Drug Price Transparency Laws Position States to Impact Drug Prices
/in Prescription Drug Pricing California, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont Blogs, Featured News Home Prescription Drug Pricing /by Johanna Butler and Jennifer ReckDrug price transparency laws enable state policymakers to understand opaque drug pricing and payment systems to formulate appropriate policy solutions to high prices, while also creating the data infrastructure to effectively realize those policy solutions. Since Vermont passed the first state drug price transparency law in 2016, more than a dozen states have enacted and implemented similar laws.
State-level transparency legislation shines light on drug pricing by requiring manufacturers and other supply chain entities such as prescription drug benefit managers (PBMs), health plans, and wholesalers to provide information on drug pricing. Transparency programs also establish accountability around manufacturers’ price increases or high launch prices. Since programs began collecting pricing data, states have seen fewer drug price increases trigger reporting requirements; however, launch prices and overall spending on prescription drugs have continued to increase.
Transparency laws can also create a foundation for additional strategies to lower drug costs. Policies like prescription drug affordability boards (PDABs), rely on having access to and expertise with drug pricing data. This blog provides an update on state drug price transparency laws and their impact.
Current State Transparency Landscape
Vermont passed the first state drug price transparency law in 2016. Since then, 13 other states have passed transparency laws focused on drug manufacturers and other actors within the supply chain – CA, CT, ME, MN, NV, NH, ND, OR, TX, UT, VA, WA, and WV. Most state programs require reporting from manufacturers when they increase the wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) of a drug above a certain threshold or if they introduce a drug with a high launch price. Several states also require reporting from insurers and pharmacy benefit managers. A few states extend reporting to other supply chain actors – pharmacy service administrative organizations (WA) and wholesale distributors (ME, NV, VA).
Transparency programs vary state-by-state regarding which drugs are reported on, the level of data collected (in aggregate or on an individual drug level), and how data is published and analyzed by the state.
- Maine’s transparency program offers one of the more robust approaches to drug price transparency. Maine collects and analyzes data with the goal to identify each supply chain entity’s average net income, including data on manufacturers, PBMs, insurers, pharmacies, and wholesale distributors. This allows the public and policymakers to “follow the money” through the supply chain.
- California’s transparency program posts launch price information and five-year schedules of price increases reported by manufacturers to its website, creating one of the only freely available sources of WAC data.
- Oregon’s transparency program holds an annual public hearing that acts as a forum for sharing data analysis, discussion with stakeholders, and policy recommendations.
- Nevada took a unique approach with its transparency program, first focusing reporting on diabetes drugs when its program was enacted in 2018 and then including asthma medications in 2019. In 2021, the state expanded its program to include all prescription drugs.
Impact of Transparency Programs
As states investigate and work to lower high drug costs, drug price transparency has become an important foundation and launch pad for efforts to lower costs. Data collected by state transparency programs can provide insights into the types of price increases and types of drugs driving high spending in a state. Pricing data can provide policymakers state-specific information to direct policy.
Moderated Price Increases Over Time
Since state transparency laws were first enacted, the number of price increases that trigger reporting based on state thresholds has decreased over time. Vermont’s Medicaid program explained in its 2020 report that compared to 2016, there was a 79 percent decline in the number of drugs reaching the state’s per year price increase threshold. The program report concludes that fewer manufacturers are excessively increasing the price of drugs. Similarly, Oregon’s transparency program reported that compared to its first year of implementation in 2019, the program received 70 percent fewer reports for price increases in 2020. However, during that same time, Oregon saw a 15 percent increase in the number of drugs with high launch prices.
Vermont and Oregon’s findings align with what drug pricing researchers have found – from 2016 to 2020 the amount of WAC price increases have decreased but launch prices have continued to rise. Although the rate of price increases may be moderating, launch prices may still cause increased state spending on prescription drugs.
Accountability for High Launch Prices
Transparency programs can establish accountability around manufacturers’ high drug price increases and high launch prices. For example, manufacturers of Semglee, the first generic insulin product deemed interchangeable by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, recently announced it will price the new insulin product at almost $270 per vial, only $20 cheaper than Lantus, the brand-name biologic competitor. Based on this launch price, Semglee would trigger Virginia’s reporting requirements under the state’s 2021 transparency law which requires manufacturers to report information on the launch of biosimilar products that are not at least 15 percent below the cost of the reference biologic. While the law is not yet implemented, Virginia’s program would be one of the most immediate tools to create some accountability for Semglee’s high list price.
