Modify supply
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Modify monopoly rules
Patent buyout3
Modify patent duration27
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Modify demand
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Consumer/provider price transparency4,28
Consumer/provider value transparency (e.g., require cost-effectiveness information at launch)3
Update value and outcomes information via registries3
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Educational measures
Towards providers: academic detailing29,30
Towards patients: mass media interventions (radio, television, newspapers, posters, and leaflets)31
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Utilization management7
Prior authorization
Formulary
Step therapy
Specialist prescribing
Quantity limits
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Directly modify price
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Reference pricing5,7
Reference other countries5
Reference a bioequivalent (i.e., generic) drug8
Reference a therapeutically equivalent drug8
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Increase budget
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Toward patients
Government-established funds for expensive drug purchases. Patient borrows from the funds to pay for out-of-pocket costs, and the loan is amortized over a repayment period as with other consumer loans, such as mortgages, credit card debt, and auto and student loans9
Securitization or government guarantees to reduce interest rates for loans10
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Toward payers
Federal government could guarantee or subsidize health care loans to payers to achieve lower interest rates
Payments over time11,12
Risk-sharing payments over time13,14
Reinsurance of payers11,12
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Reward value
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Incentivize research and development for cost-effective treatments3
Indication-based pricing4,17,18
Performance-based risk sharing5,14
HealthCoin20,21
Incorporate value into evaluations and negotiations5,15,16
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