Right Price
A Value-Based Prescription for Drug Costs
Peter J. Neumann ; Joshua T. Cohen ; Daniel A. Ollendorf
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innovation. With the advent of ever more targeted and powerful treatments, including cell- and gene-based therapies with multi-million-dollar price tags, the need for sensible drug pricing policies will only intensify.
The Right Price sheds light on the controversial topic of drug pricing by providing an accessible guide to pharmaceutical markets and analytic techniques used to measure the value of drug therapies. It illustrates the need for value-based pricing through real-life stories of patients and their experiences with the drug industry and explains why simple solutions like price controls and the importation of cheaper drugs from other countries are problematic. This volume describes how
researchers and policy makers have pursued drug valuation efforts in the past, and lays out a series of recommendations, based on years of shared author experience serving on national drug policy platforms, for how to further improve pharmaceutical value assessment in the United States.
With unique industry insights and clear narrative, The Right Price unveils why the pricing of drugs continues to be so challenging and how public and private officials can create more informed policies to achieve the right balance between drug pricing and value.
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Utgitt:
2021
Forlag: Oxford University Press Inc
Innbinding: Paperback
Språk: Engelsk
ISBN: 9780197512876
Format: 23 x 16 cm
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«This is a must-read guide for both insiders and non-experts to a topic that will be at the forefront of the drug pricing debate in the coming decade.»
«This is a timely book. Highly recommended. All readers.»
«The Tufts team should be commended for providing an important and valuable assessment of current drug pricing methodologies and how they can be improved. It should be considered required reading for those wanting to know more about the sausage-like world of drug pricing.»
«An extremely helpful and well-sourced guide to the myriad thorny issues and history behind current drug pricing and value assessment.»
«The pricing of medicines is one of the hardest problems in public policy, brimming with clinical and economic complexity. This remarkable book written by the world's leading group on drug pricing explains the key issues clearly, and without compromise. If you read only one book on how to price medicines smartly, this should be the one.»
«This is a highly readable and timely guide for anyone interested in thoughtful solutions to the nation's ongoing debates about prescription drug pricing, controlling costs, and ensuring affordability while enhancing innovation to improve people's health.»
Preface
PART 1: THE ECONOMICS OF PRESCRIPTION DRUGS
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: The prescription drug market
Chapter 3: Proposed solutions for rising drug prices
Chapter 4: Measuring the value of prescription drugs
PART 2: EXPERIENCES MEASURING A DRUG'S VALUE IN THE US AND ABROAD
Chapter 5: Measuring drug value: Whose job is it anyway?
Chapter 6: Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER)
Chapter 7: Other US value assessment frameworks
Chapter 8: Do drugs for special populations warrant higher prices?
PART 3: GETTING TO VALUE-BASED PRICING FOR DRUGS
Chapter 9: Improving value measurement
Chapter 10: Aligning prices with value
Chapter 11: The path forward
Index
Joshua T. Cohen, PhD, is Deputy Director of the Center for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health (CEVR) at the Institute for Clinical Research and Health Policy Studies at Tufts Medical Center, and Research Associate Professor of Medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine.
Daniel A. Ollendorf, PhD, is Director of Value Measurement and Global Health Initiatives at the Center for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health (CEVR) at the Institute for Clinical Research and Health Policy Studies at Tufts Medical Center, and Research Assistant Professor of Medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine. Prior to joining CEVR, he spent ten years as the Chief Scientific Officer at the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER). Dr. Ollendorf
currently serves as a non-resident Fellow at the Center for Global Development, and as Chair of the Health Technology Assessment International (HTAi) Global Policy Forum.