Monday, February 24, 2020

Drug corporations from manufacturers to retailers are rotten down the line


Drugs, drugs, drugs. We hear a lot about drugs. Especially about the Opioid Crisis, which is a very serious problem in the US. But the other drug problem we hear about is also very serious: the cost of drugs and the inability of people to access the drugs that they need, not to mention to save their lives, because of the cost.

One such drug is insulin, needed by people with Type 1 diabetes to survive. Stories of people dying from, or almost dying from, lack of access to insulin, or having to go to Canada or Mexico to buy it, are both sad and galling.  It is particularly so in the case of insulin because its discoverers wanted it to be free. In 1923, Frederick Banting and his colleagues Charles Best and James Collip sold the patent to the University of Toronto for $1 each, worried that if they did not patent it drug companies would patent an inferior version of insulin (imagine that!) and people would die. The University of Toronto gave the patent royalty-free to drug companies, specifically Eli Lilly.

Unsurprisingly, that marked the end of being motivated by the public interest. As early as 1941, Lilly and two other companies were indicted for price fixing of insulin, and it has gone on from there. In 1982, Lilly was able to synthesize human insulin (previously insulin was made from beef or pork pancreas, which had a lot of reactions, although pork was closer to human and thus preferred). Of course, the price took off. With the complicity of the government, worse in administrations that believed corporate profit (especially for big donors) was more important than human lives, the price continued to rise. This has led us to story after story about people with diabetes, like Josh Wilkerson, dying because they could not afford $1,200 co-pays. Banting and Best are turning in their graves.

Yes, pharmaceutical manufacturers are greedy and evil, whether they make insulin or Epi-Pen or colchicine, or other drugs (like pyrimethamine – see Martin Shrkeli) and deserve every bit of anger, hatred, and scorn that has been visited on them. They are continually the #1 (or, sometimes, #1!) profitable industry in the US, making lots of money because, well, people need their products to live. But they are not the only part of the drug industry that is responsible for bleeding us for profit. They are complicit with insurance companies, who agree to pay the outrageous prices that they demand (because, after all, they just raise their premiums), and with our bought-and-paid-for Congress. For example, when Congress passed the Medicare Part D Drug Act in 2003 it contained a prohibition against Medicare, the nation’s largest insurer, negotiating drug prices, thus ensuring that American pay far more for drugs than people in other countries (there is a reason uninsured folks go to Canada or Mexico)! As I noted recently, the idea is often put forward that without drug company profit, innovation in pharmaceutical discovery would grind to a halt, but in fact nearly 2/3 of discoveries are made outside the US and most of those in the US are discovered through research funded by the National Institutes of Health.

But beyond the usual villains, pharmaceutical and insurance companies, we have the wholesalers, retailers, and “bundlers” of drugs also making out like bandits (they are bandits, even if, thanks to that bought-and-paid-for Congress, their schemes are often legal) from our health needs. The “bundlers”, called Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) are contracted by large insurers to negotiate for the “best prices” with pharmacy retailers. For a positive spin on what they do, see this piece from “The Balance”. However, they are also responsible for a lot of the high cost of drugs, especially for those with worse, or no, insurance. In addition, they have a lot of practices that enhance their profit at your expense, many explained in this piece from the Commonwealth Fund, such as jacking up the price charged to insurers and pocketing the difference (“spread pricing”) and pocketing rebates from manufacturers. The entire role of PBMs is complex and bewildering, but they play a critical role in the important process of profiting off of your illness.

More recently, we have seen exposure of the nefarious practices of the final link in the chain of getting you your needed medicines, the retail pharmacies themselves. Of course, the old mom-and-pop drugstore on the corner is almost a thing of the past, having been replaced by mega-chain pharmacies such as CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid and Duane Reed. (Of course, in many big cities they are still on every corner, not just competing with each other but with themselves; in places like New York City they are more ubiquitous than Starbucks!) These chains drove out the small drugstores by underpricing them, but having been successful in that, they have adopted practices that are frequently unethical, sometimes illegal, and always guaranteed to make them more profit. Indeed, two of the largest PBMs are now owned by these chains (Caremark by CVS and Envision by Walgreens), enhancing the vertical integration of the industry.