Data Infrastructure for Policy Solutions
In addition to establishing accountability, transparency programs can provide the necessary data infrastructure for the successful implementation of efforts to lower drug prices. Since 2020, several states have enacted prescription drug affordability boards (PDAB), entities with the authority to review high cost drugs and in some states set an upper payment limit to ensure no one pays more than that amount in the state. A first step for a PDAB to review high drug costs and potentially set payment limits is to gather the necessary drug pricing data – whether that’s leveraging existing data sources or establishing manufacturer or insurer reporting like transparency programs. States without transparency laws already in place must include transparency requirements. For example, Colorado’s PDAB law, enacted in 2021, requires insurers to report top-spend drugs to help inform which drugs the PDAB will review.
States that already have transparency programs in place however, are well-positioned to take steps to rein in high drug costs through a PDAB. Oregon’s new PDAB law leverages the state’s existing drug price transparency programto identify high-cost drugs that should be reviewed by the board. Each quarter the transparency program will provide the PDAB with a list of drugs with high price increases or high launch prices as well as a list of insulin products sold in the state in the previous year. Based on this information, the PDAB will identify nine drugs and one insulin product to review. Oregon’s PDAB will be supported and housed in the same agency that manages the drug price transparency program, the Department of Business and Consumer Services, allowing the PDAB to capitalize on the drug pricing data expertise developed by the transparency program since it was enacted in 2018.
In these ways, transparency can be seen not only as a steppingstone to future action, but often a necessary building block to sustain other efforts. The data gathered and expertise developed by transparency programs could be applied to any number of drug pricing policies beyond PDABs – direct negotiations for supplemental Medicaid rebates, implementing reference rates, or prohibiting price gouging.
Federal Efforts on Transparency
While a variety of federal transparency efforts are in process, state transparency programs go beyond proposed or recently enacted language. The Build Back Better Act that passed the House in November 2021 but continues to be debated in the Senate, would require pharmacy benefit managers to report certain information related to spending, cost, utilization, and formulary placement to health plan sponsors. Additionally, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) recently published an interim final rule requiring health plans to report certain information on the most costly drugs, most frequently utilized drugs, and drugs with the greatest year over year spending increases, among other data elements, to the Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor, and the Treasury. This interim final rule is similar to the insurer reporting requirements of many existing state transparency programs. For states that do not have transparency laws, this federal data, if shared with state leaders, could be helpful to identify top-spend drugs in each state and fuel other strategies to lower costs such as a PDAB. However, it’s unclear to what extent the data could be accessed or used by states, though states are eager to coordinate with the federal government to enhance data-sharing on drug prices. Importantly, none of these initiatives focus on requiring reporting from manufactures – who actually set drug prices – leaving state officials to continue this important work.
To learn more about state transparency legislation, review the National Academy for State Health Policy’s state strategy implementation tracker or the Transparency Law Comparison Chart.
Nevada Pilots Innovative Program to Increase Access to Preventive Oral Care for Children
/in Policy Nevada Featured News Home, Reports COVID-19, Oral Health, Relief and Recovery /by Ella Roth and Carrie HanlonNevada Enacts a Public Option
/in Health Coverage and Access Nevada Blogs, Featured News Home Health Coverage and Access /by Adney RakotoniainaGovernor Sisolak signed legislation last week that gives Nevada the authority to establish a public option that is intended to provide consumers with comprehensive, but lower cost health insurance. The second state to enact such a law (Washington was first in 2019), Nevada is tasked with creating state-designed coverage to be administered by private insurers that are required to reduce premiums by addressing high health care costs.
An Overview of the Basics
Nevada’s Senate Bill 420 directs the state’s Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), the Division of Insurance (DOI), and the Silver State Health Insurance Exchange to design, establish, and operate a public option effective 2026.
The public option must meet criteria to be classified as a qualified health plan, which includes offering the essential health benefits and will be available to individuals and possibly to small employers and their employees. The public option will be sold through the state’s health insurance exchange and as a result must meet the silver and gold actuarial values (70 and 80 percent respectively).
Reference Based Premium is based on the lower of either:
- the premiums for the second lowest priced silver level plan sold on the exchange during the prior year or
- the premium for the second lowest cost silver plan sold on the exchange in 2024 and adjusted based on the Medicare Economic Index.
As one means to achieve affordability, until 2030, public option premiums in each zip code must be at least five percent lower than the reference premium for that zip code. In addition, the average public option premiums must be at least 15 percent lower than the average reference premium in the state. Lastly, premiums can’t increase by a percentage greater than the increase in the Medicare Economic Index (i.e., inflation) for that year.
