Why states might start taxing opioids
The next wave of state actions against the opioid crisis may focus on taxing them — depending on the outcome of an industry lawsuit against New York, the first state to try it.
Between the lines: Most of the bills that have been proposed would tax opioid painkillers and use the money for addiction treatment and prevention. But the health care industry argues that they’re bad policy and, at least in the New York law’s case, illegal. That case will be tested when oral arguments in the lawsuit begin Monday.
More than a dozen states saw the introduction of bills to tax opioids last year, but only New York’s made it into law.
- The New York law will collect $600 million over six years from drugmakers and distributors and use it to fund addiction treatment and prevention. These industry groups have responded with three different lawsuits arguing that the law is unconstitutional. Oral arguments for each lawsuit will be heard on Monday.
- Some groups are also arguing that the law is bad policy. “The fee itself could force a generic company, which is making a very low margin, to leave the market. And so a potential policy consequence is that patients are only left with the brand-name, high cost opioids when they have medical needs,” said Jeff Francer of the Association for Accessible Medicines, one of the plaintiffs.
Why it matters: If the industry is successful in its attempt to kill the law, that could influence whether other states follow New York’s lead or how they write legislation.
- “I think that the states see what’s going on in litigation,” Francer said. “No legislator wants to pass a law that a court finds to be unconstitutional.”
One state to watch is Minnesota, where Governor-elect Tim Walz has said he’s supportive of a fee on opioid prescriptions to help pay for treatment and prevention.
- Legislation that would have created such a fee failed to pass last year, but lawmakers have said they want to try again, per Kaiser Health News.
- Other states to watch include California, Delaware, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Montana, New Jersey, Tennessee and Vermont, per KHN.
- Here’s a list of state opioid tax legislation that was introduced in 2018, as compiled by the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Proponents of opioid taxes argue that their value goes beyond just raising money. “If the actual price for these products reflected their true costs, I think we’d see a greater emphasis on reducing opioid use and encouraging use of pain treatments that are much safer and more effective,” said Andrew Kolodny of Brandeis University.
The other side: Opponents say these taxes could make it harder for people to get the pain medication they need. “We do not believe levying a tax on prescribed medicines that meet legitimate medical needs is an appropriate funding mechanism for a state’s budget,” said a spokeswoman for Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.
The bottom line: It’s a unique new approach to the fight against the opioid crisis — but a ruling against New York could easily shut it down.
Filed under: General Problems
Prohibition again. It did not work the first time! Dot/gov offsetting cost of pain management with a tax. It is OK to use alcohol. YOU have to pay for it while dot/gov taxes it and makes a profit!!!!!!!!
This man will do anything to keep opioids away from people in pain. Does he have any sympathy for pain patients at all or is he out to kill us all?
JMO,,,KOLODNY is the essence of a psychopath in a position of power..Psychiatry seems to pump these guys every 25 years ish,,,Starting back around documented history in America,,,ie 1800, 1860’s civil war,,Eugenics,,lobotomies,lockingup humans for being crippled,for being deaf,for being blind,,for being w a women etc..If u type in ,’The 10 worse atrocities’ of mankind,,,you will see ALLLL 10 were done by psychiatrist thinking they were literaly god,,Kolodny is #11,,,,but I think he will pass all others except Nazi Germany in thee amount of blood of the dead-on his hands thru is ,”mental hygiene cleansing”of mankind,,JMO,,,maryw
He still wants to say it is a medication issue and not an illicit issue when it IS AN ILLICIT DRUGS ISSUE!