PhRMA CEO Billy Tauzin on Access to Medicine in West Virginia
Pharmaceutical companies are working every day to find new cures and treatments for society’s greatest health problems. As a cancer survivor, I understand that there is nothing more precious than your health and the health of loved ones. And I am here to tell you that without prescription medicines, the health of far too many would be in worse shape.
If you read nothing about the industry but various press accounts, however, you might mistakenly come away with the belief that America’s pharmaceutical research companies do nothing but lobby and create advertisements. Nothing could be farther from the truth.
West Virginians are right to review the issues surrounding the access and affordability of prescription medicines. These medicines are important elements of modern healthcare and yes, there are some among us who need help affording these treatments. America is the world’s leader in developing new medicines, but pharmaceutical companies know it is not enough to find and develop new medicines – as hard as that job may be. We must also help those in need afford them too.
You should know these facts:
Prescription drug spending is just over 10-cents of the total healthcare dollar. Elected officials looking to save money on healthcare tend to focus on prescription drugs but how can serious reductions in total healthcare spending be made when you narrow your focus to 10.5 percent of spending?
The appropriate use of prescription drugs helps lower overall healthcare spending. This is just common sense: It is far cheaper and leads to better healthcare to prevent heart attacks and strokes, for example, through the appropriate use of medicines than it is to pay for the in-hospital treatments including surgeries and rehabilitation that will likely come when medicines are denied.
There are significant programs available today to help those in need with their drug costs, programs that have received scant attention by this newspaper. There are more than 475 public and private programs available to help the uninsured or those with low-incomes. RxforWV (www.rxforwv.org or 1-877-WVA-Rx4u) has matched more than 43,822 West Virginians to programs offering discounted or even free medicines. Additionally, the prescription drug industry provided $55 million dollars worth of products to West Virginia’s free clinics between 2004 and 2005, including the Charleston based Health Right clinic at no cost, helping more than 49,000 West Virginians receive the prescription drugs they need. This is real help for real people.
The fundamental problems plaguing West Virginia healthcare are far broader than issues surrounding prescription drug coverage. They include improving access to health insurance for the more than 270,000 uninsured – about 16 percent of the state’s population – because you cannot get a medicine if you can’t see a doctor to get the prescription in the first place. The state must continue with its emerging efforts to address the core health problems of obesity – across all age groups – and the need for better health education. West Virginia is to be commended for recognizing that it must improve the quality of its community health.
Read the rest of this article on what the pharmaceutical industry is doing to help increase access to medicine.