To fund the public option, the law created the Public Option Trust Fund to be administered by the state treasurer. Important to the affordability of public option plans, the balance in the Public Option Trust Fund at the end of each fiscal year carries into the next fiscal year rather than reverting to State General Fund. As such, if the Treasurer deems that there are additional funds available for the fiscal year, these can be used to increase affordability of the plans (e.g., lower premiums). To start, the legislature appropriated $1,639,366 to the Public Option Trust Fund for use by June 2023, and appropriated relevant funds to DHHS and the Exchange.
The bill also directs DHHS, DOI, and the Exchange to apply for federal funding that may be available to help finance operation of the program (to be held in the Fund). Additionally, it directs the agencies to apply for any relevant federal waivers that may be necessary to implement the program, including 1115 demonstration and 1332 innovation waivers that can be used to secure federal insurance subsidies to purchase public option QHPs, as well as to combine the risk pools for the public option and Medicaid. The latter is contingent on analysis projecting that combining risk pools can lower costs. The law requires relevant agencies to apply for federal waivers by 2024 but to also conduct an actuarial study of the bill’s impact on premiums prior to applying.
Specifically, the legislature seeks to determine the impact of repealing one controversial component: requiring specific providers to participate in the public option networks.
Assuring Provider Participation
Nevada will conduct a statewide competitive bidding process for insurers to administer the public option and requires all managed care organizations contracted to deliver services for the state’s Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and Medicaid to submit a proposal.
The state aims to prioritize insurer applicants with networks that:
- align the providers across the public option and state Medicaid program,
- include rural and safety-net providers,
- strengthen the primary care and behavioral health workforce (particularly in rural areas),
- accept value-based payment models,
- decrease disparities in access and outcomes and provide culturally competent care.
Ultimately, DHHS is authorized to administer the public option if these goals cannot be accomplished by contracting with a private insurer.
Similar to the requirement of insurers, every provider that participates in Medicaid, provides care for enrollees of the state employee health plan, or provides care to injured workers who receive workers compensation must enroll as a participating provider in at least one network of providers established in the public option.
Addressing Health Care Costs
Recent research indicates that commercial insurers reimburse hospitals, on average, 247 percent of what Medicare pays for the exact same services. With an interest to contain rising health costs, a growing number of states are exploring policies to lower commercial reimbursement rates to be more in line with Medicare’s cost-based rates. For example, Washington’s public option legislation capped reimbursement rates to providers at 160 percent of Medicare, with a minimum reimbursement of 101 percent to rural hospitals and 135 percent to primary care providers.
However, Nevada’s law doesn’t set a specific rate or reimbursement cap. Instead, the law includes a provision that, in the aggregate, reimbursements by the public option must be comparable to, or “better than,” those paid by Medicare. The lack of specificity leaves room for interpretation and debate among stakeholders that will likely need to be addressed through regulation.
The enactment of Nevada’s public option provides a pathway to leverage its state-based exchange to further reduce the state’s uninsured rate while addressing health care costs by targeting reimbursements on hospitals’ costs more so than on its charges. As the price of care continues to rise, and the federal government explores a possible federal public option, state action to address health care costs continues to create meaningful change and serves as a laboratory for nationwide policy. As additional states pursue such policies, NASHP will continue to update its tracker of state legislative action to lower health system costs.
Federal and State Special Enrollment Periods Increase Access to Insurance Coverage
/in Policy California, Colorado, Connecticut, District Of Columbia, Idaho, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington Blogs, Featured News Home Eligibility and Enrollment, Health Coverage and Access, State Insurance Marketplaces /by Christina CousartWhat We’ve Learned from Early Adopters of Drug Price Transparency, and What We’ll Learn from the Next Wave
/in Policy California, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont Blogs, Featured News Home Administrative Actions, Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Health System Costs, Model Legislation, Newly-Enacted Laws, Prescription Drug Pricing, State Rx Legislative Action /by Jennifer ReckAs prescription drug price increases greatly outpace inflation and new specialty drugs priced in the millions of dollars enter the market, several states have led the way as early adopters of drug price transparency legislation and are taking the first steps to curb costs with the help of transparent drug pricing information.
A new National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP) report, What Are We Learning from State Reporting on Drug Pricing?, offers a cross-state analysis of drug price transparency findings through August 2019, based on reports from California, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, and Vermont. States are:
- Learning which drugs cost the most – and are the best targets for focused strategies;
- Tracking the percentage of health premiums attributed to drug spending – and identifying opportunities to leverage reporting on drug spending, such as implementing spending caps; and
- Beginning to capture information on net price – and profit – along the supply chain to inform fair and balanced policy approaches to ensure affordability.
