
The US prescription drug business is a $500 billion industry whose rising prices carry profound consequences for patients, caregivers, employers and taxpayers across the nation. In the United States, average prices of leading brand-name drugs are two to four times higher than prices charged in other wealthy countries, raising questions as to what Americans are getting for the extra expense. On the other hand, healthy industry returns have arguably fueled life-saving innovation. With the advent of ever more targeted and powerful treatments, including cell- and gene-based therapies with multi-million-dollar price tags, the need for sensible drug pricing policies will only intensify. The Right Price sheds light on the controversial topic of drug pricing by providing an accessible guide to pharmaceutical markets and analytic techniques used to measure the value of drug therapies. It illustrates the need for value-based pricing through real-life stories of patients and their experiences with the drug industry and explains why simple solutions like price controls and the importation of cheaper drugs from other countries are problematic. This volume describes how researchers and policy makers have pursued drug valuation efforts in the past, and lays out a series of recommendations, based on years of shared author experience serving on national drug policy platforms, for how to further improve pharmaceutical value assessment in the United States. With unique industry insights and clear narrative, The Right Price unveils why the pricing of drugs continues to be so challenging and how public and private officials can create more informed policies to achieve the right balance between drug pricing and value.
This book investigates the complex economic and ethical challenges surrounding pharmaceutical pricing in the United States and proposes a framework for value-based assessment. The authors, Daniel A. Ollendorf, Joshua T. Cohen, and Peter J. Neumann, leverage their extensive expertise in health policy and economics to analyze why American drug costs significantly exceed those in other nations. They argue that while innovation requires financial incentives, current pricing models lack transparency and alignment with patient outcomes, necessitating a shift toward evidence-based valuation methods.
What You Will Find
Experts and policy analysts recognize this work as a comprehensive primer on the mechanics of pharmaceutical market valuation. Readers frequently note that the authors successfully distill dense economic theory into accessible language for both industry professionals and concerned citizens.
Page Count:
271
Publication Date:
2021-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0197512909
ISBN-13:
9780197512906
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