By Dr. Robert Levin, President of the Florida Society of Rheumatology
Mary is a 45-year-old patient in my practice with severe rheumatoid arthritis. She was incapacitated. Her illness prevented her from working, and also made it difficult to dress, cook, do housework and other everyday tasks that most of us take for granted.
We thank the Subcommittee for scheduling today’s hearing entitled “Examining the Drug Supply Chain.” ATAP was formed on a shared concern that PBMs play an increasingly harmful role in our supply chain.
Read MoreThe Lupus and Allied Diseases Association, American Bone Health, and the Tennessee Rheumatology Society became the newest members of the Alliance for Transparent & Affordable Prescriptions (ATAP), a coalition of provider and patient groups concerned about the practices of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) driving up drug costs.
Read MoreOn December 6, ATAP Chair Dr. Robert Levin testified before the Florida House Health and Innovation Subcommittee on the impact deceptive PBM practices have on patient care. “I went to medical school… I know what the patient has and what’s best for my patient. Unfortunately, the decision-making of what prescriptions are available for our patients has been taken out of my hands,” he said. “The patients are expecting that I’m looking out for them…and [I’m] not having some third-party looking over my shoulder telling me what to do.”
Read MoreIn a letter submitted to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the Alliance for Transparent and Affordable Prescriptions (ATAP) urged the agency to address the increasingly harmful role of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) in the prescription drug delivery system.
Read MoreWe urge Congress to encourage CMS to adopt a policy requiring sponsors to include price concessions at the point of sale for Medicare beneficiaries.
Read MoreToday, the North Carolina Rheumatology Association (NCRA) and the U.S. Pain Foundation became the newest members of the Alliance for Transparent & Affordable Prescriptions (ATAP), a coalition of provider and patient groups concerned about the practices of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) driving up drug costs.
Read MoreBy Angus Worthing, MD, FACR, FACP
With 5 rheumatology biosimilars already approved by the FDA, and dozens more in the pipeline, the landscape of the rheumatology drug market is on the cusp of a major shift. Biosimilars were created to bring notoriously expensive biologic drugs to patients at lower prices. In theory, they increase access to life-changing, even life-saving, treatments. As a practicing rheumatologist in downtown Washington, DC, I observe firsthand the power of biologics to bring relief to patients suffering from crippling diseases of the joints.
Among one of the most pressing issues in American politics is prescription drug costs, and for good reason. Even patients with insurance are being forced to pay more out of pocket for their prescriptions. As the American health care system gets more complex and convoluted, solving this problem is becoming more difficult. One reason for this is the drug industry’s hidden middlemen — pharmacy benefit managers.
Read MoreThe Association of Women in Rheumatology (AWIR), National Organization of Rheumatology Managers (NORM), and Rheumatology Nurses Society (RNS) announced today that they have joined the Alliance for Transparent & Affordable Prescriptions (ATAP), a coalition of provider and patient groups concerned about the role of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) in driving up drug costs.
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