“This was an unexpected victory in a long fight against an illegal cartel of three corporations who have raised their insulin prices in lockstep.”

The Biden Administration pleasantly stunned health care reform advocates Tuesday by including short-acting insulin in its list of 10 drugs for which Medicare will negotiate lower prices, power vested in the White House by the Inflation Reduction Act.

The IRA was passed in the face of one of the heftiest barrages of lobbying in congressional history, with the pharmaceutical industry spending more than $700 million over 2021 and 2022 — several times more than the second- and third-ranking industries — much of it aimed at stopping the legislation, watering it down, or undermining its implementation.

  • @oldbaldgrumpy@lemmy.world
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    3910 months ago

    I don’t know how this is a negotiation…big pharma overcharges the USA by a lot…we all know it. How is this not illegal? Why are they not held accountable for inflating prices for 1 group of people? Imagine if they did the to just a single race…black, white, Asian, whatever… Is t it the same thing?

    • @SCB@lemmy.world
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      -910 months ago

      It’s not illegal because it isn’t illegal to set a price that the market can bear.

      They’re not increasing prices for just one group of people, which may or may not be illegal, but rather setting a price for a given product.

      This is the crux of why this has been such a tough nut to crack.

      • @underisk@lemmy.ml
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        2410 months ago

        A product which is only necessary for one group of people. A group who, through circumstances likely beyond their control, need that medication to maintain a healthy life. Thinking of life saving medication as a product to be sold is the problem.

        • @SCB@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          I don’t disagree with your intent, but this is not the way laws work in the United States. I generally share your opinion that our current methodology is not the way laws should work, but that does not change the present reality.

          You asked, “How is this not illegal” and I answered that question.

          • @underisk@lemmy.ml
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            1010 months ago

            I’m not the one who asked that. I think “How is this not illegal” wasn’t intended to be taken as a literal request to explain our current legal situation in this country but more an exasperated rhetorical question to underline the jarring and obvious moral hypocrisy in our laws.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              210 months ago

              That makes sense. I often interpret people too literally, and to me the person seemed to be literally asking why this wasn’t illegal.

              I understand the frustration, and to me, the current legal framework is the source of the frustration, which is why I thought the question was both literal and apt.