Honing in on the Costliest Drugs to Take Action Where It Matters Most
States with transparency laws are identifying the drugs creating the greatest affordability challenges for both payers and consumers. State transparency laws require gathering data from a variety of sources, including through required reporting by public and private health plans (California, Oregon, Vermont), or through all-payer claims databases (Maine), or proprietary databases (Nevada), in order to report lists of:
- The costliest drugs in the state based on price and utilization;
- The drugs with the highest year-over-year cost growth; and
- The most commonly prescribed drugs.
A cross-state analysis of these reports identified 30 drugs that appear in common across drugs reported in three of five states. Many of the drugs reported are used for the treatment of diabetes, including Humalog, Lantus Solar, Novolog, Januvia, Metformin, and Victoza. Multiple drugs for the treatment of arthritis were also identified across states: Stelara, Cosentyx, Enbrel, and Humira.
Identifying the classes of drugs – and specific drugs within those categories – that are creating the greatest affordability challenges can help states hone in on strategies to address drug costs. For example, states working to leverage their purchasing power across agencies are seeking this type of information to guide potential approaches such as bulk purchasing or establishing single preferred drug list. State officials from Nevada have credited their transparency law, initially limited to diabetes medications and since expanded to include asthma medications, with bringing payers to the table to leverage their purchasing power through Nevada’s Silver State Scripts program.
Illuminating the Link between Rising Drug and Insurance Premium Costs
Several states (California, Vermont, and Oregon) require commercial health plans subject to state regulation to submit information on the impact of prescription drug spending on premiums rates. Results shared publicly to date include a range of prescription drug spending accounting for, on average, 13 percent in California, 15.67 percent in Vermont, and up to 18 percent of premiums in Oregon. Tracking prescription drug spending, as part of rate review or other initiatives, represents an important leverage point for states to take action on drug spending. Doing so can enable, for example, monitoring and enforcement of prescription drug spending caps. Several states, including New York, Massachusetts, and Maine, have established caps for drug spending – New York and Massachusetts have the authority to negotiate supplemental rebates to meet their caps while Maine tasks its Drug Affordability Review Board with identifying strategies to meet its voluntary cap on drug spending for public plans.
Uncovering the Factors Driving Up Prices along the Drug Supply Chain
One of the questions at the heart of drug price transparency laws is: What factors are driving high price increases and high launch prices? The only way for a state to determine the actual causes of high drug prices – and the relative profit accrued by players in the supply chain – is by requiring reporting across the entire supply chain, including manufacturers, pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), wholesalers, and health plans. In order to be meaningful, this information must shed light on the net cost of drugs – an otherwise closely guarded secret behind a black box of secret rebate negotiations between manufacturers and PBMs.
Some of the early adopter states, while laying the foundation for future transparency efforts, enacted laws with limitations in terms of their ability to shine a light on net prices or to uncover the interplay between players in the drug supply chain. California, for example, limits manufacturer reporting to information that is already in the public domain. While Nevada did require reporting of some information considered to be trade secrets, and required reporting by both manufacturers and PBMs, the lack of alignment in reporting requirements (e.g., state versus national level) makes it difficult to “follow the money” across the supply chain.
A new wave of tougher state transparency measures, including a 2019 Maine law, An Act To Further Expand Drug Price Transparency, will have the ability to shine a light on net drug prices – and profits – in order to guide fair and effective state policy solutions. The Maine law, based on NASHP’s model legislation, requires reporting by entities across the entire drug supply chain, including manufacturers, PBMs, wholesalers, and health plans.
Enforcement
In addition to establishing reporting requirements with the ability to produce meaningful, actionable data, states must also have the ability to enforce reporting their new requirements. Early efforts at collecting data from manufacturers have yielded imperfect compliance at best. California received data justifying price increase from only one-third of manufacturers required to report, and Nevada recently levied $17.4 million in fines on manufacturers for failure to report in that state. While non-reporters in Nevada face fines up to $5,000 a day, Maine’s new law increases that penalty to up to $30,000 a day.
Taking Action on What Transparency Reveals
As actionable information on net drug prices and profits across the supply chain becomes available, states will use the data to make informed, impactful policy decisions. Though state policymakers are challenged by a number of limits on their authority to regulate drug prices, and meaningful action at the federal level currently remains pending, states are advancing a number of policy options to address drug prices building on what transparency laws are revealing. One model is a state Drug Affordability Review Board (DARB) with the authority to review data on drugs deemed unaffordable, and if warranted, set an upper payment limit for that drug within the state. Transparency data is essential to DARBs and related efforts. Such approaches do not seek to prohibit profit along the supply chain, but to ensure that those profits are reasonably balanced with the need to preserve access to essential drugs by ensuring their affordability.
What Are We Learning from State Reporting on Drug Pricing?
