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Show-Me State Times

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

MO Health Group: ‘Growing concern’ savings from federal drug discount program not being passed to patients

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Connie Farrow, executive director, Patients Come First - Missouri | LinkedIn

Connie Farrow, executive director, Patients Come First - Missouri | LinkedIn

The executive director of Patients Come First - Missouri (PCF-MO) said there is “growing concern” that the 340b federal drug discount program isn’t passing along drug savings Missouri patients.

“There is growing concern that the federal program’s lack of oversight is allowing bad actors to turn around and charge patients higher prices and pocket the difference or use the profits to invest in unrelated programs,” wrote Farrow in a Missouri Times op-ed. “As they fund their own special interests, the most vulnerable patients are left unable to afford their medications.”

“This is contrary to the program’s intended purpose.”

Established in 1992, the 340b program enables eligible hospitals and healthcare organizations to purchase outpatient medications at significantly discounted prices.

Hospitals participating in the 340B program can use the savings to fund essential services and programs, such as free or low-cost medication assistance, expanded access to healthcare, and community outreach initiatives.

Participating hospitals, however, “often extend their 340B discounts to clinics in well-off communities, where they can charge privately insured patients more than those on Medicaid,” reported the Wall Street Journal.

“In some cases, the program appears to be bolstering profits in well-off areas more than it is underwriting services in less-privileged neighborhoods,” said the Journal article.

“More than 2,600 hospitals, including 69 in Missouri, were participating in the 340B Program as of January 2023,” wrote Farrow. 

Dr. Anthony DiGiorgio, a neurosurgeon and senior affiliated scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, told Show-Me State Times last month that drug discounts often aren’t passed along from the hospitals to the patients.

“Because the discount is mandatory, many drugs come out with higher list prices than they normally would, but patients pay that copay at the higher list price,” he said. “Patients are actually paying more than they otherwise would if the 340b program didn't exist.”

Naomi Lopez, senior fellow at the Goldwater Institute, said “we don’t actually know” if drug discounts are being passed to patients by organizations participating in the 340b program, reported Show-Me State Times on April 10.

“The real problem is that we don't know if they're making a huge profit, where those profits are going, or if those funds are actually going to care for the low income indigent population,” said Lopez. “We're definitely looking at billions of dollars, and we don't actually know because of the lack of transparency and accountability in the program.”

If those discounts aren’t reaching patients, wrote Farrow, “the program is not functioning as it should.”

“Access to affordable medicines is critical, especially to the impoverished in underserved communities that the 340B program was intended to help,” she wrote. “Patients on the receiving end of this program already face significant barriers to care, including being able to afford treatments, residing in rural communities with fewer care facilities and various adverse health outcomes.”

Farrow previously worked as a reporter for The Associated Press in Kansas City from 1993 to 2005. She also worked as the communications director for Missouri Coalition for Lifesaving Cures, and was a Reynolds Journalism Institute Fellow from 2012-2013. 

Missouri was one of three states, including California and New Jersey, in which Patients Come First groups launched on March 18.

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