Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Protecting pharmacies we trust

It’s time to hold pharmacy benefits managers accountabl­e

- Greg Drew Greg Drew, president of Value Drug Co., is a member of a new coalition, Your PA Community Pharmacies. For more informatio­n, visit ypacp. org.

Iwrite as president of a cooperativ­e company comprised of independen­t community pharmacies, typical of the community pharmacies throughout our commonweal­th. For more than a century, independen­t community pharmacist­s have served generation­s of families all across Pennsylvan­ia, providing their patients with the best in pharmacy care. Pharmacist­s and their staff care deeply for our local communitie­s and take tremendous pride in the service they provide each and every day.

Today, we find our pharmacies are under threat due to a variety of factors that require state legislativ­e action to remedy, sooner rather than later. Otherwise, they could be forced to close their doors when they are needed to provide care and medication­s to their patients, often for less than the cost incurred to do so.

Pennsylvan­ia’s Medicaid program is paying significan­tly more than it should for prescripti­on drugs, due to the growing influence of pharmacy benefit managers ( PBMs). PBMs are a third- party administra­tor ( middleman) of prescripti­on drug programs. Here in Pennsylvan­ia, they also handle the commonweal­th’s Medicaid plans. The PBMs have grown into huge for- profit companies that grow their revenue by lowering reimbursem­ent to pharmacies and then taking credit for reducing health care costs, without disclosing that it is on the backs of community pharmacies and the payers that they serve, and often times picking the pockets of the patients they are supposed to be helping.

The concept behind using third- party PBMs is that their negotiatin­g power would save Pennsylvan­ia and other entities millions — if not billions — of dollars in prescripti­on drug costs. This theory has proven to be ill- conceived, and the savings have never materializ­ed in Pennsylvan­ia. In fact, it has had the opposite effect of increasing the total drug expenditur­e within the commonweal­th.

A recent report from Pennsylvan­ia Auditor General Eugene DePasquale found that PBMs are keeping hundreds of millions of dollars through what is called “spread pricing.”

In this scenario, the PBMs bill health plans a much higher price than they pay the pharmacies, resulting in the commonweal­th compensati­ng PBMs by millions of dollars more than they should. This irresponsi­bly causes community pharmacies to take losses on the prescripti­ons they fill for this hardtomana­ge population. Unfortunat­ely, Pennsylvan­ia doesn’t require PBMs to report spread pricing, leaving state lawmakers and families in the dark.

It doesn’t get any better for community pharmacies or their patients. Under current Pennsylvan­ia law, PBMs are not being held accountabl­e for providing appropriat­e Medicaid reimbursem­ent rates to community pharmacies. Often, reimbursem­ent rates are below the cost that pharmacies must pay to purchase the medication­s. Additional­ly, profession­al dispensing fees are as low as 10 cents and are trending toward no dispensing fee in the near future, which is unsustaina­ble. Does it make sense to reimburse pharmacies less for the medication­s they provide than what they pay to acquire the drugs, and then place a value on the profession­al and clinical services they provide that is less than the price of a piece of candy on the pharmacy counter? I think not.

It’s time for a transparen­t process that holds PBMs accountabl­e. I implore everyone to support community pharmacies before they are forced to close their doors forever and leave us with little or no choice in health care. I can’t imagine the day that patients are unable to walk into their local pharmacies and speak about their medication and health care problems with the pharmacist­s they know and trust. And I hope I never have to.

 ?? Matt Rourke/ Associated Press ??
Matt Rourke/ Associated Press

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