• @[email protected]
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    667 months ago

    I don’t think he meant to the consumer. EU countries can negotiate for the price with pharmaceutical companies, so they can lower the price.

    In the US insurance companies can try to negotiate, but their weight is quite low, and the federal government (medicaid, medicare) is forbidden by law to negotiate. Whichever price pharma sets, it’s that.

    • @Kaavi
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      107 months ago

      Sounds crazy they are but allowed to negotiate?

      Is that the same for anything else the government buys? I can’t imagine the army buying 100 tanks and just paying the first price they get?

        • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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          97 months ago

          In fact it’s the first time the government will be able to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies!

          Yes! That’s a great start 👌 especially if the negotiator is NOT getting a kickback from Pharma for negotiating a high price

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        It’s like

        – Arms dealer: Each tank cost me 500,000 dollars to make. Give me 5 billion for each.

        – Let’s negotiate. How about 500 million instead?

        – Arms dealer: Fiiine, but only because you’re a good client.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          This is legitimately how it works in the US between insurance and pharma/medical.

          I just had a baby and I added up the total bill from the hospital and it was $100,000. We were in the hospital for 3 days. My insurance “negotiated” it down to $26,000, and I paid $3000.

          The $100,000 is completely made up from the beginning. Pharma and medical just slap big ass ridiculous numbers down, then the insurance fake negotiates down to a still completely ridiculous number, then that cost has to get eaten by people who pay into insurance, which is basically everyone.

    • @[email protected]
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      57 months ago

      … forbidden by law to negotiate.

      Is that true? Is there a legitimate reason why they shouldn’t be able to?

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          How about updating the constitution to solve this specific problem, which is quite significant for the populace? After all, it’s the constitution’s job to serve the people.

          • @BloodSlut
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            37 months ago

            That would require a constitutional amendment, which would require being ratified by 38 or more states. Which would require at least 38 states without significant corruption/obstruction, and a population not braindead/brainwashed enough to vote against their own interests.

            So the chances of that happening are abysmally low.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        Because medicine shouldn’t become a flea market where you’re gambling your health against profit maximization.

        Give pharmaceutical companies a fair price scale where they can profit, don’t let them hyperinflate prices without justification.

        It’s not the same if Apple prices their phones at 20,000 USD and you decide you’re buying other brand, pharma plays these extortion games after they have captured enough market/regulation so most people have to pay or stay sick.