NEW YORK 鈥 Mike Angevine lives in constant pain. For a decade the 37-year-old has relied on opioids to manage his chronic pancreatitis, a disease with no known cure.
But in January, Angevine鈥檚 pharmacy on Long Island ran out of oxymorphone and he couldn鈥檛 find it at other drugstores. He fell into withdrawal and had to be hospitalized.
鈥淵ou just keep thinking: Am I going to get sick? Am I going to get sick?鈥 Angevine said in a phone interview. 鈥淎m I going to be able to live off the pills I have? Am I going to be able to get them on time?鈥
His pharmacy did not tell him the reason for the shortage. But Angevine isn鈥檛 the only pain patient in New York to lose access to vital medicine since July 2019, when the state implemented an excise tax on many opioids.
The tax was touted as a way to punish major drugmakers for their role in the opioid epidemic and generate funding for treatment programs. But to avoid paying, scores of manufacturers and wholesalers stopped selling opioids in New York. Instead of the anticipated $100 million, the tax brought in less than $30 million in revenue, two lawmakers said in interviews. None of it was earmarked for substance abuse programs, they said.
The state鈥檚 Department of Health, which has twice this year on the impact of the tax, did not respond to questions for this story.
The tax follows strong efforts by federal and New York officials to tamp down the use of prescription opioids, which had already cut back some supply. Now, with some medications scarce or no longer available, pain patients have been left reeling. And the law appears to have missed its target: Instead of taking a toll on manufacturers, the greater burden appears to have fallen on pharmacies that can no longer afford or access the painkillers.
Among the companies that no longer sell opioids in New York is Epic Pharma. Independent Pharmacy Cooperative, a wholesaler, confirmed it no longer sells medications subject to the tax, but still sells those , which are treatments for opioid addiction methadone and buprenorphine and also morphine. AvKARE and Lupin Pharmaceuticals said they do not ship opioids to New York anymore. Amneal Pharmaceuticals, which manufactures Angevine鈥檚 oxymorphone, declined to comment, as did Mallinckrodt.
Since the tax went into effect, Cardinal Health, which provides health services and products, publishedit does not expect to carry. Cardinal Health declined to comment.
The New York tax is slowly gaining attention in other states. Delaware last year. Minnesota is assessing a between $55,000 and $250,000 on opioid manufacturers. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy proposed such a tax this year but by the legislature.
The company that makes the first point of sale within New York pays the tax. That isn鈥檛 always the drugmaker. It can mean wholesalers selling to pharmacies here are assessed, explained Steve Moore, president of the Pharmacists Society of the State of New York.
Independent Pharmacy Cooperative said about half its revenue from opioid sales in New York would have gone to taxes.
Mark Kinney, the company鈥檚 senior vice president of government relations, said the law is putting companies in a very difficult position.
When wholesalers like IPC left the opioid market, competitive prices went with them.
Without these smaller wholesalers, it鈥檚 hard for pharmacies to go back to other wholesalers 鈥渁nd say, 鈥楬ey, your prices aren鈥檛 in line with the rest of the market,鈥欌 Moore said.
Indeed, nine independent pharmacies told KHN that when they can get opioids they are more expensive now. They have little choice but to eat the cost, drop certain prescriptions or pass the expense along.
鈥淲e can trickle that cost down to the patient,鈥 said a pharmacist at New London Pharmacy in Manhattan, 鈥渂ut from a moral and ethics point of view, as a health care provider, it just doesn't seem right to do that. It鈥檚 not the right thing to ask your patient to pay more.鈥
In addition, Medicare drug plans and Medicaid often limit reimbursements, meaning pharmacies can鈥檛 charge them more than the programs allow.
Stone鈥檚 Pharmacy in Lake Luzerne was losing money 鈥渉and over fist,鈥 owner Leigh McConchie said. His distributor was adding the tax directly to his pharmacy鈥檚 cost for the drugs. That helped drive down his profit margins from opioid sales between 60% and 70%. Stone鈥檚 stopped carrying drugs like fentanyl patches and oxycodone, and though that distributor now pays the tax itself, the pharmacy is still feeling the effects.
鈥淲hen you lose their fentanyl, you generally lose all their other prescriptions,鈥 he said, noting that few customers go to multiple pharmacies when they can get everything at one.
If pharmacies have few opioid customers, those price hikes have less impact on their business. But being able to manage the costs is not the only problem, explained Zarina Jalal, a manager at Lincoln Pharmacy in Albany. Jalal can no longer get generic oxycodone from her supplier Kinray, though she can still access brand-name OxyContin. New York鈥檚 requires insurers to provide advance authorization for the use of brand-name prescriptions, delaying the approval process. Sometimes patients wait several days to get their prescription, Jalal explained.
鈥淲hen I see them suffer, it hurts more than it hurts my wallet,鈥 she said.
One of Jalal鈥檚 customers, Janis Murphy, needs oxycodone to walk without pain. Now she is forced to buy a brand-name drug and pays up to three times what she did for generic oxycodone before the tax went into effect. She said her bill since the start of this year for oxycodone alone is $850. Lincoln Pharmacy works with Murphy on a payment plan, without which she would not be able to afford the medication at all. But the bill keeps growing.
鈥淚鈥檓 almost in tears because I cannot get this bill down,鈥 she said in a phone interview.
Several pharmacists raised concerns that patients who lose access to prescription opioids may turn to street drugs. High prescription prices to highly addictive and inexpensive heroin. McConchie of Stone鈥檚 Pharmacy said he now dispenses twice as many heroin treatment drugs as he did a year ago. Former opioid customers now come in for prescriptions for substance use disorder.
Trade groups and some physicians and state legislators the tax before it went into effect, about a slew of potential consequences, including supply problems for pharmacists and higher consumer prices.
New London Pharmacy said one of its regular distributors stopped shipping Percocet, a combination of oxycodone and acetaminophen. Instead, the pharmacy orders from a more expensive company. The pharmacist estimated that a bottle of Percocet for which it used to pay $43 now costs up to $92.
鈥淓ven if we absorb the tax, we鈥檙e not getting a break from reimbursements either,鈥 a pharmacist who spoke on the condition of anonymity explained, adding that insurance reimbursements have not increased in proportion to rising drug costs. 鈥淲e鈥檙e losing.鈥
Latchmin Raghunauth Mondol, owner of Viva Pharmacy & Wellness in Queens, has also seen that problem. The pharmacy used to be able to purchase 100 15-milligram tablets of oxycodone for $15, but that鈥檚 now $70, she said, and the pharmacy is reimbursed only about $21 by insurers.
Other opioids are just not available.
Mondol said she has been unable to obtain certain doses of two of the most commonly prescribed opioids, oxycodone and oxymorphone 鈥 the drug Angevine was on.
After Angevine lost access to oxymorphone, his doctor put him on morphine, but it does not give him the same relief. He鈥檚 been in so much pain that he stopped going to physical therapy appointments.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a marathon from hell,鈥 he said.
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