High drug prices are a major barrier to patients' access to drugs and compliance with treatment. Yet low drug prices are often argued to provide inadequate incentives for innovation. We propose a drug-licensing model for health care, which has the promise of increasing drug use without altering patients' out-of-pocket spending, health plans' costs, or drug companies' profits. In such a model, people would purchase annual drug licenses that would guarantee unfettered access to a clinically optimal number of prescriptions over the course of a year. Using the example of statins, we illustrate how such a model could be implemented. (January 2008)
Health Affairs
2008
Goldman D, Jena AB, Philipson TJ, et al.
http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/27/1/122.full?sid=37fc37b8-7d5c-40a7-b1b6-671d087a15c7