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Updated Jun 3, 2026 · 00:15
USA News Updated Jun 3, 2026

Trump Drug Plan Adds 160 Medicines, Cuts Weight-Loss Drug Costs

The Trump administration has added 160 more medicines to its drug-price transparency platform, bringing the total to over 750 drugs. Medicare beneficiaries will be able to obtain certain weight-loss drugs for $50 a month starting July 1. CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz announced the moves at a White House briefing, highlighting that the platform has attracted 12 million unique visitors and estimated savings of $500 million. Oz urged Congress to codify the administration's drug-pricing agreements to ensure long-term impact.

Trump drug plan adds 160 medicines

Washington, June 3

Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr Mehmet Oz on Monday said the Trump administration has added 160 more medicines to its drug-price transparency platform and announced that eligible Medicare beneficiaries will be able to obtain certain weight-loss drugs for $50 a month beginning July 1.

Speaking at a White House briefing, Oz said the administration's effort to lower prescription drug costs was already producing savings for consumers.

"Almost 1 in 3 Americans, when they go to a pharmacy to pick up a medication that their doctors prescribe for them, leave empty-handed because they can't afford the medication," he said.

Oz argued that Americans pay significantly more for medicines than consumers in other countries for the same products manufactured by the same companies.

"Our drug prices are about three times higher on average than the same drugs made in the same facilities and the same American factories, often than they are charging patients overseas in Europe, Asia, and other parts of the world," he said.

The CMS administrator said the administration negotiated with 17 major pharmaceutical companies and secured agreements under a "most favored nation drug pricing strategy".

"The Council of Economic Advisers estimated that the benefit of the President's negotiated program is about $600 billion over the next ten years," Oz said.

He announced that 160 additional medicines were being added to the administration's prescription pricing website, bringing the total to more than 750 drugs.

Oz said the platform allows consumers to compare prices before purchasing medicines.

"In the two weeks since we did the last event with the President on this topic, we've now up to about 12 million unique visitors to the site, estimated savings are about $500 million," he said.

The CMS chief also announced reduced costs for Medicare beneficiaries using GLP-1 medicines prescribed for weight loss."

Starting on July 1st, the patients and beneficiaries on Medicare who are eligible for GLP products, the weight loss products that the President speaks of frequently, will be allowed to obtain those products for $50 a month," he said.

Oz noted that many of the medicines currently carry list prices exceeding $1,000 a month.

He said broader access to the drugs could help reduce obesity-related conditions, including diabetes, hypertension, kidney disease, heart disease, and strokes.

Later in the briefing, Oz urged Congress to codify the administration's drug-pricing agreements, saying the current arrangements would expire after the Trump administration leaves office.

"We still believe it makes sense for Congress to codify what we've been able to achieve because it's been so helpful," he said.

Oz said the administration's broader healthcare agenda also includes reforms to pharmacy benefit managers, insurance transparency, and efforts to simplify healthcare pricing for consumers.

"We want plain English insurance policies so you can actually understand the document that you're being given," he said.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sarah B

$50 a month for weight loss drugs! That's huge. My cousin in California pays $1200 monthly for Ozempic. Makes you wonder why it took so long. 🇺🇸

Ananya R

Dr Oz heading Medicare? The same guy who promoted questionable supplements on his show? Not sure how to feel about this. But credit where due - price transparency and negotiated rates are steps in right direction. Reminds me of our Pradhan Mantri Bhartiya Janaushadhi Pariyojana. Western countries finally waking up to generic medicine benefits.

James A

160 medicines added is good. But we need more. The 'most favored nation' pricing sounds good on paper but big pharma will fight it. Also, 12 million site visitors in 2 weeks shows how desperate people are. Jay wants plain English insurance? Just look at how India's Ayushman Bharat simplified health coverage. 😊

Rohit P

Wait... Medicare only for seniors and disabled, right? What about uninsured Americans under 65? $50 price for GLP-1s is peanuts compared to current $1000, but it's only for Medicare beneficiaries. Even with this, Americans pay 3x more than Europeans. India's drug pricing control order keeps essential medicines affordable - maybe US needs similar regulation.

Kavya N

$500 million savings claimed in 2 weeks - that's impressive if true. But the real question: will these agreements outlast Trump administration? Oz himself asked Congress to codify. All this shows how political healthcare pricing is. Meanwhile, we get COVID vaccines for

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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