How A Drug Company Under Pressure For High Prices Ratchets Up Political Activity

https://khn.org/news/how-a-drug-company-under-pressure-for-high-prices-ratchets-up-political-activity/

Business looked challenging for Novo Nordisk at the end of 2016. As pressure mounted over the pharma giant’s soaring insulin prices, investors drove its stock down by a third on fears that policymakers would take action, limit prices and hurt profits.

Then things got worse. A Massachusetts law firm sued the company and two other pharma firms on behalf of patients, claiming that high insulin prices of hundreds of dollars a month forced diabetics to starve themselves to minimize their blood sugar while skimping on doses. At least five states began investigating insulin makers and their business partners.

As scrutiny rose, Novo Nordisk engaged in what analysts say is a time-honored response to public criticism. It aggressively ratcheted up spending to spread its influence in Washington and to have a louder say in the debates over drug prices.

The drugmaker’s political action committee spent $405,000 on federal campaign donations and other political outlays last year, more than in 2016 — an election year — and nearly double its allocation for 2015, data compiled by Kaiser Health News show.

“We remain committed to being part of the discussion,” said Tricia Brooks, head of government relations and public affairs for Novo Nordisk, acknowledging scrutiny over insulin prices but saying the company has many other issues to work on with policymakers. “I don’t want us to run away from it and hide or keep our head down and wait for it to roll over.”

Novo Nordisk also spent $3.2 million lobbying Congress and federal agencies in 2017, its biggest-ever investment in directly influencing U.S. policymakers, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Part of that surge included summoning more than 400 Novo Nordisk employees to contact lawmakers and their staffs on Capitol Hill, “a huge increase from anything we’ve ever done before,” Brooks said.

Taken together, the increases represent a “major corporate policy shift” for the company and appear to be a classic business response to growing political risk, said Kent Cooper, a former Federal Election Commission official who has tracked political money for decades.

The pharma industry as a whole has behaved similarly, cranking up political contributions and lobbying. Meanwhile, despite much talk about change, Congress and the Trump administration have done little to control drug prices or threaten drug-company profits.

Pharma businesses overall made political donations of $12.1 million last year, down from a $13.6 million election-year surge in 2016 but 9 percent higher than the haul for 2015, according to the KHN analysis. Pharma industry lobbying expenses surpassed $171 million last year, the highest level since 2009, during negotiations over the Affordable Care Act, according to CRP.

“It’s been hot in the health care arena for — how many years now?” said Steven Billet, who teaches lobbying and PAC management at George Washington University. “Anybody in this world now is sitting there thinking, “When I go back to the board next year, I’m going to ask for 15 percent more in my [lobbying and campaign finance] budget. Because this isn’t going away.’”

Like most big corporations, Novo Nordisk runs a political action committee, or PAC, which solicits employee donations and gives the proceeds to political candidates’ campaigns. The company is Danish. Only workers who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents are allowed to support the PAC.

Like many PACs, Novo Nordisk spreads money to both parties, concentrating on powerful committee members and other leaders. Since 2013 it has given $22,500 to House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican, and $20,472 to South Carolina’s James Clyburn, a member of the Democratic House leadership.

Brooks gave the PAC $4,370 last year, the data show. Some employees gave as little as $20 or $30.

The firm’s influence-seeking has grown along with its U.S. sales, which went from hundreds of millions of dollars in the early 2000s to some $9 billion last year. Its biggest business is diabetes, including various types of insulin whose list prices have more than doubled in recent years.

The wholesale list price for a vial of Novo Nordisk’s Levemir, a long-acting insulin, went from $144.80 in 2012 to $335.70 in January, when the price rose 4 percent, according to Connecture, a research firm.

Even Alex Azar, a former Eli Lilly executive who became Health and Human Services secretary in January, said in his confirmation hearing that “insulin prices are high, and they’re too high.” Along with Novo Nordisk and Sanofi, Lilly is one of the three big insulin makers under investigation by state attorneys general for price increases that seem suspiciously similar in size and timing.

Sanofi and Lilly both spent more last year on political donations and federal lobbying than Novo Nordisk. Lilly’s political spending was $548,100 for 2017, up 12 percent from 2015, the previous off-election year, the data show. Sanofi’s was $527,200, down from 2015.

But potential insulin price limits threaten Novo Nordisk more than those companies because diabetes-related drugs account for an exceptionally big portion of its business, analysts said. Several proposals under consideration by Congress could lower insulin prices or limit future increases.

One would allow the Medicare program for seniors to negotiate prices for covered drugs, thus lowering the cost.

Other proposals would make it easier for competing, “biosimilar” alternatives to break through the thicket of patents created by sellers of complex drugs such as insulin. Others would bring more transparency, requiring companies to publish and justify price increases.

None of the proposals has made it out of congressional committees. In the face of inaction by Washington, Novo Nordisk’s stock has recovered much of the ground it lost in 2016.

Novo Nordisk rejects suggestions that it coordinated price increases with competitors. So do Sanofi and Lilly.

List prices such as those tracked by Connecture don’t reflect what patients or their insurers ultimately pay, said Novo Nordisk spokesman Ken Inchausti. Growing discounts and rebates substantially reduced the reported list price, he said.

