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TexasTowelie

(116,801 posts)
Fri Apr 5, 2019, 03:45 AM Apr 2019

Three Pharmaceutical Companies Agree to Pay a Total of Over $122 Million to Resolve Allegations that

Three Pharmaceutical Companies Agree to Pay a Total of Over $122 Million to Resolve Allegations that they Paid Kickbacks Through Co-Pay Assistance Foundations


BOSTON – The U.S. Attorney’s Office announced today that three pharmaceutical companies –Jazz Pharmaceuticals plc (Jazz), Lundbeck LLC (Lundbeck), and Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. – have agreed to pay a total of $122.6 million to resolve allegations that they violated the False Claims Act by paying kickbacks to Medicare and Civilian Health and Medical Program (ChampVA) patients through purportedly independent charitable foundations.

When a Medicare beneficiary obtains a prescription drug covered by Medicare Part B or Part D, the beneficiary may be required to make a partial payment, which may take the form of a co-payment, co-insurance, or deductible (collectively, co-pays). Similarly, under ChampVA, patients may be required to pay a co-pay for medications. Congress included co-pay requirements in these programs, in part, to encourage market forces to serve as a check on health care costs, including the prices that pharmaceutical manufacturers can set for their drugs. The Anti-Kickback Statute prohibits pharmaceutical companies from offering or paying, directly or indirectly, any remuneration – which includes money or any other thing of value – to induce Medicare or VA patients to purchase the companies’ drugs.

“We are committed to ensuring that pharmaceutical companies do not use third-party foundations to pay kickbacks masking the high prices those companies charge for their drugs,” said United States Attorney Andrew E. Lelling. “This misconduct is widespread, and enforcement will continue until pharmaceutical companies stop circumventing the anti-kickback laws to artificially bolster high drug prices, all at the expense of American taxpayers.”

“Pharmaceutical companies undercut a key safeguard against rising drug costs when they create assistance funds to serve as conduits for the companies to subsidize the copays of their own drugs,” said Assistant Attorney General Jody Hunt of the Department of Justice’s Civil Division. “These enforcement actions make clear that the government will hold accountable drug companies that directly or indirectly pay illegal kickbacks.”

Read more: https://www.justice.gov/usao-ma/pr/three-pharmaceutical-companies-agree-pay-total-over-122-million-resolve-allegations-they
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