Walker County Messenger

Bills sharpening rules on pharmacy drug prices in Georgia pass House

- By Beau Evans

March 4.

Companies called pharmacy benefits managers (PBMs) act as go-betweens for prescriber­s and insurance companies that contract with health insurers to negotiate lower drug prices for patients.

But critics accuse them of muddling up the process, prompting increases in drug prices and unnecessar­y delays in filling prescripti­ons.

Three bills cleared the House by nearunanim­ous votes Wednesday, March

4, to increase regulation­s on pharmacy benefits managers. They now head to the

Georgia Senate.

House Bill 946, by Rep. David Knight, R-Griffin, would require pharmacy benefits managers to set prices within 10% of a nationally used average and require them to undergo financial audits by the state Department of Insurance.

It would also require all rebates from drug makers to be distribute­d to patients, rather than allowing pharmacy benefits managers to keep a portion.

Knight’s bill would also ramp up penalties against certain fees and the practice of steering, in which

PBMs direct patients to use associated pharmacies with potentiall­y higher costs.

The practice was prohibited last year in Georgia, but Knight’s bill proposes levying a new fine against PBMs that disregard the state anti-steering law.

Speaking from the floor, Knight said his bill would crack down on the “heinous practices” of pharmacy benefits managers.

“We will not take this in Georgia anymore,” Knight said. “It is not good health care policy. It is not good for the patients and it is not good for providers.”

The bill passed by a 165- 1 vote with Rep. Matt Gurtler,

R-Tiger, voting against it.

Knight’s bill mirrors separate legislatio­n filed in the Senate by Sen. Dean Burke, R-Bainbridge. That measure, Senate Bill 313, drew support from hospital and pharmacy groups as a way to keep smaller pharmacies in Georgia from going out of business amid increasing drug costs. It cleared the Senate Insurance and Labor Committee on Tuesday, March 3.

In previous committee hearings, PBMs have argued the bill would hamstring them when negotiatin­g with big pharmaceut­ical companies for lower prices, potentiall­y driving up costs overall by giving drug makers free rein to set prices as they please.

Industry representa­tives also said Burke’s measure ignores the influences of other players like drug manufactur­ers and wholesaler­s in the complex series of transactio­ns that lead to final prescripti­on costs.

A separate bill by Knight passed unanimousl­y on the House floor Wednesday, March 4, that would require the state Department of Community Affairs, which administer­s Medicaid in Georgia, to study whether to remove prescripti­on drug benefits from the state’s Medicaid managed care system.

The measure notes West Virginia carved out pharmacy benefits from its Medicaid manager list and saved millions of dollars in administra­tive costs.

The House also unanimousl­y passed a third measure, House Bill 918 by Rep. Sharon Cooper, that would bolster rules on steering and relax some penalties for pharmacies that are audited by PBMs.

Cooper, who chairs the House Health and Human Services Committee, said Wednesday, March 4, her measure aims to stop PBMs from fining pharmacies for small clerical errors like mislabelin­g, which can cost local pharmacies thousands of dollars.

“We have to put a stop to corporatio­ns running medicine,” said Cooper, R-Marietta. “They’re going to put pharmacist­s out of business.”

 ??  ?? David Knight
David Knight

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