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February 2024

PRESS CALL: Representative Steven Horsford and Affordable Care Act Enrollee to Join Protect Our Care Nevada to Highlight Record-Breaking Affordable Care Act Open Enrollment Numbers

***MEDIA ADVISORY FOR FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16 AT 9 AM PT // 12 PM ET***

Las Vegas, NV — On Friday, February 16 at 9 AM PT // 12 PM ET, United States Representative Steven Horsford (D-NV-04) and Travis Brock, an Affordable Care Act enrollee, will join Protect Our Care Nevada to highlight record-breaking open enrollment numbers, including the 96,706 Nevadans who have signed up for affordable coverage through the ACA. The Biden administration announced that 21.3 million people across the nation enrolled in coverage during the latest open enrollment period. These numbers are nearly double the number of people enrolled when President Biden took office and include more than 5 million new signups. 

Thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act’s reduction of health insurance premium costs, 80 percent of enrollees were able to find a health plan through the Marketplace for $10 or less per month. President Biden and Democrats in Congress are fighting tirelessly to extend these savings. 

As record numbers are relying on the ACA for affordable coverage, Donald Trump has fully reignited his war on health care. Speakers will call out how Trump’s plan to repeal the ACA would throw millions of Americans off their coverage, drive up costs, and dismantle vital protections for people with pre-existing conditions. 

PRESS CALL

WHO:
United States Representative Steven Horsford (D-NV-04)
Travis Brock, Affordable Care Act Enrollee
Sandra Jauregui, Protect Our Care Nevada

WHAT: Virtual Press Conference 

WHERE: Register here (registration required)

WHEN: Friday, February 16, at 9 AM PT // 12 PM ET

PRESS EVENT: Senator Bob Casey to Highlight Prescription Drug Cost Savings for Seniors

***MEDIA ADVISORY FOR WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14 AT 10:00 AM ET***

Casey-Backed Inflation Reduction Act Gave Medicare Power to Negotiate Drug Prices for the First Time.  

In August 2023, the Biden Administration Announced the First Round of Prescription Drugs to Be Negotiated by Medicare.

In November 2023, the Senate Finance Committee Sent a Legislative Package, Including Bipartisan Casey-Led Provisions Protecting Seniors From High Drug Costs to the Senate Floor for Vote.  

Jessup, PA – On Wednesday, February 14, 2024, at 10:00 AM ET, U.S. Senator Bob Casey (D-PA) will join health care advocates and community leaders to highlight how the Inflation Reduction Act’s historic provisions are reducing costs for seniors. Specifically, the IRA allows Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices for the first time and caps the cost of insulin for Part D beneficiaries at $35 a month. These provisions are protecting Pennsylvanians from unfair drug prices and lowering costs for seniors. A media availability will follow the speaking program. 

PRESS EVENT

Who:
U.S. Senator Bob Casey
Michael Berman, Pennsylvania State Director for Protect Our Care
Barbara Richel, Lake Ariel resident

When: Wednesday, February 14, 2024, at 10:00 AM ET

Where: Address provided upon RSVP to [email protected]. Press should include the names and phone numbers of each person planning to attend. 

GREED WATCH: AstraZeneca Announces Over $45 Billion in Revenue

AstraZeneca announced it raked in $45.5 billion in 2023 – a $1.46 billion increase over 2022 – during their earnings report last week. While they make billions, drug companies charge Americans over four times more for prescription drugs than customers in other high-income countries. 

  • During the call, CEO Pascal Soriot underscored his company’s greed in suing the Biden administration to block Medicare from negotiating lower prescription drug prices. Soriot noted that Medicare Negotiation has a “quite limited” impact on their global sales, and the Inflation Reduction Act’s $2,000 annual out-of-pocket cap on drug costs “is going to be a very, very good system” and “will mean a reduction of free goods, we have to give,” suggesting they are suing to protect a small portion of their profits at the expense of American seniors and taxpayers. 
  • AstraZeneca’s CEO, Pascal Soriot made over $120 million in total compensation over the past ten years, while the company hiked prices on lifesaving medication. 
  • AstraZeneca charges U.S. customers more than seven times more for Farxiga than customers in other high-income countries, even when considering net prices in the U.S. 
  • On aggregate, drug companies charge Americans prices up to four times higher than prices in other countries, forcing patients to cut pills and skip doses.
  • Over 80 percent of voters support giving Medicare the power to negotiate, making it the most popular provision in the Inflation Reduction Act. 

