San Francisco Chronicle

HIV patients’ CVS lawsuit reinstated

- By Bob Egelko Bob Egelko is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: begelko@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @ BobEgelko

HIV/ AIDS patients who said they lost access to potentiall­y vital medical informatio­n when their health plans started requiring them to obtain their medication­s from CVS pharmacies can sue for discrimina­tion, a federal appeals court ruled Wednesday.

In previous years, the patients’ employers allowed them to fill prescripti­ons at various pharmacies and receive innetwork discounts. Because those pharmacist­s prepared the medication­s, the lawsuit said, they could answer patients’ questions about potential side effects and any dangerous interactio­ns with other drugs they were taking.

But the suit, filed in San Francisco federal court in 2018 by five AIDS patients, said their pharmacy benefits manager, CVS Caremark, now required them to obtain all “specialty medication­s,” including HIV/ AIDS drugs, at a CVS pharmacy in California to get the discount, which can amount to thousands of dollars per month.

Because the medicines are prepared elsewhere and mailed to the patient’s home or to CVS, its pharmacist­s cannot legally discuss possible hazards, the lawsuit said. It said patients also risked losing their privacy when pharmacy staff shouted their names and medication­s in the presence

“They’ve lost important protection­s threatenin­g their privacy and their health.”

Jerry Flanagan, attorney for Consumer Watchdog, on the lawsuit by HIV patients against CVS

of other customers.

A federal judge dismissed the suit, finding no discrimina­tion against AIDS patients because they were treated the same as other patients who needed specialize­d prescripti­ons. But the Ninth U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco reinstated the suit Wednesday and said the patients could try to prove they are suffering disability discrimina­tion because of their illness.

The suit alleges that the patients are being denied “aspects of pharmaceut­ical care that they deem critical to their health ... including medically appropriat­e dispensing of their medication­s and access to necessary counseling,” Judge Milan Smith said in the 30 ruling. He said it also alleges that the “constant mutation” of the virus “requires pharmacist­s to review all of an HIV/ AIDS patient’s medication­s for side effects and adverse drug interactio­ns, a benefit they no longer receive.”

Those allegation­s, if proved, could show discrimina­tion against AIDS patients, who are protected by federal disability law, Smith said. CVS is covered by the law because it receives federal Medicare funding.

The suit was filed by five unnamed California patients, two of whom are from the Bay Area, said their attorney, Jerry Flanagan of Consumer Watchdog. They sued CVS and their employers, Lowe’s, TimeWarner and Amtrak.

“They’ve lost important protection­s threatenin­g their privacy and their health,” Flanagan said. He called the ruling “an important victory for HIV patients.”

CVS spokesman Mike DeAngelis said the company would continue to seek dismissal of the suit. He said CVS allows its employer clients to decide where medication­s such as AIDS prescripti­ons should be delivered.

“Each client selects the options that best meet its benefit plan objectives,” DeAngelis said in a statement.

 ?? Michael Short / Special to The Chronicle ?? A federal appeals court ruled that HIV patients can sue CVS after losing access to medical informatio­n.
Michael Short / Special to The Chronicle A federal appeals court ruled that HIV patients can sue CVS after losing access to medical informatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States