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A00676 Summary:

BILL NOA00676C
 
SAME ASSAME AS S03346-B
 
SPONSORRosenthal
 
COSPNSRSimanowitz, Brindisi, Skoufis, Cymbrowitz, McDonald, Lupardo, Cusick, Jaffee, Paulin, Dinowitz, Quart, Weprin, Titone, Davila, Russell, Crouch, Gottfried, Benedetto, Fahy, Tenney, Abinanti, Walter, Lavine, Gunther, McDonough, Gjonaj, Colton
 
MLTSPNSRClark, Curran, Fitzpatrick, Hevesi, Kolb, Lupinacci, Montesano, Palmesano, Ra, Raia, Schimel, Simon
 
Add S280-a, Pub Health L
 
Relates to establishing a pharmacy benefit manager contract appeals process.
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A00676 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A676C
 
SPONSOR: Rosenthal (MS)
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the public health law, in relation to pharmacy benefit managers   PURPOSE: To require contracts between pharmacy benefit managers and pharmacies to include a reasonable appeals process   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section one adds a new § 280-a to the Public Health Law to require contracts between a pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) and a pharmacy, or a pharmacy's contract agent, to include a reasonable appeals process. Under the process, the right to appeal is limited to 30 days following the initial claim submission. The PBM must provide a phone number and email for processing the appeal, and must respond to an appeal within 7 business days. If the appeal is deemed valid, the price is adjusted for the appealing pharmacy effective the date of the original claim and, if warranted, the PBM shall update the maximum allowable cost for all simi- larly situated pharmacies. If the appeal is denied, the PBM shall iden- tify an equivalent drug that is available for purchase at an equal price. Section two provides that this act shall take effect 90 days after enactment.   JUSTIFICATION: Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) are business entities that manage the pharmacy benefit for health plans, employers and other payers. Services include managing pharmacy networks by contracting with pharmacy provid- ers, establishing reimbursement rates for brands and generics, paying pharmacies for submitted claims, managing formularies, establishing co-payment amounts and other services. Contracts between PBMs and phar- macies include reimbursement policies. For brand drugs, contracts between pharmacies and PBMs refer to published pricing benchmarks such as Wholesaler Acquisition Cost and Average Wholesale Price. On the other hand, for generics PBM contracts refer to Maximum Allowable Cost(MAC). MAC price lists for generics are developed and managed by individual PBMs and are not included in with the contracts that are presented to pharmacies or their contracting agents. Since each patient's policy may be governed by a different MAC list that the pharmacist does not have access to, a pharmacy typically will not know the reimbursed amount of the drug prior to filling a prescription. The recent unprecedented fluctuation in generic drug prices has gener- ated significant attention and highlighted the need for this legis- lation. Under this legislation, contracts would be required to include a process by which a pharmacy can appeal a MAC price that is below its cost, with a reasonable timeline for both the pharmacy to appeal and for the PBM to respond. Similar legislation has been enacted in 16 other states as well as the Medicare Part D policy scheduled to take effect in January, 2016.   LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: Similar to A.9264 of 2014   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None.   EFFECTIVE DATE: 90 days after enactment
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