The Inflation Reduction Act brings down prescription drug costs for everyday Americans, especially seniors, by capping the price of insulin at $35 per month and providing free vaccines including shingles, giving Medicare the power to negotiate lower drug prices, and limiting the amount people have to pay each year for prescription drugs to $2,000 annually starting in 2025.  

Read more:

REPORT: Why Medicare Needs the Power to Negotiate for Lower Drug Costs: the Five Drugs That Tell the Story

FACT SHEET: Big Drug Companies Are in Court to Stop Medicare Negotiation and Protect Their Sky-High Profits

“You Have Chosen to Price a Drug At a Point That Is Unaffordable”: Drug Company CEOs Put Their Reckless Greed on Full Display at Senate HELP Hearing

Washington, D.C. — Today, CEOs of top drug companies went before the Senate HELP Committee to try to justify their outrageous prices. The CEOs of Bristol Myers Squibb, Johnson & Johnson, and Merck all produce some of the highest-priced drugs on the market, and they continue to bring in record profits, lining the pockets of executives and shareholders, all while charging consumers in other countries less for the same drugs. In response, Protect Our Care Executive Director Brad Woodhouse issued the following statement: 

“These CEOs ought to be ashamed of themselves. They are lying to the American people by claiming they have to charge Americans four times more than people in other countries for the same drugs. As millions of Americans struggle to afford their prescription drugs, there is no defense for these sky-high prices. Drug company greed knows no bounds. All of these companies are in court right now trying to take away Medicare’s power to negotiate lower drug prices. They are working with Republicans to repeal all of the Inflation Reduction Act’s drug pricing measures. Drug companies are fighting tooth and nail to hike costs on seniors and families — all in the name of corporate profit.”

Drug Company CEOs Will Testify Today and Struggle to Explain Why They Rip Americans Off While Fighting to Ban Medicare From Negotiating Lower Drug Prices

Today, CEOS of big drug companies are slated to go before Congress and explain why they are ripping off the American people. In the hearing led by HELP Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-VT), the CEOs of Bristol Myers Squibb, Johnson & Johnson, and Merck will have to defend their sky-high drug prices as millions of Americans struggle to afford their prescription drugs. During recent earnings calls, Bristol Myers Squibb, Johnson & Johnson, and Merck touted billions in profit in 2023, which comes as they are fighting to take away Medicare’s power to negotiate lower drug costs.

Big drug companies charge Americans up to four times more than people in other countries, causing patients to skip or cut doses of critical life-saving medications. One in five adults report that they have not filled a prescription because of the cost, while one in ten say they have cut or skipped doses of medicine in the last year. Higher drug costs also disproportionately impact low-income families, rural Americans, and people with disabilities. 

The hearing comes as the Biden administration is implementing the Inflation Reduction Act’s Medicare Price Negotiation Program and lowering drug costs for seniors. The program is projected to save seniors and taxpayers tens of billions of dollars. Bristol Myers Squibb, Johnson & Johnson, and Merck all have drugs up for negotiation, so they are spending millions of dollars on lobbying and filing meritless lawsuits to block the Negotiation Program. Republicans are also working alongside drug companies by introducing legislation to repeal all of the Inflation Reduction Act’s measures to lower drug prices for the American people. 

In response, Protect Our Care Chair Leslie Dach issued the following statement: 

These CEOs will be putting their relentless greed on full display as they attempt to explain why Americans are charged far more than people in other countries. Big drug companies have been ripping Americans off for years and we are sick and tired of it. It is outrageous that people have to skip doses and not fill prescriptions while the CEOs and shareholders line their pockets with cash. Even worse, these drug companies are fighting to rip away savings from seniors by banning Medicare from negotiating for lower prices. Their massive profits are made on the backs of American consumers and they want us to continue to pay the price for their greed.”