/in Policy California, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont Featured News Home, Reports Administrative Actions, Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Health System Costs, Legal Resources, Model Legislation, Newly-Enacted Laws, Prescription Drug Pricing, State Rx Legislative Action /by Deborah Chollet, PhD, William Mulhern, JD and Jia Pu, MA, PhD, MathematicaThis report summarizes what states are learning from reporting required by prescription drug price transparency laws, which include reports on data submitted by health insurers, manufacturers, and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). The review period includes reports published by states through August 2019. The National Academy for State Health Policy’s Center for State Rx Drug Pricing, with support from Arnold Ventures, commissioned this analysis from experts affiliated with Mathematica.
Executive Summary
This report summarizes what states are learning from reporting required by prescription drug price transparency laws, including reports on data submitted by health insurers, manufacturers, and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). The review period includes reports published by states through August 2019.
Costliest Drugs across States
Five states — California, Nevada, Maine, Oregon and Vermont — have published reports identifying specific drugs that are high cost, for which costs are rising fastest, and/or that are most frequently prescribed. In Nevada, these drugs include only those related to the treatment of diabetes. California, Maine, Oregon, and Vermont reported up to 126 prescription drugs across therapeutic uses. These states reported many of the same drugs—including five drugs used for treatment of diabetes and four drugs used for treatment of psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis, or rheumatoid arthritis.
Impact on Premiums
California, Vermont, and Oregon have reported impacts of retail prescription drug costs on insurance premiums, averaging 13 percent in California (before accounting for manufacturer rebates, which averaged 10.1 percent of insurers’ retail drug costs) in 2017, 15.67 percent of premiums in Vermont in 2018 (before accounting for rebates), and up to 18 percent of premiums in Oregon (after accounting for rebates) in 2018.
Manufacturer and PBM Reporting
Requiring both manufacturers and PBMs to report allows states to track drug pricing along the supply chain. As of August 2019, only Nevada had publicly reported information about manufacturer and PBM costs, focused on essential diabetes drugs. Nevada’s report indicates that:
- Production costs accounted for 29 percent of manufacturers’ estimated average revenue in 2018 for essential diabetes drugs after rebates. Administrative costs and profit each accounted for 25 percent. On average, manufacturers earned $42 in profits for every $100 spent on production and administrative cost for these drugs.
- Financial assistance to consumers accounted for 14 percent of the manufacturers’ estimated total revenues after rebates, although most manufacturers reported offering no financial assistance.
- Most of the rebates that PBMs in Nevada negotiated nationally for essential diabetes drugs were on behalf of private insurers and self-insured employer plans. PBMs retained 6.6 percent of all rebates, whether negotiated on behalf of private third parties or Medicaid.
Early Lessons
The information these states have made public suggests some early lessons:
- States share concerns about the affordability of many of the same drugs. There may be substantial value in sharing information across states with similar confidentiality protections while reducing the burden of redundant reporting to multiple states.
- Understanding pricing across the entire supply chain, from the manufacturer to the consumer, is critical. Reporting that uses consistent concepts and measures can foster mutual understanding of facts among policymakers and stakeholders in a complex system.
- The agency responsible for obtaining data must have the authority and resources to follow up when the data are not complete or credible, if drug transparency laws are to help states develop a fair approach to ensuring that prescription drugs are affordable.
Introduction
This report summarizes what states are learning from reporting required by prescription drug price transparency laws, including data reported by health insurers, manufacturers, and pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs). Since 2017, nine states have enacted drug price transparency legislation that requires such reporting.[1]
Five of these states — California, Nevada, Maine, Oregon, and Vermont — have published reports identifying specific drugs that are high cost (defined by total spending), for which costs are rising fastest (defined as year over year increase), and/or that are most frequently prescribed (so represent high consumer exposure).[2] In Nevada, these drugs include only those related to treatment of diabetes. California, Maine, Oregon, and Vermont included prescription drugs across all therapeutic classes. In Section 1, we present the drugs of interest that these states reported and look, in particular, at the 30 drugs of interest reported by at least three of these states.
In Section 2, we describe the impact of drug prices on health insurance premiums, as reported by three states, California, Oregon, and Vermont. These states have published the dollar amounts and/or the percentage of premiums attributed to retail prescription drugs — in California and Vermont, before manufacturer and other rebates and price discounts to insurers; and in Oregon, after rebates and price discounts.
In Section 3, we describe what Nevada is learning from the reporting required of manufacturers and PBMs. Currently, eight states have enacted laws requiring PBMs to report rebate amounts either for specific drugs or in the aggregate. These laws have taken effect in four states (Connecticut, Nevada, Texas, and Washington) as part of each state’s drug pricing transparency effort, but as of August 2019, only Nevada (for specified essential diabetes drugs) had made summary information public.
