HealthCare Institute of New Jersey statement on White House healthcare proposal

Trenton, January 15, 2026 ― Chrissy Buteas, President and Chief Executive Officer of the HealthCare Institute of New Jersey (HINJ – www.hinj.org), released the following statement concerning President Trump’s proposed healthcare plan:
“Lowering costs for patients is among the highest of priorities, one that must be coupled with the continued discovery of new, revolutionary ways to save patients’ lives from cancers and other dreaded diseases. Today’s proposal of mandatory price controls would cripple our ability to find those new treatments and cures.”
Buteas continued, “One way to immediately and easily lower costs is to require pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) to take the billions of dollars of rebates they receive, and pass them on to patients – instead of keeping it for themselves. While we applaud the proposal for barring PBM payments to large consulting firms, PBM reform should go much further. These middlemen line their pockets by overcharging patients and employers, and it’s time for federal and state policies to prohibit this unethical PBM profiteering at the expense of patients.”
Buteas concluded, “New Jersey leads the world in drug discovery and curing diseases. There are smart ways to lower costs without jeopardizing future treatments and cures, and we will continue working with policymakers in Washington and Trenton to enact those smart approaches for patients and human health.”
About the HealthCare Institute of New Jersey (HINJ)
Founded in 1997, the HealthCare Institute of New Jersey (HINJ) is a trade association that serves as the voice for our state’s leading research-based biopharmaceutical and medical technology companies. HINJ strives to raise awareness, understanding and public support for the state’s life sciences industry, expand patient access to the medical innovations our member companies produce and promote awareness of the life sciences’ economic impact in New Jersey.
To learn more, please visit www.hinj.org and follow us on X, Facebook and LinkedIn. For data on the life sciences’ impact on New Jersey’s economy, visit our By the Numbers page.