Here’s What You Need to Know About the State of Drug Prices in 2024

Drug Prices Are Too High

80 Percent Of Adults Say The Cost Of Prescription Drugs Is Too High. With six in ten adults taking at least one prescription drug, and over one in four needing more than four medications, 82 percent of adults agree that the cost of prescription drugs is unreasonable. 30 percent of adults have not taken medication as prescribed due to cost in the past year. One in five adults have not filled prescriptions and 12 percent have cut pills in half or skipped doses completely due to cost. Young adults between 18-29 years old, Hispanic adults, people taking four or more prescription drugs, and those living in households with incomes less than $40,000 per year are most vulnerable when it comes to the affordability of medication.

Prices For Prescription Drugs Increased More Than Other Household Goods. In 2020, the average annual cost for prescription drugs used to treat chronic illnesses was more than $26,000 per drug. This is more than one-third of the median household income of $69,639. If drug price increases had been limited to the rate of inflation, as is now required by the Inflation Reduction Act, prices would be more than $14,000 lower. The average annual cost of generic drugs was nearly $6,000 cheaper than name brands. 

Americans Believe That Profits For Pharmaceutical Companies Are A Major Factor For Drug Prices. Eight in ten adults regardless of political party affiliation believe that profits for drug companies are a major contributor to the price of prescriptions. 75 percent believe there should be more regulation to reign in the price of prescription drugs, including majorities across partisanship. 

Drug Companies Continue To Rake In Massive Profits. While the pharmaceutical industry is crying wolf to the courts to try to ban Medicare from negotiating lower prices, they’re not sounding the same alarms to Wall Street investors. Some of the most expensive drugs have made as much as $90.9 billion in revenue – making drug makers among the most profitable companies in the world. Rather than pricing their drugs reasonably so they’re affordable and accessible to people, big drug companies spend hundreds of billions on stock buybacks for their investors and reward their executives with massive salaries and bonuses. While drug companies rake in billions, U.S. drug prices are up to four times higher than prices in other high-income countries, leading patients in America to cut pills and skip doses to make ends meet.

Drug Company Arguments That Innovation Will Suffer Are False. Big pharma insists to lawmakers that the new Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program will undermine American biopharmaceutical leadership and discourage the development of new medications. Meanwhile, many drug companies announced increases in research and development following the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, suggesting that they believe they will be able to recoup additional investments in drug development. For example, J&J reported a 21 percent increase in R&D spending in 2022, Merck & Co reported a 10.6 percent increase in 2022, and Moderna reported a 65 percent increase in 2022 and projected further increases in 2023. 

President Biden Has Lowered Drug Prices, While Republicans Continue To Defend Big Pharma

How the Inflation Reduction Act Lowers Drug Prices:

  • 4 million Americans on Medicare who use insulin are now charged no more than $35 per month for an insulin prescription.
  • 50.5 million of America’s seniors are able to receive the shingles vaccination and other recommended vaccinations free of cost.
  • Seniors on Medicare will be protected from drug company price hikes thanks to increased inflation rebates.
  • Nearly 9 million people take the first ten drugs that were selected for Medicare negotiation. These drugs account for 20 percent of the annual Medicare Part D spending. Negotiated prices will take effect in 2026.
  • 400,000 low-income seniors will receive more help affording prescription drugs through the Medicare Part D Low-Income Subsidy Program.
  • Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries have access to recommended vaccinations free of cost.
  • Seniors with the highest brand-name drug costs will see relief because their coinsurance is phased out, effectively capping their out-of-pocket costs at $3,250 for the year.
  • In 2025, out-of-pocket costs in Medicare Part D will be capped at $2,000, saving nearly 19 million Americans an average of $400 each year. 

