One part of the
Affordable Care Act that gets almost no attention from the media is the "Physician Payment Sunshine Act" or section 6002 of the ACA, the text of which can be found here. By
law, starting in 2014, a publicly available Open
Payments Data website, managed by the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS), will display information about payments and other
"transfers of value" made from manufacturers to individual doctors
and teaching hospitals as stated here:
"Sometimes, doctors
and hospitals have financial relationships with health care manufacturing
companies. These relationships can include money for research activities,
gifts, speaking fees, meals, or travel. The Social Security Act requires CMS to
collect information from applicable
manufacturers and group purchasing organizations (GPOs) in
order to report information about their financial relationships with physicians
and hospitals. Open Payments is the federally run program that collects the
information about these financial relationships and makes it available to
you."
The act requires
manufacturers of drugs, medical devices and biologicals that participate in
federal health care programs to report payments to physicians as noted above when cumulative payments have a value of over $100 or items that have a value of less than $10 which must be included if the aggregate value is $100 or more.
The first data was made available to the public in late September 2014
and, as of December 19, 2014, the total value of "financial
relationships" between the health care system and the health care
manufacturing sector totalled $3.7 billion with data published on 366,000
physicians, 900 teaching hospitals and 1228 applicable manufacturers and group
purchasing organizations.
You might ask yourself,
"why is this so important?". Let's look at a bit of background.
According to the IMS Institute for Healthcare Informatics, this is what spending on medicines int he
United States looked like in 2013:
American consumers spent
a total of $232 billion or branded drugs and $97 billion on branded and
unbranded generics. This is an increase of 3.2 percent over the previous
year.
Here is a graphic showing which Americans, by
age, use the most prescription drugs and how many prescriptions they have:
Overall, American per
capita consumption of pharmaceuticals rose by 1.7 percent on a year-over-year
basis to 12.2 prescriptions per capita. Seniors over the age of 65 who
make up 13.7 percent of the total U.S. population use 31.3 percent of all
prescriptions with between 27.3 and 29.1 prescriptions per capita.
A 2010 study by Joshua Weiss at The George
Washington University Law School examined the marketing of both pharmaceuticals
and medical devices in the United States during 2009. In that year,
Americans spent around $300 billion on prescription drugs and a further $200
billion on medical devices. While he notes that estimates vary, it
appears that the pharmaceutical and medical device industries spent around $30
billion in 2009 on "marketing efforts", spending an average of over
$20,000 per doctor per year on marketing that includes gifts that are often of
the type branded with pharmaceutical company logos, meals, travel, consultancy
fees and continuing medical education programs. A 2007 study by Dr. Eric Campbell showed that 94
percent of physicians in the United States have received some form of benefit
or payment from the drug and device industries. Most of these involved
receiving food in the workplace (83 percent), or receiving drug samples (78
percent). As well, 35 percent reported receiving reimbursement for costs
associated with professional meetings or continuing education and 28 percent received
payment for consulting, giving lectures or enrolling patients in trials as
shown on this table:
It has been observed that
physicians who meet with marketers prescribe more drugs overall and tend to
more frequently prescribe branded medicines rather than cheaper generic
alternatives.
While this may seem like
harmless "fun and games", ultimately taxpayers and private insurance
must pay the bill for pharmaceutical industry-induced overspending.
Let's go back to the Open
Payments database. By going to this page and typing in the name of a
physician, teaching hospital or pharmaceutical/medical company, you can
retrieve a full and detailed listing of payments received and made. Here
is a screen capture showing you part of the retrieval for three types of payments made by
Pfizer Inc.:
Please note that there
are a total of 11,159 pages of payments made by Pfizer to physicians, a total of 49 pages of general payments made to teaching hospitals and a total of 178 pages
of research payments made to teaching hospitals. In total, Pfizer made
112,073 total general transactions totalling $21,207,374.91 in general payments
along with 1771 total research transactions totalling $18,286,714.72 from August to December 2013 (the first reporting
cycle of the new law).
It is interesting to note
that the Americal Medical Association even provides its physicians with "customizable talking points" that they
can use to respond to inquiries about the Sunshine Act, the first page of
which is shown here:
Given the economic
power of the for-profit medical system in the United States and the long-running
battle against the Affordable Care Act, it is interesting to see that at least
one part of the legislation is providing American healthcare consumers with
information that is enlightening. Given that "Big Pharma" spent $227,808,563 on lobbying in 2014 (which puts them in first place among all 121 industries) as shown on this graphic:
...it will be interesting to see how long the "Physician Payment Sunshine Act" remains intact.
So, the next time you pick up that way overpriced prescription, please keep in mind that America's pharmaceutical industry has millions and millions of dollars to spend on lobbying and physician "marketing efforts" instead of research and development, an "investment" that partially explains why the United States has the world's most costly health care.
So, the next time you pick up that way overpriced prescription, please keep in mind that America's pharmaceutical industry has millions and millions of dollars to spend on lobbying and physician "marketing efforts" instead of research and development, an "investment" that partially explains why the United States has the world's most costly health care.
Not really touched on by this post, but the overmedicating of people is also a problem. Anytime I or my wife have an issue the Dr. attempt to provide some type of prescription and then there are the "tests" to rule out certain things. The whole industry is rotten due to being for profit.
ReplyDeleteThe next time I "pick up that way overpriced prescription", I will be reminded that some of my money is going to doctors who treat patients, and not all is staying with the pharmaceutical industry. That's a good thing, not a bad thing.
ReplyDeleteUnless that Doctor happens to be providing you with an overpriced pharmaceutical for which he/she received a "benefit" rather than a cheaper alternative for which he/she did not. Then it's to your disadvantage.
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