Pfizer’s Covid antiviral drug Paxlovid is an important medicine. Doctors can prescribe it to help Covid patients significantly reduce their odds of hospitalization, death and long-term health problems. Despite its efficacy, it’s already not being prescribed as often as it probably should be.
That’s why it’s so depressing to hear that Pfizer is planning to price a five-day course of Paxlovid at $1,390 when it enters the commercial market later this year. That’s more than double the $529 it was charging the U.S. government, which has been purchasing the medicine from Pfizer since 2021 and freely providing it to patients. Harvard University researchers estimate the cost of production for a 5-day course of the drug is about $13.
While many people will not be affected by the change in list price, some people are likely to find it harder to access the drug in the future.
There’s nothing unusual about pharmaceutical companies extracting extraordinary profits from drugs by posting astronomical list prices. But that doesn’t make it any less gross to watch, particularly given how familiar everyone is with the dangers of Covid for high-risk populations. While many people will not be affected by the change in list price, some people are likely to find it harder to access the drug in the future and, thus, be deprived of a great tool for lowering the risk of serious illness from a dangerous virus.
According to The Wall Street Journal, health plans will make it so that “most patients will have a small or no out-of-pocket cost because Pfizer is expected to offer price discounts and help patients with their out-of-pocket charges.” But the high list price might still make insurance companies stingier about covering it, thereby limiting access to it. David Boulware, a professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota Medical School, told The Wall Street Journal, “With a low cost medicine, they’re not going to aggressively police it, but a higher price medicine they likely would.”








