Florida News Connection
November 18, 2022
By: Trimmel Gomes
A
case that pits Big Pharma against Community Health Centers that
serve low-income and uninsured patients advanced this week with opening
arguments on Tuesday.
At issue is a government drug discount program known as 340B, which requires drug makers to sell certain
medications at lower prices to health centers and hospitals. Three drugmakers -
Astra Zeneca, Sanofi and Novo Nordisk - are suing the feds for the right to
restrict rebates to drugs dispensed at health centers, rather than pharmacies
closer to patients' homes.
Vacheria Keys, the National Association of
Community Health Centers' director of regulatory affairs, said
this cuts into the centers' revenue and ultimately affects public health.
"So, as health centers have been losing money, and that translates into
losing services for patients, pharmaceutical manufacturers have actually made
money over the last few years," she said, "while safety-net providers
like health centers are passing out their COVID-19 vaccine to the most
underserved communities."
The three drug companies did not immediately reply to requests for comment, and
theirs is one of three similar lawsuits. Other manufacturers have unilaterally
limited the list of drugs they will discount. The trade group Pharmaceutical
Research and Manufacturers of America has argued that the 340B
program provides tens of billions of dollars in drug discounts, but doesn't
require health centers or hospitals to prove the money goes to patient care.
Health centers counter that sharing the financial data would allow drug makers
and health-insurance companies to force them into unfavorable contracts.
Health centers have reported using the 340-B savings to pay for services such
as dental care, behavioral health, transportation and housing supports, food
pantries and co-pay assistance programs.
Mick Pickos, chief pharmacy officer at Central
Florida Health Care, said patients are left suffering without these
services.
"What several drug manufacturers have done is they've limited or
completely blocked our ability to use 340B drug pricing at our community
partner pharmacies," he said. "What this does is makes it harder for
our patients to receive meds."
Recently the federal government rejected an
administrative complaint filed by Community Health Centers, so advocates for
the centers are asking Congress to step in.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News
Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service.
Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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