Feature

Federal court puts chill on Maryland drug price-gouging law


 


Regardless, striking down a law on constitutional grounds can be particularly discouraging, suggested Rachel Sachs, an associate law professor at Washington University in St. Louis who researches drug regulations.

“If it had been a rejection on vagueness grounds, that’s something you can cure with a more specific statute,” she said. “But the fact that they said this is unconstitutional poses real concern for other states.”

That’s important. While the federal government has talked a big game on bringing down drug prices, it has done little. Instead, states have taken the lead – spurred by the budget squeeze pricey prescriptions impose on their Medicaid programs and on state employee benefits packages.

But states have far fewer tools at their disposal than does Congress. Most state laws so far tackle only pieces of the problem – targeting a specific drug or particular practice, experts said.

Pages

Recommended Reading

ACS WiSC seeks ACS Fellows to serve as new members
MDedge Surgery
Applications for ACS Academy of Master Surgeon Educators are now being accepted –
MDedge Surgery
ACS releases 2018 update to the Physicians as Assistants at Surgery report
MDedge Surgery
Royal Australasian College of Surgeons partners with ACS for Annual Scientific Congress
MDedge Surgery
Dr. Pellegrini receives Seattle Business Leaders in Health Care Lifetime Achievement Award
MDedge Surgery
Most physicians support Medicaid work requirements
MDedge Surgery
Musculoskeletal procedures predominate in top 20 surgeries
MDedge Surgery
Surgeries account for almost half of hospital costs
MDedge Surgery
Will patients get on board with CMS’s new health data approach?
MDedge Surgery
Short-Term Storage of Platelet-Rich Plasma at Room Temperature Does Not Affect Growth Factor or Catabolic Cytokine Concentration
MDedge Surgery