Religious Groups Urge Drug Makers To Ease Up On Price Hikes
01 4월 2011 - 6:28AM
Dow Jones News
Some religious groups are pressing major drug companies
including Pfizer Inc. (PFE) and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) to put
the brakes on price increases, which last year were the steepest in
a decade for top-selling drugs.
An order of Catholic nuns, a Catholic hospital chain and other
members of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility want
the boards of at least four large drug companies to adopt policies
of "price restraint" on branded pharmaceuticals, such as limiting
increases to the annual rate of inflation.
The groups have placed shareholder proposals urging such
policies on the ballots of upcoming annual shareholder meetings for
Pfizer, J&J, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (BMY) and Abbott
Laboratories (ABT). The meetings are scheduled for late April and
early May.
Barclays Capital recently said the average price increase for
the top-selling 130 branded drugs for 2010 was 6.9%, the highest
rate in a decade. Some newly approved drugs carry high price tags:
$120,000 for a standard course of Bristol-Myers' skin-cancer
treatment Yervoy, and $1,500 per injection of K-V Pharmaceutical
Co.'s (KVA, KBA) premature birth drug Makena.
Drug companies have boosted prices to help offset hits to
revenue from the recent U.S. health-care overhaul, and to maximize
sales for top-selling drugs nearing generic competition triggered
by patent expirations, including Pfizer's cholesterol-lowering drug
Lipitor and the anti-clotting drug Plavix from Bristol and
Sanofi-Aventis SA (SNY).
Supporters of the price-restraint proposals know they face an
uphill battle. Companies oppose the measures, and other
shareholders may view price restraints as a direct threat to
profits.
But supporters want to send a message that price hikes are
adding to the overall cost of healthcare, undermining the U.S.
health-care overhaul's goals of expanding insurance coverage and
controlling costs. Supporters say price increases hurt patients'
ability to adhere to their prescriptions.
"More and more people can't afford this, and more and more fall
back on taking either less pills or half a pill," said Sister
Barbara Aires, coordinator of corporate responsibility in
investments for the Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth, a
religious order based in Convent Station, N.J., which has around
390 sisters.
The Sisters of Charity's shareholder proposals say the companies
haven't "made a clear case offering fiscal and moral justification
for such exorbitant price increases." The proposals ask companies
to limit price hikes to the previous year's Consumer Price Index, a
gauge of inflation which last year came in at 1.5%.
The order is a member of the Interfaith Center on Corporate
Responsibility, which says its mission is to urge companies to
integrate societal values into their policies. The group's members
span various faiths. Another member, Catholic hospital operator
Trinity Health in Novi, Mich., is the lead sponsor of a price
restraint proposal on Bristol-Myers' proxy ballot.
Restraint on prices may not be welcome by other drug-company
shareholders, however. "As an investor, you'd want to vote against
anything that limits the pricing power of your company," said
William Smead, head of Smead Capital Management in Seattle, which
owned shares of Pfizer, J&J, Abbott and Bristol as of Dec.
31.
Smead said drug companies should charge what the market can
bear. But he also said most big companies have patient-assistance
programs to provide drugs for free to eligible uninsured people, or
to defray the costs of insurance copays.
Pfizer and other companies oppose price restraints because they
say prices reflect the high cost and risks of drug research and
development, in which more drug candidates fail than succeed. The
companies instead favor expanding coverage as a solution to
improving access to drugs.
"It is essential that innovators are able to price drugs based
on the value they bring to patients," Pfizer said in its response
to the price restraint proposal in its proxy statement. "It is also
essential that they are able to freely change those prices to
reflect new medical information, changes in cost, and emerging
competition from therapeutic alternatives."
A Pfizer spokeswoman declined to comment beyond the proxy
statement.
J&J said in its proxy it already strives to ensure that
average price increases across the full range of its health-care
products are within the consumer price index rate. J&J also
makes medical devices and consumer-health products.
"We do not disagree with the concept of maintaining
pharmaceutical prices at reasonable levels, and we will continue to
price our pharmaceutical products in a reasonable and responsible
manner," J&J said in its proxy statement. A spokeswoman
declined further comment.
Bristol-Myers said in its proxy it needs flexibility on pricing
so that it can invest aggressively in research. The company said it
provided more than $458 million worth of medicines to more than
263,000 patients in 2010 at no cost.
"Abbott takes a responsible approach to pricing and offers
numerous programs to ensure patients around the world have access
to our innovative treatments," a spokeswoman said.
Abbott said in its proxy more than 160,000 patients received
Abbott medicines valued at about $450 million in 2010 through
programs to provide free or low-cost medicines to eligible
patients.
-Peter Loftus, Dow Jones Newswires; 215-982-5581;
peter.loftus@dowjones.com
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