Big Pharma Is Working To Keep Drug Prices High. Drug company giants including Merck, Bristol Myers Squibb, Johnson & Johnson-owned Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Boehringer Ingelheim, AstraZeneca, Novartis, and Novo Nordisk as well as mega lobbying groups PhRMA (of which Amgen, Johnson & Johnson and others are members) and the US Chamber of Commerce (which represents AbbVie as a member), have filed meritless lawsuits against the federal government in an effort to stop Medicare from negotiating for lower prescription drug prices — the most popular provision of the Inflation Reduction Act. These lawsuits seek to end Medicare’s new ability to negotiate lower prescription drug prices for Medicare beneficiaries. If the big drug companies get their way, patients will pay more so the drug companies can make more money:

  • GONE: Medicare’s power to negotiate lower prices for the most popular and expensive prescription drugs. Under the Inflation Reduction Act, Medicare is set to begin negotiating prices for 10 of the top 50 most expensive Part D drugs in 2026, adding another 15 drugs in 2027 and 2028, and another 20 in 2029 and subsequent years.
  • GONE: $98.6 billion in Medicare savings over the next decade from the drug negotiation program, which translates into savings for patients and taxpayers.
  • GONE: Lower Part D premiums and lower out-of-pocket drug costs for certain Medicare beneficiaries who rely on qualifying drugs.

Republicans Voted Against Lowering Drug Prices. Every single Republican in the House and Senate voted against the Inflation Reduction Act — keeping drug prices high and money in the pockets of big pharma. Republicans gave into big drug companies’ lobbying campaign, turning their backs on the American people despite the law’s vast support from voters of all parties. Big Pharma’s GOP allies in Congress have repeatedly introduced legislation to repeal the Inflation Reduction Act’s prescription drug provisions, which would increase drug costs for millions of seniors. In 2023, Senator Mike Lee reintroduced legislation that would not only repeal Medicare’s new ability to negotiate lower drug prices but would also repeal the new penalties on drug companies that increase prices faster than inflation, and roll back the new $2,000 out-of-pocket spending cap on drug costs for those on Medicare. The Republican Study Committee also released a budget proposal that repeals the Inflation Reduction Act’s Medicare negotiation program entirely.

Americans Support The Inflation Reduction Act.  Overall, 73 percent of Americans support the Inflation Reduction Act, including 95 percent of Democrats, 73 percent of independents, and 52 percent of Republicans. The health care and drug pricing provisions are among the most popular parts of the Inflation Reduction Act.  An overwhelming 88 percent of Americans, including 87 percent of Republicans, support Congress taking action to cap the price of insulin copays for those with private insurance and Medicare at $35 per month. 83 percent of Americans from all political backgrounds strongly back Medicare drug price negotiation.

GREED WATCH: Amgen Brought In Over $28 Billion In 2023

Amgen announced it raked in $28.2 billion in 2023 – a 7 percent increase over 2022 – during their earnings report today. While they make billions, Americans pay exorbitantly high prices for prescription drugs. Amgen opposed the Biden administration reforms that lower prescription drug prices. 

  • During the call, Amgen CEO Robert A. Bradway bragged about the company’s strong revenue growth, stating, “2023 was another year of performance and progress for our company.” 
  • Amgen rewarded its shareholders with $4.6 billion in dividends in 2023 – an increase of nearly 10 percent compared to 2022.
  • Amgen CEO Robert A. Bradway made $21.4 million in total compensation in 2022, while the company hiked prices on lifesaving medication. 
  • Amgen completed its acquisition of Horizon Therapeutics in Q4 2023.
  • Amgen is a member of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) trade association, which is suing the Biden administration to stop Medicare from negotiating lower drug prices for patients because it would endanger their massive profits.
  • Amgen brought in around $3.7 billion in 2023 from blockbuster rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, and psoriatic arthritis drug Enbrel, which is currently under price negotiations with Medicare, and has now made over $84 billion on the drug since its 1998 launch
  • Amgen charges U.S. customers around 4–13x times more for Enbrel than customers in other high-income countries.
  • On aggregate, drug companies charge Americans prices up to four times higher than prices in other countries, forcing patients to cut pills and skip doses.
  • Over 80 percent of voters support giving Medicare the power to negotiate, making it the most popular provision in the Inflation Reduction Act. 

