Recent announcement of Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway and JP
Morgan Chase (1, 2) to address rising healthcare costs for their
employees has caused a bit of uproar on the healthcare landscape. Healthcare
companies and many others have expressed their concern and doubts about success
of the partnership (3). There will be many “naysayers” and many will
pontificate. Their concerns could be real but time for “creative destruction” (4,
5, 6) on the healthcare landscape has come. It has been long overdue.
In the last one hundred years creative destruction/disruption
has led to significant innovations in almost every industry. To a major extent
pharmaceutical and healthcare industries have escaped this disruption. It is my
perspective that time for the needed disruption has come. Banding of ABM
(Amazon, Berkshire, Morgan) is start of an alternate landscape. There will be
evolution. Some of the elements that need the change are also being discussed (1).
Discussion of healthcare costs and controlling them is out of the closet. These
three companies with a combined revenue of about $500 billion dollars per year
and over one million employees are going to explore possibilities of how the
costs can be contained and even lowered will be a good thing.
The task is going to be challenging, multi-faceted and
evolutionary. There will be significant resistance from every cog of the
healthcare wheel. Political and economic power of the healthcare industry will
be tested. We should not be surprised if legislators, intellectuals and consultants
also get in the act to score points.
For success there will be strategic re-modeling of the
current business model, rejuvenation of the manufacturing practices, supply
chain changes and re-allocation of the workforce. Status quo of the current
practices is going to be increasingly disrupted and disturbed with every ABM
success. Each success will bring in new players to improve the process. Business
strategies will change. Technology, artificial and real, along with process of
continuous improvement will play a major role.
ABM effort to lower healthcare costs is counter to the
current operating philosophies of the pharmaceutical, insurers and pharmacy
benefit manager companies. A quick look just at the pharmaceuticals tells us
part of the story. Most of the revenue growth of the pharmaceutical companies is
in the developed countries (7). Lately pharmaceutical companies due
to their inability to create affordable new drugs that are more effective than
the current drugs for the mutually subsidized healthcare systems and affordable
to 98+% of the global population are depending on high priced orphan drugs,
preventing generic entries and are raising prices. Due to political pressures
some pharmaceutical companies have opted to less than 10% price increases (8,
9). I am not sure how long this these strategies will work.
At the initial going (1) ABM alliance has supposedly
conceded drug distribution to industry’s middlemen PBM (Pharmacy Benefit
Manager’s). However, if the Alliance has to be successful in lowering drug
prices it will have to crack open the PBM pricing juggernaut between the formulation
sellers to the patients. Reverse calculations will show ABM how the price multiples
traverse between the API manufacturer and the patient (10).
ABM alliance is giving the healthcare industry and
opportunity to stay afloat. There will be survival tug of war. My conjecture is
fissures in the healthcare citadel will develop and could get wider thereby
lowering healthcare costs.
Other healthcare components would most likely experience similar
cost pressures. Since there are multiple elements in healthcare, I am sharing
my perspective of the possibilities as they relate to drug prices (pharmaceutical
manufacturing) only (11).
A recent post “Comparison of Drugs Prices: US vs. India: Their
Manufacturing Costs & Opportunities to Improve Affordability” (10)
gives us a perspective of drug price differences for the generic drugs. Brief
review suggests tremendous price change possibilities.
While
collecting the pricing information (10) I noticed drug packing that
might be worth mentioning. Majority of the drugs in India come in blister pack
or foil strips of 10 to 20 counts each. When one asks for a specific drug,
customer receives the prescribed/required number of tablets. Since
air-conditioning is not available at every pharmacy, blister pack or foil
strips might be preserving the drug from extremes. Such packing could be used
in the developed countries also. Few advantages in such packing i.e. reduce
waste, reduced cross contamination if the tablets are a look alike and speedier
drug dispensing. Every cost reduction could be passed on to the patients.
Opportunities:
Since Amazon is an online store and they are already serving
the needs of patients, they could throw each of the following elements to serve
and lower drug costs.
Local same day delivery could play a major role in Amazon
business expansion. Through reverse calculation (10, 11, 12, 13) ABM
could negotiate with various OTC, generic and even with the brand companies the
best prices they can provide offer via Amazon.com to their employees and expand
to serve others. Reverse calculation will improve price negotiation and
incorporation of better technologies to improve product quality, profits and lower
costs. ABM enterprise through Amazon could have more than one supplier for the
same drug offerings. It would be a case similar to companies competing for
“shelf space” on the basis of product quality and sell price as is being
currently done by different producers of the same products on Amazon website
and at the grocery stores. Another significant benefit of ABM’s effort and the
drugs being available via Amazon.com will result in drug pricing transparency.
Through technology copay systems of mutually subsidized systems could be
incorporated. Single pay system could also be tested
and if successful could be expanded.
My conjecture is that if companies compete side-by-side for the
same product quality they will compete on costs. This also means inclusion of manufacturing
technology innovation through “economies of scale” (14, 15), which has
been shunned in API manufacturing and their formulations.
