Contracts
Show Trump Giving Big Pharma Free Rein to Price Gouge Taxpayer-Funded
Coronavirus Drugs
Government contracts obtained by
consumer advocacy group Knowledge Ecology International show that the Trump
administration is giving pharmaceutical companies a green light to charge
exorbitant prices for potential coronavirus treatments developed with taxpayer
money by refusing to exercise federal authority to constrain costs.
Five of the seven
documents reviewed by KEI are classified as "other transaction
agreements," which allow federal agencies to loosen regulations designed
to protect the public in order to help companies streamline the product
development process.
Through the Freedom of Information Act, Knowledge Ecology International (KEI) last week got hold of a number of heavily redacted agreements between the Trump administration and major pharmaceutical companies like Johnson & Johnson, Regeneron, and Genentech.
Through the Freedom of Information Act, Knowledge Ecology International (KEI) last week got hold of a number of heavily redacted agreements between the Trump administration and major pharmaceutical companies like Johnson & Johnson, Regeneron, and Genentech.
In the case of four
contracts for potential Covid-19 treatments or vaccines with Johnson &
Johnson, Genentech, Regeneron, and Roche issued by the Biomedical Advanced
Research and Development Authority (BARDA) and the Pentagon, the Trump
administration omitted a standard condition requiring
that products developed with taxpayer money be made available to the public
"on reasonable terms."
"This means that the government has limited its ability to intervene if the pharmaceutical companies (which are party to the agreements and are receiving hundreds of millions of dollars to conduct the research) charge unreasonable prices for the resulting Covid-19 vaccines or treatments," KEI noted in a press release.
KEI also found that
federal contracts with Genentech and Regeneron for coronavirus treatments contain
passages restricting the government's ability to "have generic
manufacturers make and distribute through pharmacies and other commercial
outlets an effective diagnostic test, drug, or vaccine for Covid-19."
The details of the contracts come just days after the Trump administration faced backlash from consumer groups for refusing to require Gilead to charge a reasonable price for its Covid-19 treatment remdesivir.
On Monday, as Common Dreams reported, Gilead announced it will charge U.S. hospitals around $3,120 per privately insured patient for a treatment course of remdesivir, which was developed with the help of at least $70.5 million in taxpayer funding.
"Allowing Gilead to
set the terms during a pandemic represents a colossal failure of leadership by
the Trump administration," Peter Maybarduk, director of Public Citizen's
Access to Medicines Program, said in a statement Monday. "The
U.S. government has authority and a responsibility to steward the technology it
helped develop."
As the Washington Post reported Wednesday, "[Johnson & Johnson] has a $456 million contract with BARDA to develop a coronavirus vaccine and a $152 million contract to conduct screening of drug compounds that could be Covid-19 treatments."
"Regeneron has
contracts worth up to $130 million to develop two therapies for the
disease," the Post noted.
"Roche's Genentech subsidiary has contracts worth $47 million to develop a
pair of therapies."
James Love, the director
of KEI, told the Post that
"the amount of money the government is throwing at companies is
unprecedented."
"Normally when you
write bigger checks," Love said, "you should have more leverage, not
less leverage."