Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Care at risk

Drugmakers threaten drug program

- LASHANNON SPENCER LaShannon Spencer is chief executive officer of the Community Health Centers of Arkansas, the Primary Care Associatio­n for the state.

Arkansas continues to be hammered by covid-19, but it seems the big drug manufactur­ers, for some ill-conceived reason, have chosen this time to attack a prescripti­on drug program that benefits thousands of low-income Arkansans.

Our society demands quality, dependable health care now more than ever. People shouldn’t stress over affording their prescripti­ons.

Multiple pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers are threatenin­g to charge much more for drugs that our patients count on for treating and stabilizin­g diabetes, heart conditions, and many other ailments. Other drugmakers want to stop offering drugs to certain pharmacies connected to nonprofit Community Health Centers (CHCs).

These prescripti­ons may be just little pills, but they mean so much more to our patients; they are lifelines that can literally mean the difference between life and death. Other patients risk exhausting their savings to maintain their prescripti­ons.

The program at risk is known as 340B, named after a correspond­ing section in the federal Public Health Service Act of 1992. To summarize, it requires drug companies as a condition of participat­ing in the Medicaid market to provide discounts to certain hospitals and other health-care providers, such as CHCs. Those savings help low-income patients get medical care and help CHCs provide healthcare access to those hardest to reach.

The program has produced some amazing results since its inception. Victoria Hennessey, owner of a pharmacy contracted with Community Clinic, a CHC in Springdale, said: “Especially with covid-19, we’ve had a lot of patients who have lost insurance and need help. We work closely with patients and their medical providers to ensure they continue to receive the medicine they need to survive at affordable prices. A lot of these patients would not have access to critical medication without 340B.”

For example, Hennessey cites one couple she was proud to help. They had health-insurance coverage through the wife’s job until she was laid off due to covid-19. Courtesy of the 340B program, diabetes and blood pressure medication­s were obtained for a $13-a-month co-pay. Without 340B, they would have cost the couple more than $1,200.

The program is a must at Community Clinic, which works hard to serve the Latino and Marshalles­e population­s in northwest Arkansas; many are uninsured and have been hit especially hard during the pandemic.

In Arkansas last year, thanks to 340B, more than 110,000 prescripti­ons were distribute­d at significan­t discounts to under-insured and uninsured patients by the 10 CHCs that are members of the Community Health Centers of Arkansas. We are in all corners of the state, including Mainline Health Systems in the Delta, 1st Choice Healthcare in northeast Arkansas, and River Valley Primary Care Services in western Arkansas, just to name a few. Each year we serve more than 220,000 Arkansans.

But the drug industry doesn’t seem concerned about that. In a recent news release, the Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America (PhRMA) alleged that “contract pharmacies … siphon money out of the program and away from vulnerable patients.”

CHCs take offense at this statement. Who are these supposedly greedy contract pharmacist­s? They include good and decent local Arkansans, including Hennessey. She’s not trying to bilk a federal program. All she wants to do is help her patients get the medication they need.

It is the mission of CHCs to provide access to quality health care to those most in need, especially vulnerable and income population­s. Rural areas most benefit from 340B, and elected officials in Arkansas are smart enough to see its value.

U.S. Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., recently signed on to a bipartisan letter with 27 other senators, urging the Department of Health and Human Services to address concerns raised by CHCs and hospitals because “we fear potential exacerbati­on of … shortfalls in resources at a time when they are needed most.”

We also thank each of the four members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation, Republican Reps. Steve Womack, Rick Crawford, French Hill, and Bruce Westerman. They sent a letter to drug manufactur­ers Eli Lilly, Merck, Sanofi, Novartis, and AstraZenec­a warning that changes to 340B would “limit patient access to affordable medication­s and likely result in the closure of existing community pharmacies in underserve­d areas.”

Hey, we couldn’t have said it better ourselves.

The timing of the 340B debate is made even more troubling because Congress still has not approved an extender for a significan­t funding stream for Community Health Centers which expires Dec. 11. A House-passed covid-relief bill includes a $77 billion request from the National Associatio­n of Community Health Centers, which, unfortunat­ely, hasn’t been included in proposed Senate legislatio­n.

All this is to say that we need help if CHCs are to continue to be a viable source for good in Arkansas communitie­s, improving health care in hardto-reach areas of the state, especially during covid-19. We are pleading with the administra­tion in Washington to help protect 340B. Please remind your elected representa­tives how important CHCs are to your communitie­s.

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