The Inflation Reduction Act brings down prescription drug costs for everyday Americans, especially seniors, by capping the price of insulin at $35 per month and providing free vaccines including shingles, giving Medicare the power to negotiate lower drug prices, and limiting the amount people have to pay each year for prescription drugs to $2,000 annually starting in 2025.  

Read more:

REPORT: Why Medicare Needs the Power to Negotiate for Lower Drug Costs: the Five Drugs That Tell the Story

FACT SHEET: Big Drug Companies Are in Court to Stop Medicare Negotiation and Protect Their Sky-High Profits

GREED WATCH: Eli Lilly Announces Staggering 20 Percent Revenue Increase

Eli Lilly announced it raked in $34.1 billion in 2023 – a shocking $5.6 billion increase over 2022 – during their earnings report today. While they make billions, Americans pay exorbitantly high prices for prescription drugs. Eli Lilly opposed the Biden administration reforms that lower prescription drug prices. 

  • During the call, CEO David A. Ricks bragged about the company’s astronomical revenue increase in 2023 saying,”2023 was a year of tremendous achievement for Lilly… resulting in strong revenue growth” 
  • Over the course of 2023, Eli Lilly rewarded its shareholders with $750 million in stock buybacks. In the fourth quarter alone, over $1 billion in dividends were distributed to shareholders as well
  • A Wall Street Journal report found that in 2022 alone, Eli Lilly CEO David A. Ricks received $64.1 million in total compensation, while the company hiked prices on lifesaving medication. 
  • Eli Lilly is suing the Biden administration to stop Medicare from negotiating lower drug prices for patients because it would endanger their massive profits. 
  • Eli Lilly charges U.S. customers up to seven times more for Jardiance than customers in other high-income countries. 
  • On aggregate, drug companies charge Americans prices up to four times higher than prices in other countries, forcing patients to cut pills and skip doses.
  • Over 80 percent of voters support giving Medicare the power to negotiate, making it the most popular provision in the Inflation Reduction Act. 

The Inflation Reduction Act brings down prescription drug costs for everyday Americans, especially seniors, by capping the price of insulin at $35 per month and providing free vaccines including shingles, giving Medicare the power to negotiate lower drug prices, and limiting the amount people have to pay each year for prescription drugs to $2,000 annually starting in 2025.  

Read more:

REPORT: Why Medicare Needs the Power to Negotiate for Lower Drug Costs: the Five Drugs That Tell the Story

FACT SHEET: Big Drug Companies Are in Court to Stop Medicare Negotiation and Protect Their Sky-High Profits

PRESS CALL: Congressman Nickel and State Sen. Murdock to Join Protect Our Care North Carolina to Highlight Record-Breaking ACA Enrollment Numbers and Coverage Benefits for Young North Carolinians

***MEDIA ADVISORY FOR TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6th AT 11:15 AM ET***

Raleigh, NC — Today, Congressman Wiley Nickel (D-NC-13) and State Senator Natalie Murdock will join Protect Our Care North Carolina to highlight record-breaking open enrollment numbers, including the 1,027,930 North Carolinians who have signed up for affordable coverage through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace. The Biden administration announced that 21.3 million people enrolled in coverage during the latest open enrollment period – over 9 million more than when President Biden took office. Speakers will also discuss a recent report on how the ACA benefits young adults, including a requirement that allows people up to age 26 to stay on their parent’s health plan. The ACA brings coverage to over 4.1 million young Americans.

Thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act’s reduction of health insurance premium costs, 80 percent of ACA enrollees were able to find a health plan through the Marketplace for $10 or less per month. President Biden and Democrats in Congress are fighting tirelessly to extend these savings. Meanwhile, Donald Trump has fully reignited the GOP war on health care. Speakers will call out how Trump’s plan to repeal the ACA would throw millions of Americans off their coverage, drive up costs, and dismantle vital protections for people with pre-existing conditions. 

