Drug Discovery and Development

  • Home Drug Discovery and Development
  • Drug Discovery
  • Women in Pharma and Biotech
  • Oncology
  • Neurological Disease
  • Infectious Disease
  • Resources
    • Video features
    • Podcast
    • Voices
    • Views
    • Webinars
  • Pharma 50
    • 2025 Pharma 50
    • 2024 Pharma 50
    • 2023 Pharma 50
    • 2022 Pharma 50
    • 2021 Pharma 50
  • Advertise
  • SUBSCRIBE

Price-Gouging Bill Aimed at Wholesalers

By Drug Discovery Trends Editor | May 23, 2012

TRENTON (AP) – A Congressman investigating wholesalers accused of jacking up prices of crucial prescription drugs in short supply introduced a bill meant to curb the problem.

Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, D-Md., is proposing reforms meant to deter price-gouging and make the drug supply chain safer – issues that are part of the complex problem of shortages.

For the past few years, record shortages of crucial medications heavily used by hospitals have been disrupting care, driving up costs and endangering patients, leading to some deaths.

The problems have forced doctors to postpone chemotherapy and surgeries and provide some treatments that are less effective and have worse side effects. Patients have had to endure more pain, preventable complications and longer hospital stays.

Most of the drugs that are unavailable or hard to find are normally cheap, generic injectable drugs, including sedatives for surgery and powerful antibiotics and painkillers.

Many of the shortages have been caused by manufacturing shutdowns due to contamination and other serious problems. Other reasons include increased demand for some drugs, companies ending production of low-profit medicines, consolidation in the generic drug industry and limited supplies of some ingredients.

A press release from Cummings, who is the ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, said “unscrupulous gray market wholesalers” have been buying scarce drugs from pharmacies to “charge excessive markups and divert drugs away from patients who need them.”

Cummings’s bill would prohibit wholesalers, which normally purchase medicines from manufacturers and re-sell them to hospitals and pharmacies, from buying drugs from pharmacies. It also would require wholesalers selling any critical drugs that are in short supply to list a drug’s selling price in its pedigree, a document listing each company that has handled the product, so buyers can see each middleman’s markup.

The bill also would create a national database to which wholesalers would have to report the status of their state licenses or face penalites. State regulators would report license revocations and disciplinary actions to the same database, so medical providers, consumers and state regulators could spot problems.

“Nobody should be allowed to engage in profiteering at the expense of children and adults with cancer or other critical illnesses by jacking up the price of drugs that are in critically short supply,” Cummings said in a statement. “This bill closes down loopholes in the supply chain.”

Cummings and other members of Congress have been investigating dozens of wholesalers, looking at where they purchase drugs in short supply and what they pay. The majority of pedigrees the investigators have examined indicate wholesalers are snapping up drugs from pharmacies, then offering them to hospitals at big markups. In a few cases, people appear to have set up sham pharmacies just to buy scarce drugs and then re-sell them at a big profit.

Cummings and Sen. John D. Rockefeller, chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, aim to report on the investigation this summer. A Commerce Committee spokesman said Rockefeller has yet to decide whether to introduce a Senate version of the Cummings bill.

A funding bill for the Food and Drug Administration, set for votes by the full House and Senate in the next couple weeks, includes some provisions aimed at easing other aspects of the shortages. A Cummings staff member said it’s possible some of his bill could get incorporated in the funding bill.

Meanwhile, increased efforts by the FDA to get manufacturers to notify it of impending shortages have been paying off; reports of new shortages have fallen significantly this year.

There are now shortages of 280 drugs, including 78 new shortages reported between January and mid-May, according to Erin R. Fox, manager of the University of Utah Drug Information Service, which tracks national drug shortages. Last year, there were 267 new shortages reported, adding to a couple hundred shortages persisting from earlier years.

Date: May 22, 2012
Source: Associated Press


Filed Under: Drug Discovery

 

Related Articles Read More >

S&P report highlights Big Pharma’s concentration risk amid pre-JPM deal flurry
Eli Lilly in the Drug Discovery & Development Pharma 50
Lilly Phase 3b trial shows roughly 40-fold higher combined arthritis and weight-loss response
Drug companies sign “Most Favored Nation” deals, then raise prices anyway
New gonorrhea antibiotic could treat resistant infections
“ddd
EXPAND YOUR KNOWLEDGE AND STAY CONNECTED
Get the latest news and trends happening now in the drug discovery and development industry.

MEDTECH 100 INDEX

Medtech 100 logo
Market Summary > Current Price
The MedTech 100 is a financial index calculated using the BIG100 companies covered in Medical Design and Outsourcing.
Drug Discovery and Development
  • MassDevice
  • DeviceTalks
  • Medtech100 Index
  • Medical Design Sourcing
  • Medical Design & Outsourcing
  • Medical Tubing + Extrusion
  • Subscribe to our E-Newsletter
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • R&D World
  • Drug Delivery Business News
  • Pharmaceutical Processing World

Copyright © 2026 WTWH Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of WTWH Media
Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us

Search Drug Discovery & Development

  • Home Drug Discovery and Development
  • Drug Discovery
  • Women in Pharma and Biotech
  • Oncology
  • Neurological Disease
  • Infectious Disease
  • Resources
    • Video features
    • Podcast
    • Voices
    • Views
    • Webinars
  • Pharma 50
    • 2025 Pharma 50
    • 2024 Pharma 50
    • 2023 Pharma 50
    • 2022 Pharma 50
    • 2021 Pharma 50
  • Advertise
  • SUBSCRIBE