The state of Louisiana is attempting to adopt the Netflix
model of paying for pharmaceuticals as a way to tackle the high cost of
pharmaceuticals and public health issues.
The Netflix model was proposed in a recent article. Basically, the state pays a set price for an
unlimited number of drugs for its citizens.
This has the benefit of providing certainty as to price as well as opens
up access to the drugs to more people than previously treated. The Washington Post discusses Louisiana and
the Netflix model, here. The abstract of
the article titled, Alternative State-Level Financing for Hepatitis C Treatment—The “Netflix Model”, authored by Mark R. Trusheim, MS; William M. Cassidy, MD; Peter B. Bach, MD is in the November issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association states:
Drug prices in the United States remain the highest in the
world. New payment approaches are needed, a point illustrated by the new
treatments for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection that are highly effective but
also very expensive, at least from the view of many payers, physicians, and
patients. Five years after the introduction of these drugs, and due in many
cases to budgetary constraints of state Medicaid programs and prisons, only 15%
of the estimated population of more than 3 million individuals with HCV
infection in the United States have been treated. Yet the optimal
way to treat HCV is at the population level, that is, by treating every patient
possible, with as much speed as is possible. Doing so would reduce the health
consequences for those infected, generate the most future savings from improved
health, and help decrease future transmission of HCV from person to person.
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