Reporting of High-Cost, High Cost-Growth, and Most Prescribed Drugs
California, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, and Vermont have reported drugs that account for high total cost or high cost growth, or because they are frequently prescribed, represent high consumer exposure. Maine derived its lists from analysis of the state’s all-payer claims database (APCD) system; California and Oregon relied on insurer reporting under special statutory authority; and Vermont relied on both insurer and Medicaid reporting. Nevada derived it list of drugs from analysis of a purchased database.
Table 1 lists the number of unique drug names reported in each state. California and Vermont reported the most extensive list of drugs: each reported on more than 120 unique drug names; Nevada, Maine, and Oregon each reported on approximately 50 unique drug names.
Table 1. Number of drugs listed in state public reports, by state
| Reporting state | Reference period | Number of unique drug names reported* |
| CA | CY2017 | 126 |
| ME | FY2018 | 51 |
| NV | CY2018 | 53 |
| OR | CY2018 | 56 |
| VT | CY2018 | 121 |
*The number of unique drugs was developed by merging separate lists of drugs, if the state reported separate lists by reason for reporting and/or by insurer.
Source: Mathematica analysis of data reported in these reports: California Department of Managed Health Care (2018); Maine Health Data Organization (2018); Nevada Department of Health and Human Services (2018b); Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services (2019); and State of Vermont Green Mountain Care Board (2019). See full references at the end of this report.
We matched drugs reported across these states by National Drug Code (NDC) and identified 128 unique NDCs that at least two states selected in common (shown in Appendix 1). The 30 drugs that at least three states selected in common are shown in Table 2.
These 30 drugs span multiple therapeutic classes, but several have similar therapeutic uses. Eight of the drugs are used for treatment of diabetes myelitis — including five drugs, Lantus Solostar, Novolog, Januvia, Metformin, and Victoza, which four of the five states reported in common.
At least three of the four states that did not focus only on essential diabetes drugs — California, Maine, Oregon, and Vermont — selected in common a number of additional drugs that clustered around treatment for asthma (Fluticasone Prop, Ventolin, Proair, and Symbicort); depression (Bupropion Hcl and Sertraline); hepatitis C (Harvoni and Epclusa); multiple sclerosis (Copaxone and Tecfidera); psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis, and/or rheumatoid arthritis (Stelara, Cosentyx, Enbrel, Humira Syringe, and Humira Pen); and a range of cardiovascular concerns (Eliquis, Xarelto, Hydrochlorothiazide, Atorvastatin).
Table 2. Drugs reported by three or more states, 2017-2018 (in alphabetic order of primary therapeutic use)
| NDC | Drug name | States | Therapeutic class | Primary therapeutic use | Reasons for reporting |
| 00054327099 | Fluticasone Prop | CA, ME, VT | Respiratory tract agents | Treatment of allergic and non-allergic nasal symptoms; long term management of asthma, COPD | Most frequently prescribed (CA, ME, VT) |
| 00173068220 | Ventolin | CA, ME, OR, VT | Autonomic drugs; respiratory tract agents | Treatment of asthma, acute bronchitis | Most costly (CA); highest cost increase (CA); most frequently prescribed (CA, ME, OR, VT) |
| 59310057922 | Proair | CA, ME, OR, VT | Beta-Adrenergic agents | Treatment of asthma, acute bronchitis | Most frequently prescribed (CA, ME, OR, VT) |
| 00186037020 | Symbicort | CA, ME, VT | Antiasthmatic and bronchodilator agents | Treatment of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) | Most frequently prescribed (ME); most costly (ME, CA); highest price (VT) |
| 00003089421 | Eliquis | CA, ME, OR | Blood formation, coagulation, and thrombosis agents | Prevention of blood clots/stroke in people with atrial fibrillation. | Most frequently prescribed (ME); highest price increase (CA, ME); most costly (CA, ME) |
| 50458057930 | Xarelto | CA, ME, VT | Anticoagulants, coumarin type | Treatment/prevention of blood clots | Most costly (CA, ME); highest cost increase (CA, ME, VT) |
| 50111078751 | Azithromycin | CA, ME, OR | Antibacterials | Treatment of bronchitis; pneumonia, sexually transmitted diseases, and infections of the ears, lungs, sinuses, skin, throat, and reproductive organs. | Most frequently prescribed (CA, ME, VT) |
| 45963014205 | Bupropion Hcl | CA, VT, OR | Antidepressants | Treatment of depression | Most frequently prescribed (VT); most costly (CA); highest price increase (CA) |
| 68180035302 | Sertraline | CA, ME, OR, VT | Antidepressants | Treatment of depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), social anxiety disorder, panic disorder | Most frequently prescribed (CA, ME, OR, VT) |
