Ms. Farr attended the conference alongside executives who oversee benefits for major U.S. companies like Amazon and IBM.
During an April 20 session, the National Business Group on Health’s president and CEO Brian Marcotte asked attendees to submit one word to describe the pharmaceutical supply chain. He posted the results as a word cloud, which included words like “convoluted,” “confusing,” “expensive,” “a mess” and “no transparency.”
Ms. Farr noted some companies are teaming up to address the underlying issues driving high drug costs, such as the joint venture Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway and JPMorgan announced in January.
“I got a general sense at the conference that employers were unsatisfied,” Ms. Farr concluded. “They asked tough questions, held companies in the drug supply chain to task and seemed eager to learn about its complexities. Let’s hope they use their collective power for good.”
More articles on supply chain:
Amazon drops plan to become a major pharmaceutical distributor: 7 things to know
GSK divests line of rare disease drugs
FDA OKs 1st AI medical device that screens patients without physician interpretation