Resources
The National Pharmaceutical Council (NPC) is a health policy research organization dedicated to the advancement of good evidence and science, and to fostering an environment in the United States that supports medical innovation.
Filter by:
Topic
Topic
- (-) Accountable Care Organizations
- Alternative Payment Models
- Biopharmaceutical Innovation
- Bundled Payments
- Clinical Pathways
- Decision Frameworks
- Elements of Value
- Evidence for Decision Making
- Formulary/Benefit Design
- Formulary Development
- Good Practices for Evidence
- Health Care Quality Measures
- (-) Health Spending
- Health Spend Management
- High-Deductible Health Plans
- (-) Impact on Outcome & Spending
- Individual Treatment Effects & Personalized Access
- IRA Implementation
- Low-Value Care
- Pandemic Response
- (-) Patient Cost Sharing
- Paying for Cures
- Policy & Regulatory Barriers
- Real-World Data
- Real-World Evidence
- Regulatory Barriers & Challenges
- Understanding Health Spending
- Utilization Management & Step Therapy
- Value-Based Contracts
- Value-Based Insurance Design
- Value Assessment
- Value Assessment Frameworks
- Value Assessment Methods
Resource Type
Audience
Audience
Display Only
Showing 162 Results
NPC in Morning Consult: “Why Is Drug Spending So High?” Is the Wrong Question
In a column published in Morning Consult, NPC Chief Science Officer and Executive Vice President Robert W. Dubois, MD, PhD, explains that asking why drug spending is so high assumes that…
National Pharmaceutical Council in STAT: The (relative) risk in misinterpreting health spending statistics
National Pharmaceutical Council Chief Science Officer and Executive Vice President Robert W. Dubois, MD, PhD, explains in his column in STAT that the absolute numbers tell a different story than the…
Health Care Spending Expected to Increase, According to Latest CMS Figures
National health care spending is expected to increase to $5.7 trillion and comprise nearly 20% of the Gross Domestic Product by 2026, according to the latest statistics reported today by the Centers…
Health Spending: Tackling the Big Issues
The Health Affairs and National Pharmaceutical Council event, “Health Spending: Tackling the Big Issues,” convened a crowd of more than 450 to ask critical questions about how the United States…
Tackling the Big Issues in Health Spending
The Health Affairs and National Pharmaceutical Council event, “Health Spending: Tackling the Big Issues,” convened a crowd of more than 450 to ask critical questions about how the United States…
NPC in AJPB: Having a Broader Conversation About Health Care Spending
In his latest column for the American Journal of Pharmacy Benefits, National Pharmaceutical Council President Dan Leonard argues it’s time for us to have a broader, more honest conversation…
Biopharma Innovation Just Part Of Health Care Equation
Biopharma discoveries are changing people's lives in ways we didn't know were possible just a decade ago. As the industry's science continually expands the treatment frontier, the business of health…
Insurance Switching and the Mismatch Between the Costs and Benefits of New Technologies
The peer-reviewed study examined the disconnect between the short-term budget impact of a treatment and its downstream effects on payers and society.
Why We Need A Serious Conversation About Health Spending
The government released its annual assessment on health spending in 2016 and the overall spending number came in at $3.3 trillion, up 4.3 percent from 2015. We know the easy fixes aren’t up to the…
NPC in Health Affairs Blog: It’s Time for a Serious Conversation About Health Care Spending
In a blog published today in Health Affairs, National Pharmaceutical Council Chief Science Officer Robert W. Dubois, MD, PhD, noted that a serious conversation among all health care stakeholders is…
Where Are They Now: Checking In With Former NPC Fellow Chuck Shih
Chuck Shih, PhD, MHS, currently Senior Officer, Drug Spending at Pew Charitable Trusts, was the 2013-2015 NPC Health Policy Fellow as part of a partnership with the George Washington University…
What’s Contributing to Unnecessary Health Spending?
Reducing low-value care—health care that is cost-inefficient and clinically ineffective—remains a front burner issue for health care stakeholders. It hasn’t been easy to root out or measure low-value…