Perspectives: COVID-19 Vaccine Might Be Worth Government Turning A Blind Eye To Pharma Profits
Read recent commentaries about drug-cost issues.
If we want a vaccine or drug treatment to stop coronavirus, the government should ignore those complaining about drug-company profits and commit to a huge reward that encourages more businesses to develop one. It wouldn鈥檛 just save lives; it could save the global economy.聽The coronavirus could cost the U.S. $1.5 trillion in annual economic output, or $125 billion every month 鈥 and that鈥檚 a conservative estimate. The losses for the entire world economy will be four to five times larger. And these economic costs will be dwarfed by the human costs of illness and death.聽(Hanno Lustig and Jeffrey Zwiebel, 3/31)
The need for any kind of聽聽treatment to help stem the coronavirus outbreak聽is acute as cases and hospitalizations continue to mount. But there's a strong need to balance urgency and evidence. President Donald Trump's cheerleading of chloroquine and its derivative hydroxychloroquine 鈥斅爋lder malaria drugs with limited evidence of efficacy in Covid-19 鈥斅爄s arguably dangerous. As he touts the drugs in press conferences, people are reportedly poisoning themselves via self-administration and聽hoarding聽it to create聽hazardous shortages, making the prudent use and evaluation of it as a treatment聽more difficult. (Max Nisen, 3/25)
n late February, as it became increasingly clear that the coronavirus was going to spread widely in the U.S., Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar told Congress, 鈥淲e would want to ensure that we work to make [COVID-19 drugs] affordable, but we can鈥檛 control that price because we need the private sector to invest.鈥 We do need the private sector to invest. But the U.S. government is investing too, and it deserves a say here, on behalf of taxpayers. Since the outbreak of SARS in 2002, the National Institutes of Health has invested nearly $700 million in coronavirus research, and the first COVID-19 package passed by Congress included another $826 million for the development of coronavirus treatments, vaccines, and tests. (Matthew Lane, 3/26,)
As the pandemic deepens, physicians face an agonizing decision 鈥 to medicate or not to medicate? Here鈥檚 the dilemma: Over the past few weeks, some small studies suggested a decades-old malaria drug called hydroxychloroquine may have the potential to combat the novel coronavirus known as Covid-19. And as the results trickled out, the tablet has become more valuable than gold. (Ed Silverman, 3/31)
High out of pocket costs likely won鈥檛 be an issue when a treatment for the coronavirus becomes available. Based on past epidemics, it鈥檚 probable the government will direct patients to receive a vaccine without having to hand over a copay to an insurance company. Before the current pandemic, rumor had it that the Trump administration was quietly considering reviving a drug pricing reform it abandoned last year. (Drew Johnson, 3/27)