"However, according to my father, as a physician, having a number of drugs for the same indication makes being a doctor much easier. Paraphrasing here, but some people just don't respond to some drugs, but they do respond to other in the same class. So there is certainly some utility in me-too pharma."
Fair enough. But, let's remember that the incentive for pharmaceutical companies to make drugs in the same class is to capture some of that billion dollar market. And, let's look at the sort of drugs that Big Pharma is rushing manufacture. They are not exactly for treating "diseases," but rather "lifestyle ailments" : erectile dysfunction, cox-2 inhibitors, statins, hair loss treatments, etc. (I am sure someone will debate me on this!)[Side note: The 1951 Humphrey-Durham amendment made many drugs "prescription only," and specified they had to be treatments for diseases.]
Now we are about to face on onslaught of Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) ads for drugs that treat "insomnia." While I am more than sympathetic to folks suffering from insomnia, I am suspicious of these sorts of claims:
the new insomnia medications are aimed at people who have gone largely untreated and may be unaware of new treatment options.
What he have here is another case of Big Pharma marketing a "disease." And, they make all this money by getting third-party payers (medicare, private insurance, managed care, etc.) to cover the cost of these over-priced drugs. Big Pharma claims that they need to recoup their massive drug development costs--and, sure, some of that is true. But, here companies like Sepracor, Inc., who wants to spend 60 million bucks to sell Lunesta aren't exactly making a "breakthrough" drug.
I proposed to "brillant student" David Healy's argument that we simply make these lifestyle drugs over-the-counter, rather than "prescription only" status. That way, I argued (appealing to "brillant"'s free market nature), the price of these drugs will reflect market forces and consumers will have to decide how much they really need Lunestra, which might cost, let's say 300 bucks for a months' supply, when they could spend the same amount on massages, gym membership, Kava Kava root or what have you. There are lots of treatments for insomnia--including, reducing stress, insane deadlines, and demands on your life. We can also make social changes, things like getting rid of big-ass-bright-car-lot lights that keep my neighborhood artificially lit up every night.
"Brillant student" is skeptical of my suggestion. He is not sure that average folks will make good decisions about which drugs to take in the absence of a physician. But, part of my response is, why would the physician be elminated? Right now physicians tell me all the time to purchase a certain matress for my back problem or look into this sort of air filter for my allergies. When I had a weird bump on my arm, a doctor told me to go by hydrocortisone. All of these things are OTC, right?
Ah, Lunestra! Apparently it makes a butterfly come to your house and put you right to sleep. How soothing!
ReplyDeleteSeriously, my only concern about the OTC thing is that, if someone has serious, chronic insomnia (no one I know), and they can only buy the meds over the counter, then they will wind up paying an arm and a leg out of their own pocket, 'cause neither insurance nor flexible salary reduction payments will cover an OTC med no matter how much it costs. Will the free market make the price go down?? Not much! Look at over the counter allergy meds--$16-20. Yeast infection medications came down since they originally went OTC, but not much. It costs me more to buy it over the counter than to pay a $10 co-pay and get it from my physician. Of course, it's worth the lack of hassle, so I do it, but it certainly hasn't become cheap and affordable just because it's OTC.
And those natural things, like Kava kava? Have you seen the prices on that stuff? I fear that OTC status will make desperately unhappy people simply have to pay more rather than less for their medications. So much for the free market (why do people actually believe in that stuff anyway?) ;-)
"I"--
ReplyDeleteYea, I would be hit pretty hard if these drugs went OTC. And, I think its not a perfect solution. But, the way things stand now, the only reason I can get treatment is because I have good insurance, which a lot of folks don't have (and I still pay pretty high co-pays for medication).
(side note: I just read today that a local musician, who supports himself through his music, landed in the hospital for a month and had no insurance. Local people are trying to raise money for him through a benefit.)
Sure, you might argue that others can get it through Medicare, but its not wholly clear to me that Medicare makes these drugs all that affordable (assuming there is a high co-pay) or that you can reliably get them (depending on the bureaucratic nightmares of using the prescription drug benefit). And, anyway, the third party payer system for prescription-only drugs and not other treatments forces us to get the treatments that insurance covers (because we can afford it) rather than what is best or even what the doctor thinks we should get.
