Moderna Reverses Course, Says People Won’t Have to Pay for COVID-19 Vaccine

Moderna Reverses Course, Says People Won’t Have to Pay for COVID-19 Vaccine
Vials of Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine in Bridgeport, Conn., in a file image. (Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Images)
Zachary Stieber
2/18/2023
Updated:
2/20/2023
0:00

Moderna has reversed course and promised that people won’t have to pay for the company’s COVID-19 vaccine once the U.S. government stops buying doses.

“Moderna remains committed to ensuring that people in the United States will have access to our COVID-19 vaccines regardless of ability to pay,” the company said in a statement.

Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine “will continue to be available at no cost for insured people whether they receive them at their doctors’ offices or local pharmacies,” according to the company. People who don’t have health insurance or don’t have adequate insurance will be able to get the vaccine “at no cost” through a Moderna assistance program, it noted.

The U.S. government has purchased hundreds of millions of COVID-19 vaccine doses since 2020, and Americans who have wanted one haven’t been charged.

President Joe Biden’s administration plans to end the COVID-19 public health emergency in May and stop buying vaccine doses.
While some already-purchased doses will be available for some time, the change could potentially lead to people paying to get vaccinated. The Department of Health and Human Services has stated that “many Americans will continue to pay nothing out-of-pocket” to get a vaccine because most private insurers and Medicare would cover the vaccines at least through September 2024.

However, some people were set to face a steep cost.

Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel said in January that Moderna was looking at pricing doses in the $110 to $130 range following the end of the emergency. That would be up from the $26 per dose for booster shots and approximately $15 per dose for the original vaccine that the company charged the government.

“I would think this type of pricing is consistent with the value” of the vaccine, Bancel told The Wall Street Journal.

That plan drew ire from Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who wrote in a letter (pdf) to the CEO that millions of Americans may not be able to afford that cost. Sanders called the proposed hike an “outrageous price boost.”

Sanders, who chairs the Senate Health Committee, is holding a hearing in March titled “Taxpayers Paid Billions For It: So Why Would Moderna Consider Quadrupling the Price of the COVID Vaccine.” Bancel is slated to testify during the hearing.

Sanders has pointed out that Moderna has reaped immense profits during the COVID-19 pandemic, as have Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson. The three companies produce the only COVID-19 vaccines that were available in the United States until 2022, when regulators authorized a vaccine from Novavax.
Pfizer stated in the fall that it plans to charge about $110 to $130 per dose once the government stops buying the vaccine. Novavax hasn’t named a price but has stated that it expects to take a significant share of the market once the government buying ends. Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine isn’t preferred due to the risk of an often-deadly combination of low platelet levels and blood clotting.

Immunization Schedule

Because the COVID-19 vaccines were added to the child immunization schedule, children whose families can’t pay for the vaccine will be eligible to receive them for free, with taxpayers covering the cost.

That will happen through a program called Vaccines for Children.

Advisers to the government, who recommended the addition to the schedule, said it was because the vaccines can prevent severe illness. The new vaccines, poised to replace the original shots, aren’t backed by any clinical trial data yet.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), said the only reason the vaccines were placed on the schedule was so they could be covered by the Vaccines for Children program.

“It was the only way that our uninsured children would be able to have access to the vaccines,” Walensky said during a congressional hearing on Feb. 8. “That was the reason to put it on the schedule.”

The vaccines are authorized for the prevention of COVID-19.

The original vaccines aren’t very effective for children, according to trial data and observational studies.

A CDC study published this month, for example, found that a primary series of Moderna’s shot provided 60 percent protection for children aged 3 to 5 but that the protection plunged to 36 percent between three and four months. Pfizer’s primary series provided just 31 percent protection.
Children are at the least risk from COVID-19.
Observational data for the updated vaccines indicate they may protect better against severe illness, but many experts say trial data are required to prove effectiveness.