Categories: HealthJust Politics

Trump signs order to reduce drug prices

United States President Donald Trump has signed an executive order aiming to lower crippling drug prices in the country.

Trump signed the executive order on Tuesday, April 15, 2025.

Americans face the highest prescription drug prices in the world, leaving many people to pay partially out of their own pockets despite already exorbitant insurance premiums.

A White House official told reporters: “This (order) will provide meaningful relief to seniors and low-income individuals who depend on insulin and many, many more.

“Furthermore, it will foster a more competitive prescription drug market to ensure the prices being charged to patients and the government are more aligned with the value they provide, rather than some quirk in the way that the government pays for them.”

The order directs the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which regulates prescription and over-the-counter pharmaceuticals, to allow more states to import medicines directly from countries with lower prices.

The administration of Trump’s predecessor, Joe Biden, approved Florida’s application to import from Canada last year, but no other states were given the green light for their own deals.

The order also tweaks the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) passed under Biden, which allowed the Medicare health insurance plan for seniors to negotiate the prices of certain drugs for the first time.

Trump freezes $2bn Harvard University funds after rejecting president’s demands

The aim of the changes is to eliminate the difference between price negotiation rules for pills and those for injectable drugs – a disparity that critics argue could harm investment in the orally-administered products.

Under the IRA, Medicare could negotiate on prices for “small molecule” drugs that patients swallow, such as ibuprofen, nine years after FDA approval, AFP reported.

“Large molecule” biologics such as gene-based therapies and hormonal regulators could only be subject to negotiations after 13 years.

The order did not specify how the disparity would be addressed.

Officials said the edict also did not make use of a “most favored nation” status that would force pharmaceutical companies to offer their lowest prices in America.

Biden’s IRA reforms led to the costs of 10 key medicines being cut in landmark negotiations with pharmaceutical firms.

Days before leaving office, the Democrat announced a further 15 drugs for which the government would negotiate lower prices with pharmaceutical companies, with the resulting prices taking effect in 2027.

The Star

Segun Ojo

Recent Posts

Bank customer snatches rifle, fires at robbers in Niger

A bank customer in Minna, Niger State, on Friday fought back against suspected armed robbers,…

6 hours ago

Weekly review: NGX records lower turnover as market capitalisation rises

Investors traded 3.695 billion shares valued at N177.687 billion in 370,980 deals at the Nigerian…

7 hours ago

Troops rescue 19 kidnap victims in Abuja

Troops of the Nigerian Army’s 7 Guards Battalion, under the Guards Brigade, have rescued 19…

8 hours ago

Bwala defends viral Al Jazeera interview, says criticism won’t distract him

The Special Adviser to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Media and Policy Communication, Daniel Bwala,…

9 hours ago

IBEDC blames gas shortage, apologises for unstable power supply

The Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC) has apologised for the inconvenience caused by ongoing power…

10 hours ago

Terrorists now demand drugs, virgins for hostages — Afenifere

The pan-Yoruba socio-political organisation, Afenifere, has raised alarm over the worsening security situation in South-West…

10 hours ago

This website uses cookies.