Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

MORE FROM day’s action at the Legislatur­e.

- HUNTER FIELD

A day after it voted down the bill, the Arkansas House passed legislatio­n to increase the products available to those trying to stop smoking.

Rep. Andrew Collins, D-Little Rock, said Monday after his House Bill 1555 fell three votes shy of passage that he was unsure whether he’d ask for another vote. The measure would make all seven tobacco-cessation products approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion available to Arkansans on Medicaid without prior authorizat­ion.

However, the measure returned to the House floor for considerat­ion Tuesday after Rep. Sarah Capp, R-Ozark, made a motion for reconsider­ation, signaling that she wanted to change her “no” vote to a “yes” vote.

Capp wasn’t the only member who had a change of heart, as the bill passed 63-16 after failing in a 48-24 vote on Monday.

The proposal fell short Monday after members raised questions about the cost of three additional products the bill would make readily available to Medicaid recipients. Four of the federally approved products are offered without needing special approval from the Medicaid program.

“Yesterday, this was a very close vote, and I know many of us didn’t have an opportunit­y to review the fiscal impact,” Capp said from the House floor. “It specifical­ly states that Arkansas already covers four of the seven medication­s provided in [the bill]. It is possible the remaining three could be added at no additional cost. … For every dollar spent on tobacco-cessation medication­s, the state receives a 3-to-1 savings in tobacco-related illness. For that reason, I ask that we reconsider this.”

HB1555 would allow physicians to prescribe nicotine-replacemen­t therapy lozenges, nasal spray and inhalers to Medicaid recipients without prior authorizat­ion from state Medicaid administra­tors. Collins said Monday that lozenges cost $259 a month; the nasal spray is $317 a month; and the inhalers are $1,200 a month.

Requiring prior authorizat­ion can be used by states to steer patients to cheaper treatment options and cause delays that discourage treatment altogether, according to the American Lung Associatio­n.

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