The study asked 580 Americans to view one of five different ads for the same made-up drug. Two of the print ads bore a $15,500 price tag; one version included a payment assistance offer and the other didn't. The second set of ads priced the drug at $50, one with payment assistance and the other without. The fifth ad didn't include a price.
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In the lower-priced set, consumers showed little change in response across four measures—whether they would ask their doctor about the drug, ask their insurer, research the drug online, or take the drug—with or without the assistance offer.
But viewing the high-priced ad without the payment modifier “significantly reduced the likelihood” that participants would act on the ad at all. When they watched the ad that dangled a $0 copay, the “results were significantly mitigated,” the researchers found.
That means pharma companies that talk about patient financial assistance in their advertising are more likely to retain a consumer’s interest even if the ad includes a high list price. The study essentially showed that pharma companies already have a workaround if the Trump proposal becomes law and they are forced to show list prices in ads.
That wasn't the researchers' intent, though, as one of the authors emphasized. The researchers were simply investigating what might happen if drug prices are included in ads, he said.
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“Given that the coupon or copay programs are already in place, we wanted to know would the (drug ad price) proposal work? Our evidence would suggest that while the policy wouldn’t hurt anything, it might not be as effective as it could be (unless) the policy also did something to curb those copay assistance programs,” said Clemson University professor Jace Garrett, Ph.D., who co-authored the study with Ge Bai, Ph.D., at Johns Hopkins University and William Taylor, Ph.D., at Brigham Young University.