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National Poll: Bipartisan Support to Regulate Pharmacy Benefit Mangers

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Monday, April 17, 2023   

A new national poll shows Nevadans, like most Americans, do not want to pay more for prescription drugs.

The poll conducted by Lake Research Partners found bipartisan support among voters for legislation to regulate health insurance middlemen companies known as Pharmacy Benefit Managers.

Mark Blum, executive director of America's Agenda: Health Care for All, and managing director of the PBM Accountability Project, said Pharmacy Benefit Managers are the intermediaries between drug manufacturers and patients' health plans.

He argued instead of lowering drug costs, they are taking advantage of the system to increase revenues at the expense of others. The poll found 84% of likely voters across the country want to see Pharmacy Benefit Managers regulated, and Blum added it is a priority for Nevada lawmakers.

"Your own senator, (Catherine) Cortez Masto, has observed 50% of Americans forwent a prescription drug being needed because of affordability," Blum pointed out. "The battle has begun in Congress. In the Senate, we expect four different bills."

Blum added 72% of Americans say they are more likely to vote for a candidate in the upcoming election cycle who supports regulating Pharmacy Benefit Managers.

According to the polling data, respondents support a number of specific policies and measures to regulate Pharmacy Benefit Managers. Blum noted more than 80% of Americans want to "break the link" between Pharmacy Benefit Manager profits and the price of drugs.

He emphasized the second reform Americans have largely agreed upon is requiring Pharmacy Benefit Managers to pass on discounts to patients which they get from negotiating with drug manufacturers. Lastly, participants showed strong support for more transparency into Pharmacy Benefit Managers' contracts and the drug-pricing process.

Blum stressed the three biggest Pharmacy Benefit Managers in the U.S. control 80% of the drug marketplace.

"PBMs have been able to get enough market power, they have developed all kinds of new schemes to use their competitive power to drive competitors out of the marketplace and to extract value that people don't even see," Blum asserted.

Blum said the three biggest Pharmacy Benefit Managers, Express Scripts International, Optum RX and CVS Caremark, have merged with the largest health insurance companies in America, which he argued allowed the "vertically integrated" companies to dominate the prescription drug marketplace.


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