The White House released a health care plan Jan. 15 addressing drug prices, health insurance premiums and price transparency efforts. The plan includes codifying the administration’s “most favored nation” agreements recently reached with certain drugmakers, where companies must offer Americans the lowest cost paid for the same medications in other countries. It also calls for sending subsidies directly to Americans instead of insurance companies and funding cost-sharing reductions to reduce premiums. The plan would also require health insurers to publish rate and coverage comparisons on their websites “in plain English — not industry jargon” for consumers. In addition, the plan calls for any health provider or insurer accepting Medicare or Medicaid to “prominently” post their pricing and fees. 

Related News Articles

Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services and Drug Enforcement Administration Dec. 30 released a temporary rule extending for the fourth time waiver…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Dec. 23 introduced a new drug pricing model for Medicare Part D and Medicaid beneficiaries. The Better…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Dec. 19 issued two proposed rules for implementing alternative drug pricing models. The first proposed…
Headline
The Departments of Treasury, Labor, and Health and Human Services proposed several changes Dec. 19 to the Transparency in Coverage requirements for insurers.…
Headline
The White House announced Dec. 19 that it reached most-favored-nation deals with nine pharmaceutical companies, aligning their drug prices with the lowest paid…
Headline
The AHA Dec. 17 urged Elevance Health, which is the parent company of the Anthem brand of health plans, to rescind Anthem’s nonparticipating provider…