| 00002771559 | Basaglar (Kwikpen) | ME, NV, OR | Hormones and synthetic substitutes | Treatment of diabetes myelitis type 1 and 2 | Highest price increase (ME, NV) |
| 00002879959 | Humalog (Kwikpen) | ME, NV, OR | Hormones and synthetic substitutes | Treatment of diabetes myelitis type 1 | Most costly (CA, ME); highest price increase (CA, ME, NV); most frequently prescribed (CA) |
| 00002751001 | Humalog | CA, ME, NV, OR | Hormones and synthetic substitutes | Treatment of diabetes myelitis type 1 | Most costly (CA, ME, OR); most frequently prescribed (CA); highest price increase (CA, ME, NV) |
| 00088221905 | Lantus Solostar | CA, ME, NV, VT | Hormones and synthetic substitutes | Treatment of diabetes myelitis type 1 and 2 | Most costly (CA, ME); highest price (VT); Most commonly prescribed (ME, VT); highest cost increase (NV) |
| 00169633910 | Novolog | NV, ME, OR, VT | Hormones and synthetic substitutes | Treatment of diabetes myelitis type 1 and 2 | Most costly (ME); highest price (OR, VT); highest cost increase (NV); most frequently prescribed (CA) |
| 00006027731 | Januvia | CA, ME, NV, VT | Blood glucose regulators | Treatment of diabetes myelitis type 2 | Most costly (CA, ME); highest cost increase (CA, ME, VT); most commonly prescribed (CA) |
| Multiple NDCs | Metformin | CA, NV, OR, VT | Blood glucose regulators | Treatment of diabetes myelitis type 2 | Most frequently prescribed (CA, OR); highest cost increase (NV, VT); most costly (CA) |
| 00169406013 | Victoza | CA. ME, NV, VT | Hormones and synthetic substitutes | Treatment of diabetes myelitis type 2 | Most costly (CA, ME); highest cost increase (CA, NV); most frequently prescribed (CA); highest price (VT) |
| 61958180101 | Harvoni | CA, ME, VT | Anti-infective agents | Treatment of hepatitis C | Most costly (CA, ME); highest cost increase (CA); highest price (VT) |
| 61958220101 | Epclusa | CA, ME, OR, VT | Antivirals | Treatment of hepatitis C | Most costly (CA, ME); highest price (OR, VT); highest cost increase (CA) |
| 16729018317 | Hydrochlorothiazide | CA, ME, OR, VT | Diuretics | Treatment of high blood pressure, edema, kidney stones | Most frequently prescribed (CA, ME, OR, VT) |
| 60505258009 | Atorvastatin | CA, ME, OR, VT | Antihyperlipidemics | Treatment of high cholesterol and triglyceride levels | Most frequently prescribed (CA, ME, OR, VT); most costly (CA); highest cost increase (CA) |
| 61958200201 | Descovy | CA, ME, VT | Antivirals | Treatment of HIV-1 | Most costly (CA); highest cost increase (CA, ME, VT); most frequently prescribed (CA) |
| 68546032512 | Copaxone | CA, ME, OR, VT | Miscellaneous therapeutic agents | Treatment of multiple sclerosis | Most costly (CA, ME); highest cost increase (CA); highest price (OR, VT) |
| 64406000602 | Tecfidera | CA, ME, OR, VT | Psychotherapeutic and neurological agents – misc. | Treatment of multiple sclerosis | Most costly (CA, ME, OR); highest cost increase (CA); highest price (VT) |
| 57894006103 | Stelara | CA, ME, VT | Immunological agents | Treatment of plaque psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis | Most costly (CA, ME); highest cost increase (CA, ME, VT); highest price (VT); most frequently prescribed (OR) |
| Multiple NDCs | Cosentyx | CA, ME, OR, VT | Immunological agents | Treatment of plaque psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis | Highest price (VT); most costly (CA); highest cost increase (CA, ME, OR); most frequently prescribed (OR) |
| 58406044504 | Enbrel | CA, ME, OR, VT | Miscellaneous therapeutic agents | Treatment of plaque psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis | Most costly (ME, CA); highest cost increase (CA, OR, VT); most frequently prescribed (CA, OR); highest cost (VT) |
| 00074379902 | Humira (Syringe) | CA, ME, OR, VT | Gastrointestinal drugs; miscellaneous therapeutic agents | Treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, plaque psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis | Most costly (CA, ME, OR); highest price (VT); highest cost increase (CA, OR, VT); most frequently prescribed (CA) |
| 00074433902 | Humira (Pen) | CA, ME, OR, VT | Gastrointestinal drugs; miscellaneous therapeutic agents | Treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, plaque psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis | Most costly (CA, ME, OR); highest price (VT); highest cost increase (CA, OR, VT); most frequently prescribed (CA) |
| 69097081412 | Gabapentin | CA, ME, OR, VT | Anticonvulsants | Treatment/prevention of seizures, pain | Most frequently prescribed (CA, ME, OR, VT); highest expenditure (CA) |
Source: Mathematica analysis of drug website data and data reported in: California Department of Managed Health Care (2018); Maine Health Data Organization (2018); Nevada Department of Health and Human Services (2018b); Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services (2019); and State of Vermont Green Mountain Care Board (2019).
