Orlando Sentinel

Bill would keep insurers from removing OK’d drugs

- By Ron Hurtibise Staff Writer

Private health insurers would not be able to yank prescripti­on drugs from their approved-forcoverag­e lists during the middle of a health insurance policy term, if a proposed ban becomes law in Florida.

At Tuesday’s meeting of the state Senate Banking and Insurance Committee in Tallahasse­e, Vero Beach mom Margaret Mitchell recounted going to her pharmacy and learning the price of her daughter’s asthma inhaler jumped from $15 or less to $400 or $500 because their insurer suddenly decided not to cover it anymore.

That’s happened as often as four or five times in a year, she said. Her pharmacist would then scan the insurer’s coverage list, “find the one the insurer wouldn’t reject and send me with that name back to the pediatrici­an to get the prescripti­on for that medication and also to ask the pediatrici­an, “Is this going to work for my daughter?’ ”

Separate trips to a specialist are also needed, she said, to have them approve it, too and then in two weeks, to make sure that medication was working.”

“That’s three days in a month I have to be off work,” Mitchell said.

The bill “would simply require commercial health plans to deliver on the pharmacy benefits that they marketed and sold to consumers during open enrollment,” said bill sponsor Debbie Mayfield, R-Melbourne. “They can add new generic drugs or any new product they like. They just can’t make the original list more restrictiv­e.”

Insurers would be able to change their lists of covered drugs during open enrollment periods, or during a plan term if the Food and Drug Administra­tion issues a health warning about the drug.

Several interest groups at the meeting said they supported the bill, including the AARP, the Florida Pharmacy Associatio­n, the American College of Physicians, the American Cancer Society, the Florida Medical Associatio­n and the Florida Dermatolog­y Associatio­n.

Michael Ruppal, executive director of the AIDS Institute, said that for HIV/AIDS patients, “stopping or interrupti­ng treatment at any time is potentiall­y a death sentence by interferin­g with their ability to fight the virus.”

Opposing the bill, Audrey Brown, president and CEO of the Florida Associatio­n of Health Plans, said it would have barred health plans from adding a lowercost alternativ­e to the epinephrin­e injector known as EpiPen to their lists of preferred prescripti­on drugs after approval by the FDA in mid-January.

It also would have barred health plans from pulling the drug Vioxx when it became apparent patients were suffering adverse effects while FDA warnings were still pending, Brown said.

And Brewster Bevis, spokesman for the Associated Industries of Florida, said his organizati­on believes the proposed law would lead to higher health insurance prices because insurers would no longer be able to remove drugs if their prices skyrocket.

Approved 6-1 by the Banking and Insurance Committee, the bill heads to the Senate’s Health Policy and Rules committees next. A companion version in the House is sponsored by Ralph Massullo, R-Beverly Hills.

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