PRESS CALL:

WHO:
Congressman Wiley Nickel (D-NC-13)
State Senator Natalie Murdock
Anderson Clayton, Health care storyteller 

WHAT: Virtual Press Conference 

WHERE: Register for the Zoom here [Registration required]

WHEN: Tuesday, February 6th at 11:15 a.m. ET

 

GREED WATCH: Astellas Announces Increase in Revenue After Nearly a Billion in Stock Buybacks and Dividends

Astellas announced it raked in $8 billion between April 1 and December 31 2023 – a $166.3 million increase over that same period in 2022 – during their earnings report today. While they make billions, Americans pay exorbitantly high prices for prescription drugs. Astellas opposed the Biden administration reforms that lower prescription drug prices. 

  • Over 2023, Astellas rewarded its shareholders with $72 million in stock buybacks and over $785 million in dividends. 
  • Astellas filed a lawsuit against the Biden administration to stop Medicare from negotiating lower drug prices for patients because it would endanger their massive profits, but dropped it once it became clear they didn’t have standing. Astellas withdrawing their lawsuit doesn’t change that they still vocally oppose price negotiations of any form.
  • On aggregate, drug companies charge Americans prices up to four times higher than prices in other countries, forcing patients to cut pills and skip doses.
  • Over 80 percent of voters support giving Medicare the power to negotiate, making it the most popular provision in the Inflation Reduction Act. 

The Inflation Reduction Act brings down prescription drug costs for everyday Americans, especially seniors, by capping the price of insulin at $35 per month and providing free vaccines including shingles, giving Medicare the power to negotiate lower drug prices, and limiting the amount people have to pay each year for prescription drugs to $2,000 annually starting in 2025.  

Read more:

REPORT: Why Medicare Needs the Power to Negotiate for Lower Drug Costs: the Five Drugs That Tell the Story

FACT SHEET: Big Drug Companies Are in Court to Stop Medicare Negotiation and Protect Their Sky-High Profits

GREED WATCH: Regeneron Announces Nearly a Billion Dollar Increase in Profits as They Try to Stifle Competition

Regeneron announced it raked in $13.1 billion in 2023 – a $944 million increase over 2022 – during their earnings report. While they make billions, Americans pay exorbitantly high prices for prescription drugs. Regeneron opposed the Biden administration reforms that lower prescription drug prices. 

  • During the call, CEO Len Schleifer bragged about the company’s financial success saying, “2023 marked another year of exceptional accomplishments for Regeneron as we further diversified our revenue base… In 2024, we plan to build on this momentum with continued growth of our breakthrough products Dupixent and EYLEA HD while we bring additional new therapies to market and advance our growing pipeline.” 
  • In an effort to protect their growing profits, Regenron is attempting to block biosimilars of their product Eylea, which brought them $6.3 billion in sales last year alone, from entering the market. Biosimilars would increase competition and lower costs for Americans who rely on treatments for eye diseases like macular degeneration.
  • Regeneron rewarded its shareholders with $1.5 billion in stock buybacks over the course of 2023 out of the $3 billion the company announced it would purchase in January.
  • Although his salary is relatively meager at around $7 million annually, Regeneron’s CEO Len Schleifer received over $453 million in total compensation in 2021 alone, all while the company hiked prices on lifesaving medication. 
  • On aggregate, drug companies charge Americans prices up to four times higher than prices in other countries, forcing patients to cut pills and skip doses.
  • Over 80 percent of voters support giving Medicare the power to negotiate, making it the most popular provision in the Inflation Reduction Act. 

The Inflation Reduction Act brings down prescription drug costs for everyday Americans, especially seniors, by capping the price of insulin at $35 per month and providing free vaccines including shingles, giving Medicare the power to negotiate lower drug prices, and limiting the amount people have to pay each year for prescription drugs to $2,000 annually starting in 2025.  

Read more:

REPORT: Why Medicare Needs the Power to Negotiate for Lower Drug Costs: the Five Drugs That Tell the Story

FACT SHEET: Big Drug Companies Are in Court to Stop Medicare Negotiation and Protect Their Sky-High Profits