FDA will also have to change its process review and approval
methods. It will have to develop and promulgate a road map so that the ANDA
approval process could be lowered to three months (16, 17). NDA approval methods will have to be revisited. FDA
will face significant internal resistance to such a change but the long-term
benefits will outlast the short-term hiccups. Since “Lower the Healthcare Cost”
Genie is out of the bag and is recognized, change will happen.
FDA’s regulatory quality compliance would still stand. My
conjecture is that if companies compete side-by-side for same product quality
they will compete on costs and quality and that means manufacturing technology
innovation through inclusion of “economies of scale” in API manufacturing and
their formulations.
Since drugs being available via Amazon.com another
significant benefit of ABM’s effort will be drug-pricing transparency that is
hidden from the patients in mutually subsidized healthcare systems.
Quoting
WSJ Editorial Board (6) “… health care is long overdue for a shake up, and the
leaders of these companies—Mr. Buffett, Jeff Bezos and Jamie Dimon —deserve credit
for jumping in. The public would be the beneficiary if this trio can figure out
how to lower costs and increase quality, and the odds are better with them than
another political intervention.” Since change in healthcare is much needed by the constituents of
our country it will also be a test of metal of our legislators’ short and
long-term interest and alliance. Political and economic pressures will be
tremendous.
Only
time will tell who wins and who does not and by how much. One thing is for sure
that each segment of healthcare (pharmaceutical development, manufacturing,
distribution and insurers, providers, hospitals) will have to review/alter
their modus operandi to lower their costs and improve quality of products/services
they provide.
Assembly
line methods e.g. cataract in India, knee replacements and other procedures might
have to be adopted, streamlined or considered to improve and lower healthcare
costs. Drug affordability is an issue and will become increasingly an important
part of the discussion as America ages. Healthcare providers will have to forgo
their latent prevailing sentiment that patients will pay the highest price to
get well and extend their life.
Many
will be rooting for the ABM alliance success but there will be many who could
create obstacles.
Girish
Malhotra, PE
EPCOT
International
- Triple Threat: Amazon, Berkshire, JPMorgan Rattle Health-Care Firms, The Wall Street Journal, January 30, 2018, Accessed January 31, 2018
- If Amazon And Buffett Lift Veil On Health Prices, Insurers Are In Trouble, Forbes.com, January 31, 2018, Accessed January 31, 2018
- JPMorgan to Banking Clients: Joint Health-Care Venture Is No Threat, WSJ.COM, February 4, 2018, Accessed February 4, 2018
- Creative destruction: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creative destruction Accessed January 31, 2018
- Malhotra, Girish: Is "Creative Destruction" the way to go for the Pharmaceuticals? Profitability through Simplicity, December 11, 2008, Accessed February 5, 2018
- Welcome to the Health-Care Jungle, WSJ.COM February 1, 2018, Accessed February 5, 2018
- Malhotra, Girish: An Alternate Look at the Pharmaceutical World Revenues and Drug Affordability, Pages 2-5, www.gmpnews.net, Autumn 2017, Manufacturing Chemist, Volume 88, Number 10, October 2017, Pg. 28-32
- Facing Criticism, Drug Makers Keep Lid On Price Increases, WSJ.COM [https://www.wsj.com/articles/facing-criticism-drug-makers-keep-lid-on-price-increases-1488157893], February 26, 2017, Accessed February 5, 2018
- US pharma industry holds to price-cap pledge, Pharmaceutical Technology [https://www.pharmaceutical-technology.com/comment/us-pharma-industry-holds-price-cap-pledge/], January 5, 2018, Accessed February 5, 2018
- Malhotra, Girish: Comparison of Drugs Prices: US vs. India; Their Manufacturing Costs & Opportunities to Improve Affordability, Profitability through Simplicity, January 18, 2018
- Malhotra, Girish: May Day May Day: Can Someone Help and Lower Drug Prices?, Profitability through Simplicity, May 1, 2015, Accessed February 5, 2018
- Malhotra, Girish: A Blueprint for Improved Pharma Competitiveness, Contract Pharma, September 8, 2014 Accessed February 6, 2018
- Malhotra, Girish: Can An Alliance Between US Pharmaceutical Benefit Managers (1) and Make in India (2) Lead to Lower Global Drug Prices? Profitability through Simplicity, June 17, 2015 Accessed February 6, 2018
- Malhotra, Girish: Recent Posts That Relate to Pharmaceuticals and Chemicals-I, Profitability through Simplicity, 2013, Accessed February 6, 2018
- Malhotra, Girish: Neglected Tropical Disease (Infectious Diseases) Drugs: What are they telling us about Innovations! Profitability through Simplicity, March 7, 2012, Accessed February 6, 2018
- Malhotra, Girish: Can the Review and Approval Process for ANDA at USFDA be Reduced from Ten Months to Three Months? Profitability through Simplicity, March 25, 2017
- Malhotra, Girish: ANDA (Abbreviated New Drug Application) / NDA (New Drug Applications) Filing Simplification: Road Maps are a Must, Profitability through Simplicity, May 11, 2017