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MSN MoneyWednesday, August 25, 2010 12:56 PM
This won't be a surprise to anyone who regularly fills a prescription: The price of name-brand drugs has risen 8.3% in the past year, far faster than the rate of inflation.
In a report (.pdf file) that looked at prices over five years, AARP found that prices for 207 name-brand drugs commonly taken by Medicare beneficiaries had increased 41.5% since 2004, compared with an inflation rate of 13.3%.
For people who take more than one prescription drug to treat chronic conditions, the impact can be substantial. A patient who regularly takes three name-brand drugs would have paid nearly $1,900 a year more in 2009 than in 2004. The report looked at retail prices of drugs, and many patients with insurance pay less.
Industry officials challenged AARP's finding, telling The New York Times that the AARP report doesn't reflect the widespread use of generic drugs. A U.S. government study of all drug prices, conducted for the Consumer Price Index, found that drug prices overall rose 3.4% in 2009. About 75% of all prescriptions in the United States are now generics, the Times reported.
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