Guest guest Posted December 4, 2003 Report Share Posted December 4, 2003 The health of most people are very dependent on politics, information and economics. To you it is probably a very personal issue. To politicians and the pharmacueticalmedical industry it is business that counts. F. http://healthy.net/scr/news.asp?Id=7983 Trade Group Lobbying Paid Off on Medicare Vote Provided by New York Times Syndicate on 11/27/2003 by Christopher Rowland Drug makers stand to reap the biggest rewards from the $400 billion Medicare drug benefit approved Tuesday by Congress, but a host of other players also stand to benefit, from doctors and hospitals to the makers of orthopedic shoes. The intense lobbying on the Medicare bill by a variety of industry and trade groups paid off, as the delivery of a prescription benefit to seniors was used as an opportunity to affect other segments of the health-care economy. Oncologists will receive more money for overhead costs. Hospitals that invest in technology will get $700 million in new subsidies. The makers of biotech drugs will get more money when patients are treated in hospitals. The bill even sets up a fee schedule for custom shoes for diabetic patients. There are some losers in the bill. Diagnostic laboratories, for instance, will have their Medicare reimbursement rates frozen for five years. ``These things are fundamentally political,'' said Richard Frank, a professor of public-health policy at Harvard Medical School. ``You've got a bill here that's moving around a pretty big chunk of the economy, and as soon as you do that, you've produced winners and losers.'' Most of the attention has been focused on the pharmaceutical industry, which achieved the major goals: avoiding federal price controls that could erode profits and blocking the importation of less expensive drugs from Canada. Instead of caps, Congress permitted prices to be negotiated by drug companies and a host of private-sector insurance managers that will run the Medicare plan. ``It's a huge win from the point of view of the industry,'' said Sam Isaly, a mutual fund portfolio manager in New York with Eaton Vance Worldwide Healthcare Fund. ``Without having a single buyer, there will be less pressure on price.'' With the massive infusion of new government spending, 3 percent to 5 percent more medicine will be sold over 10 years, Isaly said. Estimating how much money will be generated with that extra sales volume is difficult to say, analysts and academics said. Seniors who have drug coverage through private plans now, or are paying retail prices at drugstores, will shift into the Medicare system, eliminating a good portion of the overall gains. ``It's not suddenly like they have a ton of new business all of which didn't exist before,'' said Harvard's Frank. ``Some of it's going to be old business at different prices.'' Another uncertainy for the drug industry will be the political climate moving forward. Viren Mehta, principal of Mehta Partners LLC, a global health-care investment firm based in New York, said the industry will immediately benefit from the reduced pressure from Congress and the states, because 40 million seniors without drug coverage will have access to a prescription drug plan starting in 2006. But when seniors start buying huge quantities of drugs they previously could not afford, it could lead the government to revisit the costs of the program and demand deeper discounts, Mehta said. In that case, he said, ``it could turn into somewhat of a negative outcome'' for industry. Drug manufacturers scored another key victory in the bill. The House and Senate turned back an effort to permit the importation of prescription drugs from Canada, where medicine is 20 percent to 80 percent less expensive than in the United States because of Canadian price controls. The bill also promises to generate a huge volume of new business for the companies that manage benefits for prescription drugs, so-called pharmacy benefit managers that play an increasingly large role in the lives of Americans. But exactly how much business this will generate remains unclear. Details of risk, competition, coverage, and other key factors will be decided later by the Bush administration. ``Obviously they will get a lot more business,'' Frank said. ``Until you know exactly how it works, its hard to tell how much. The devil is deeply in the details.'' In the field of biotech drugs, oncologists scored a long-sought victory. Physicians who administer cancer drugs in their offices will receive higher Medicare reimbursements for overhead, including the cost of paying specialized nurses. Biotech drugs administered in hospitals - which were reimbursed based on a set of complicated calculations that produced low rates - will be reimbursed at higher rates. Large employers who keep their retirees on prescription benefit plans will receive a tax subsidy. Doctors, instead of receiving a 4.5 percent cut in Medicare payments in 2004, will receive a 1.5 percent increase. Rural hospitals and doctors will receive $20 billion over 10 years.@ @The law also calls for higher rates for mammograms and transport by ambulance. ``Everybody has a stake'' in the new law, said Vicki Greene, spokeswoman for the Massachusetts Biotechnology Council. ----- (The Boston Globe web site is at http://www.boston.com/globe/ ) c.2003 The Boston Globe NEW WEB MESSAGE BOARDS - JOIN HERE. Alternative Medicine Message Boards.Info http://alternative-medicine-message-boards.info Free Pop-Up Blocker - Get it now Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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