US health authorities to set targets for lowering drug prices
- On May 12, 2025, the U.S. Government announced an executive order aimed at establishing nationwide goals to reduce the cost of prescription medications.
- The order follows longstanding criticism of high US drug costs due to lack of government price negotiation, unlike other rich countries.
- The administration directs Medicare and Medicaid to benchmark reimbursement rates to prices in other developed nations and expects voluntary industry compliance.
- Health Secretary Kennedy noted American patients pay three to five times more for drugs, citing common cases like GLP-1 drugs costing $1,000 in the US versus $88 in London.
- If drug makers do not comply, regulators may propose rules for mandatory price caps, which could lower costs for patients but face political and industry resistance.
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Feds preparing to roll out drug price targets
BOSTON (SHNS) - The federal government indicated Tuesday it has set specific targets to address a health care cost driver that Massachusetts policymakers are grappling with: prescription drugs. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said it identified targets that drug manufacturers are expected to meet to satisfy the requirements of President Trump's new executive order on drug pricing. "President Trump and Secretary Kennedy look for…
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