Even including discounts, however, the company’s net profit margin for 2017 was 34 percent, its highest since at least 2000, when it was half that high.

Official filings show Novo Nordisk lobbyists have been weighing in on numerous measures related to drug prices, including proposals to import less expensive drugs from Canada.

The company lobbies Washington on a wide range of issues including diabetes prevention, budget matters, chronic disease and making obesity an accepted medical disease that insurers will pay to prevent, Brooks said.

But last year’s increase in campaign donations and lobbying doesn’t look like business as usual for Novo Nordisk, said Billet, a former AT&T lobbyist who directs GWU’s Legislative Affairs program.

“I’m not surprised,” he said. “They’ve obviously had some issues recently. This is maybe a predictable enough element in their strategy.”

 

HERE’S HOW MUCH MONEY EVERY SENATOR RECEIVED FROM HEALTH-INSURANCE COMPANIES IN THE LAST ELECTION CYCLE

https://psmag.com/news/health-insurance-senate-money-connections

Image result for HERE'S HOW MUCH MONEY EVERY SENATOR RECEIVED FROM HEALTH-INSURANCE COMPANIES IN THE LAST ELECTION CYCLE

On average, senators who don’t support Bernie Sanders’ single-payer plan received more money from insurance companies.

Senator Bernie Sanders introduced a radical bill last week that would overhaul America’s health-insurance system. The Medicare for All Act of 2017 would turn the American government into the country’s only payer—besides individuals—for health care. While the bill has virtually no chance of passing the Republican-controlled Congress, it’s still symbolically important because it shows the Democrats’ shift to the left on health care. Case in point: The last time Sanders (I-Vermont) introduced a similar bill, in 2013, he wasn’t able to garner a single co-sponsor; this time, 16 Democratic senators signed on as co-sponsors.

What’s driving this change of heart? According to University of Southern California political scientist Christian Grose, many of these co-signers are thought to have presidential ambitions and therefore may be “trying to peel off some support from Bernie Sanders voters were they to run in 2020,” he writes in an email. In addition, the number of Americans who say they want to have a single-payer health-care system is growing, although they remain in the minority.

Might other interests be at work as well? MapLight, a non-profit that tracks how campaign donations affect politicians’ voting, ran the numbers to see how much accident- and health-insurance companies have donated to sitting senators in their most recent election campaigns. Pacific Standard re-ran MapLight’s analysis using the organization’s “Find Contributions” tool and came up with similar results: On average, senators who didn’t sign Medicare for All received about $48,000 from these industries between November of 2010 and November of 2016. That’s nearly twice as much as the 17 senators who signed it, who received an average of $27,000. Democratic senators who didn’t sign on received an average of more than twice as much in donations as Sanders and his 16 co-signers: $56,500. You can see our full results below:

Of course, these numbers don’t show the whole picture. It’s very difficult to track all the ways a company can donate to a political candidate. MapLight analysts sought to identify donations from companies, company employees, and relevant political action committees, but they may have missed some major contributions. “The money is more than likely grossly undercounted,” says Paul Jorgensen, a political scientist who studies campaign finance at the University of Texas–Rio Grande Valley and is not involved with MapLight. “What it may not account for are the other committees that those sitting senators will be a part of that receive cash. The committee system in Congress is very complicated and the flow of money is very complicated. Just looking at the primary campaign committee is not sufficient for looking at an aggregate of campaign donations.” Candidates may receive support from super political action committees, or super PACs, run by their party leadership, for example, which wouldn’t show up in the data MapLight uses, which is drawn from the Center for Responsive Politics.

It’s possible that the ratios we found—twice as much money given to Medicare for All’s non-supporters—might be different in a full accounting of donations. Still, nearly all of the political scientists Pacific Standard consulted thought it was reasonable to report these numbers as a rough estimate of industry money involved in the Senate’s votes on health care. They also said the ratios are plausible and, if correct, significant. (Jorgensen was the exception because he thought the undercount might be so severe.)

These numbers don’t prove that industry donations made senators not support Medicare for All. To argue that, analysts would have to rule out other reasons senators may not support the bill, such as their personal ideologies or the desires of their constituents. Plus, the line of reasoning may run the other way. “It’s just as likely that these senators were openly unfriendly to legislation such as the Sanders bill and that that is why the industry donated to them in the first place,” George Mason University political scientist Jennifer Nicoll Victor writes in an email. “The reason for the donation isn’t to ‘corrupt’ the senator or to buy their position on a bill, rather the donation is more like an expression of commonality, friendship, or alliance because they already agree with one another.”

There’s other evidence that shows money influences votes, at least for other bills. Jorgensen himself worked on a white paper for the Roosevelt Institute, a think tank that supports stricter regulation on business, that linked industry donations to congressional votes on the Dodd-Frank Act. MapLight’s analysis isn’t set up to make that same argument for Sanders’ Medicare for All Act. MapLight spokesman Alec Saslow admits as much, but adds, “At a minimum, the outsized influence of money in politics gives the public reasonable cause to question our lawmakers’ motivations.”