Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel will testify before Senate next month on Covid vaccine price hike
Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel will testify before the Senate health committee in March over the company’s plans to hike the price of its Covid-19 vaccine.
Sen. Bernie Sanders, chair of the health panel, confirmed in a statement on Wednesday that Bancel would appear at a hearing titled: “Taxpayers Paid Billions For It: So Why Would Moderna Consider Quadrupling the Price of the COVID Vaccine?”
Bancel told the Wall Street Journal in January that the company was considering increasing the price of its vaccine to between $110 to $130 when the federal government stops buying the shots for the public and they’re sold on the private market. The U.S. currently pays about $26 per dose for Moderna’s omicron booster, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Sanders, in a letter to Bancel last month, slammed the proposed price hike as “outrageous” given that the vaccine was developed in cooperation with the National Institutes of Health using taxpayer money.
“I find your decision particularly offensive given the fact that the vaccine was jointly developed in partnership with scientists from the National Institutes of Health, a U.S. government agency that is funded by U.S. taxpayers,” Sanders wrote to Bancel.
Sanders said raising the vaccine price would have a negative effect on the budgets of Medicare and Medicaid and will increase private health insurance premiums, but he said the uninsured would feel the greatest impact.
“Perhaps most significantly, the quadrupling of prices will make the vaccine unavailable for millions of uninsured and underinsured Americans who will not be able to afford it,” Sanders said. “How many of these Americans will die from Covid-19 as a result of limited access to these lifesaving vaccines?”
The federal government has guaranteed free Covid vaccines for everyone in the country regardless of insurance status since the shots rolled out in December 2020. The vaccines will remain free for people who have Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance under the Affordable Care Act even after the federal Covid immunization program ends.
The U.S. still has 120 million omicron boosters that haven’t been used. The uninsured will continue to have access to these shots for free, but it’s unclear how long the supply will last.
When the federal supply runs out, uninsured adults may have to pay the full price for the shots. The White House has said it is developing plans to help.
There is a federal free vaccine program for children whose families or caretakers can’t afford the shots.
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