A New York Times exposé of January 31, 2020 by Ellen Gabler tells how retail pharmacies overwork their employees, sometimes with resultant errors such as patients getting the wrong medicines and often having adverse effects. It was titled “How Chaos at Chain Pharmacies is Putting Patients at Risk”, but this headline, while accurate, does not explain the real reason for the chaos, which is that these pharmacies are using an old and dishonorable technique made famous by Henry Ford in the early days of assembly lines called “speed up”. Speed-up, increasing the expectations for “production” (in this case, number of prescriptions filled per hour) has been a target of union contracts since the 1930s, but as the influence of unions has waned (with the collaboration of pro-corporate legislatures) these practices have increased. Pharmacists may be “professionals” (like nurses and doctors) but whatever your education and training, if you work for a large corporation who sets the rules and standard and has control, you are a worker, and need the protections that all workers should have. The most conscientious of these professionals have protested, often to the state boards that regulate them, as cited in the Gabler article:

In letters to state regulatory boards and in interviews with The New York Times, many pharmacists at companies like CVS, Rite Aid and Walgreens described understaffed and chaotic workplaces where they said it had become difficult to perform their jobs safely, putting the public at risk of medication errors.

They struggle to fill prescriptions, give flu shots, tend the drive-through, answer phones, work the register, counsel patients and call doctors and insurance companies, they said — all the while racing to meet corporate performance metrics that they characterized as unreasonable and unsafe in an industry squeezed to do more with less.

“I am a danger to the public working for CVS,” one pharmacist wrote in an anonymous letter to the Texas State Board of Pharmacy in April.

“The amount of busywork we must do while verifying prescriptions is absolutely dangerous,” another wrote to the Pennsylvania board in February. “Mistakes are going to be made and the patients are going to be the ones suffering.


So is the problem being addressed? You can be sure that it is, by the corporations that run these pharmacies. How? The complaints of the pharmacists are being taken care of in the way that big corporations often do, that is, ignoring them and deleting mention of them from their reports. In a follow up on February 21, 2020, “At Walgreens, complaints of medication errors go missing”, Ms. Gabler writes:

Pharmacy employees at Walgreens told consultants late last year that high levels of stress and “unreasonable” expectations had led them to make mistakes while filling prescriptions and to ignore some safety procedures.

But when the consultants presented their findings at Walgreens’s corporate offices this month, there was no reference to the errors and little mention of other concerns the employees had raised.

That’s because senior leaders at Walgreens had directed the consultants to remove some damaging findings after seeing a draft of their presentation, a review of internal emails, chat logs and two versions of the report shows.

In one instance, Amy Bixler, the director of pharmacy and retail operations at Walgreens, told them to delete a bullet point last month that mentioned how employees “sometimes skirted or completely ignored” proper procedures to meet corporate metrics, according to the chat logs and the draft report.

Good for you, Ms. Bixler! Took care of that problem! You should get a nice bonus this year!

If these practice are of concern to you, they should be. So should the price gouging up and down the line in the pharmaceutical industry, the drive to profit for manufacturers, PBMs, insurance companies, and retail pharmacies to make lots of money off you, or you die. “Your money or your life!” is an old cliché attributed to highwaymen. It should be the mantra of the pharmaceutical industry in this age of unfettered capitalism.

But no highwayman ever had the reach or power or ownership of politicians that these folks do. 

1 comment:

  1. Sadly, sadly true, Josh.
    Most anyone who has the time to pay attention knows a lot of this already, but these details add fuel to what should be a bonfire of outrage. And I didn't know the history of the initial patenting of insulin. How horribly wrong the later history is!
    Thanks for keeping on with this.

    ReplyDelete