National Academies' Report Took Pharma-Friendly Stance After Millions in Gifts From Drugmakers
By Christina Jewett
AUGUST 12, 2021
The National Academy of Sciences for years has been collecting generous gifts from foundations, universities and corporations, including at least $10 million from major drugmakers since 2015, its treasurer reports show. (HANNAH NORMAN / KHN)
To several U.S. senators, it looked wasteful, even outrageous. Every year, taxpayers pay for at least $750 million worth of expensive pharmaceuticals that are simply thrown away. Companies ship many of the drugs in Costco-size vials, one lawmaker said, that once opened usually cannot be resealed or saved for other patients. Yet pharma gets paid for every drop.
So Congress turned to the prestigious National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine for advice, given its reputation for independent, objective reports on such matters. The national academies influential report, released in February, struck physicians whove tracked the issue as distinctly friendly to Big Pharma. It advised against an effort to recoup millions for the discarded drugs. It concluded that Medicare should stop tracking the cost of the drug waste altogether.
Yet the report left out a few key facts, a KHN investigation has found.
Among them: One committee member was paid $1.4 million to serve on the board of a pharmaceutical corporation in 2019 and in 2020 joined the board of a biotechnology company that lists government cost containment efforts as a risk to its bottom line.
Another committee member reported consulting income from 11 to 13 pharmaceutical companies, including eight that Medicare records show have earned millions billing for drug waste. His pharma ties were disclosed in unrelated publications in 2019 through this year.
https://khn.org/news/article/national-academies-big-pharma-support-drug-waste-report/