of the workforce and worsens the economic outlook for their own future.
The Senate can — and must — do something about this, now.
Every American deserves access to prescription drugs at the lowest, negotiated price. The House-passed Elijah Cummings Lower Drug Costs Now Act (H.R.3) would save Medicare some $450 billion over ten years, mainly by allowing the program to negotiate prices directly with Big Pharma. Or, in the House-passed Build Back Better Act, Medicare would be able to negotiate the prices of up to 10 drugs per year starting in 2023, with that number eventually rising to up to 20 drugs per year. The Congressional Budget Office estimates federal budget savings from the drug pricing provisions would be $297 billion over ten years.
Either way it gets done, the prohibition on allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices must be lifted.
Through a legislative mechanism called budget reconciliation, with 50 votes, the Senate can enact vital investments of federal funding in the public interest. Older people and their families need affordable in-home care, so that family members aren’t forced to leave the workforce to step into caregiving roles. Increasing the wages of care workers in the Medicaid Home and Community Based services program, will expand the job market and strengthen this workforce, according to Moody’s Analytics.
Any reconciliation agreement that comes across Congress must include these vital investments to lower costs for caregiving families, strengthen the home care workforce and lower prescription drug prices. A majority of Americans agree: recent polling shows 87 percent of respondents support policies to provide “affordable long-term care for seniors and people with disabilities,” and 81% of Republicans support allowing Medicare to negotiate lower prices for prescription drugs.
We can afford to make these investments, but we can’t afford to wait.
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Good Bills |
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The National Committee endorses the “Generic Substitution Non-Interference Act” introduced by U.S. Representative David Cicilline (RI-01) that would block so-called “Dispense-As-Written” campaigns where drug manufacturers incentivize health care providers to specify a brand drug on a prescription to block generic substitution at the pharmacy. The campaigns increase drug spending by encouraging the overuse of brand drugs when cheaper, equally effective generic alternative is available.
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Ask Web |
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Our resident Social Security expert, Webster Phillips — a Senior Policy Analyst for the National Committee and a 31-year veteran at the Social Security Administration — is here to answer your questions about Social Security.
You can either search our archives for valuable advice on a broad range of concerns or submit your question here.
This week's question is: Have there been any changes regarding Social Security Disability Insurance benefits and investing? Is it still not considered earned income?
Click here to read the answer.
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Take Our Poll |
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Has high inflation impacted your ability to afford out-of-pocket health care costs, including prescription drugs?
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Ask Web
Whether you’re currently retired or approaching retirement, we can help answer your questions and provide valuable advice on Social Security. |
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Aging, Health and Care
Find useful resources on everything from caregiving and hearing care to long-term care and transportation. |
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Why Raising the Eligibility Age is Not a Good Idea |
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"The wrong thing to do (to address Social Security trust fund solvency) is to cut benefits, and unfortunately, that's the solution proposed by most Republicans," says Dan Adcock, director of government relations and policy at the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare. (June 15, 2022, WDUN, Radio interview with NCPSSM Director of Government Relations & Policy Dan Adcock)
Listen Here →
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No time to cut benefits |
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NCPSSM President and CEO Max Richtman says that the Republican approach to Social Security is "to cut benefits, to move people into poverty, without regard for all the increases in the cost of living for seniors." The National Committee favors legislation to strengthen the program while improving benefits. (June 10, 2022, WHMP, Radio interview with NCPSSM President & CEO Max Richtman)
Listen Here →
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Boosting Social Security Benefits in a Fair Way |
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National Committee President Max Richtman tells radio audience: The Social Security Trustees project that the program's trust fund will be depleted in 2035 if Congress takes no action. But Congress can act to strengthen the program's finances and improve benefits, if the wealthy pay their fair share in payroll taxes. (June 10, 2022, WEPM, Radio interview with NCPSSM President & CEO Max Richtman)
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Editorial: The time to save Social Security is now |
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According to the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, half of all working-age families have $5,000 or less in retirement savings. That picture will only worsen during this time of high inflation. (June 21, 2022, Boston Herald, Editorial)
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