The whole thing is messed up!
One thing I think it is important to point out is that a mattress, air filter, and topical hydrocortisone are not in the same class as prescription drugs. After all the whole goal of medicinal chemistry is to significantly alter the body's biochemistry in a way that brings about some therapeutic affect. What is the goal of mattress design? Not significant alterations to biochemistry. As far as something like hydrocortisone the reason things like this make it to be OTC is that they have been time-tested to be safe. Furthermore, there is very little risk of hydrocortisone abuse. Can the same thing be said for Viagra, Prozac, and Lunestra?
ReplyDeleteI do like the idea of forcing people to understand the prices of their medications and deciding, rather than the public program which just allows people to get whatever they want whenever they want at other's expense. However, I think medicines bring a whole new set of risks that are not apparent in mattresses and thus they warrant their own set of regulations. Furthermore, because there is always a balance between bringing therapeutics to market so that they can benefit society versus time tested safety I think there necessarily needs to be someone qualified deciding what is the best set of treatments for an individual.
I agree that they’re many issues with human life today that should be resolved through changes in lifestyle not necessarily through medicine. However, again this is obviously a balance issue. Yesterday I ran along the Charles river between Harvard and MIT, I wouldn’t not have made it if it were not for the 500mg of Ibuprofen that I took before I left. Now on one hand running/exercise is a proven health benefit. On the other hand I would not have been able to run without the medicine (I hurt my knee in high school). What is the point? The point is that there are a lot of things that medicine can do to allow us to live better lives. But these medications can easily be taken too far and become a substitute for living well. Again a reason why somebody qualified need to be in the loop.
Where does that leave us? Well big pharma, Medicare, and just drug access alone are issues that will continue to become a bigger problem in society. I agree that the current situation is unsustainable; however allowing people to have free access to lifestyle drugs would create many more problems than it solves. After all it is one thing to take a few advils before going for a run… it is completely different to pop Prozac, Viagra, and Lunestra as a substitute for living well. Besides the market will not necessarily lower the prices of drugs if they are OTC. It may increase demand and cause prices to rise (and I certainly don’t want to pay anymore into public healthcare programs). So what is there to gain by moving to OTC lifestyle drugs? Prices would probably stay roughly the same… after all they are already in demand.
I think the bigger problem is system in the USA. We can look to many causes, but the fact is that there has been a serious drop off in innovation and scientific progress in this country over the last years. I think we need to do more to develop/educate the next generation of innovators. I may be bias (as a scientist), but the USA has lost the innovative spirit that put a man on the moon, built the PC, and developed the internet. There are a number of problems ahead for the people of this world and I fear that these problems are going to be solved by other countries leaving citizens of the USA at the mercy of the whole world, which might not be a good thing given our recent policy towards them. I often wonder who the next innovators and world changers will be, but it seems that the US’s proportion of those is going to be declining in the near future.
Soul Searcher--
ReplyDeleteWelcome! I love your "handle"! As expected, you've made some smart points against making lifestyle drugs OTC. I think, ultimately, it is not the solution. And, I would like to believe that physicians should be looking after us, their patients, and making sure a drug works well for us.
One concern with the physician-as-guardian idea is that physicians have conflicts of interest with certain pharmaceutical companies. For as a long as I can remember, my father, a gastroenterologist, has gotten all sorts of sweet deals from Big Pharma. And, its pretty safe to say that makes him partial to prescribing certain medications over others.
Now, clearly physicians do not want to be sued because of bad drug therapy. And, that is a good check against poor medicine. But, its not perfect.
Let's talk about your innovation comments. I love it. So romantic and spirited. I am not being sarcastic. I want to see that sort of passion alive. I hope people like you will take some time from your crazy lab life to inspire young people to take part in making our country be, once again, the cutting edge in innovation. We need to inspire young people. And, it wouldn't hurt if we didn't have Federal restrictions on stem cell research! :)