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Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report
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Coverage & Access | Uninsured Individuals Pay Most for Prescription Drugs, Study Says
[Oct 22, 2004]

      U.S. residents without health insurance pay more for prescription drugs than the federal government, according to a survey released on Thursday by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, the New York Daily News reports (Shin, New York Daily News, 10/22). In the survey, researchers collected prices charged to uninsured residents for the 12 medications most commonly prescribed to patients younger than age 65 at more than 400 pharmacies in 19 states and Washington, D.C. Researchers compared the prices to those on the Federal Supply Schedule, which are used by federal agencies like the Department of Veterans Affairs. According to the survey, uninsured residents on average pay 78% for 12 common prescription drugs, rising to as much as 162% more. The survey also found that uninsured individuals on average pay 105% more at U.S. pharmacies than at Canadian pharmacies for nine drugs examined in the survey and sometimes as much as 530% more.

Reaction
U.S. PIRG consumer advocate Lindsey Johnson said, "HMOs and the federal government use their buying power to negotiate better prices for the drugs they purchase. But with no one bargaining on their behalf, uninsured Americans struggle to pay for needed medical treatment." U.S. PIRG called on Congress to legalize the reimportation of lower-priced prescription drugs from Canada and other nations with regulatory systems similar to those in the United States. "Despite the growing popularity of prescription drug importation, Congress has failed to pass bipartisan legislation giving 45 million uninsured Americans access to low-cost prescription drugs," Johnson said, adding that state lawmakers "have passed innovative legislation to help uninsured consumers afford their prescription medication" (U.S. PIRG release, 10/22).

Online The study is available online.


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