Impact on Insurance Premiums
Three states — California, Oregon, and Vermont — have reported impacts of rising drug prices on insurance premiums. California[3] reported that insurer payments for retail prescription drugs totaled $8.7 billion in 2017, accounting for 13.1 percent of health plan premiums that year. Specialty drugs accounted for a small minority of prescriptions (1.6 percent), but more than half (51.5 percent) of all insurer spending on retail prescription drugs.
Manufacturer rebates and consumer cost sharing lessened the impact of retail prescription drugs on premiums in California, compared to what it might otherwise have been. Manufacturer rebates to insurers equaled about 10.5 percent ($915 million) of the $8.7 billion insurers spent on retail prescription drugs. Among the 25 most frequently prescribed drugs (representing 42.8 percent of total spending on retail prescription drugs), health plan enrollees paid approximately 3 percent of the cost overall — ranging from 2.9 percent of the cost of specialty drugs to 56.6 percent of the cost of generics. Enrollees paid about 8.8 percent of the cost of the 25 most costly drugs (91.2 percent of total spending on retail prescription drugs) reported by insurers.
Vermont [4] reported that prescription drugs accounted for 15.67 percent of premium rates in 2018 (before accounting for manufacturer rebates and other price concessions). Expressed as a per member per month (PMPM) amount, that averaged $81.65 PMPM in 2018. Vermont also identified the three drugs contributing the most to premiums: Humira Pen, Harvoni, and Enbrel Sureclick. Specialty drugs as a category contributed most to premium increases, compared with generic or brand name drugs.
Oregon[5] reported the impact of prescription drugs on premium rates PMPM in 2018 after accounting for manufacturer rebates or other price concessions to insurers. Insurers reported impacts that ranged from a low of 2.5 percent of premiums ($13 PMPM, or about $154 per member annually, for one insurer’s small-group plans) to 18 percent of premiums (about $85 PMPM, or more than or $1,000 per member annually, for two insurers’ small group plans, respectively. At the median, prescription drugs accounted for 11.9 percent of the premiums — nearly $53 PMPM in 2018, or about $635 annually.
Manufacturer and PBM Reporting
At present, five states — Nevada, Connecticut, Maine, Texas, and Washington — have enacted laws that require both manufacturers and PBMs to report annually. Manufacturers are required to report information on specified drugs. PBMs are required to report information about the rebates they have obtained from manufacturers — either in the aggregate (for all drugs) or for specified drugs. Requiring both manufacturers and PBMs to report offers the potential for states to track pricing along the supply chain for drugs of interest, if the state aligns the level of information that each must report.
The drug cost transparency reporting requirements in these states are shown in Table 3. Washington will require PBMs to report information for each covered drug—a provision that will enable the Washington Health Care Authority to track prices across the supply chain for each drug.[6] Nevada requests PBM reporting on essential diabetes drugs (collectively), as specifically identified by the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services. Connecticut and Texas will require PBMs to report aggregate rebates obtained across all drugs from pharmaceutical manufacturers. In Maine, the Maine Health Data Organization will adopt rules specifying the data elements to be reported.
Table 3. States that require reporting by both manufacturers and PBMs*
| State | Manufacturers must report:** | PBMs must report: |
| Connecticut | · Total company level research and development costs for the most recent year | · The aggregate dollar amount for all rebates concerning drug formularies that PBM collected from pharmaceutical manufacturers, Including those that manufactured outpatient prescription drugs covered by the health carriers and are attributable to patient utilization of such drugs under the health care plan
· The aggregate dollar amount of all rebates excluding rebates received by health carriers |
| Nevada | · Total administrative expenditures (including marketing and advertising costs)
· Profit earned and percentage of total profit attributable to the drug · Total amount of financial assistance provided through patient assistance · Cost associated with coupons · Wholesale acquisition cost · History of any increase over the 5 years including percentage increase, date of increase, and explanation · Aggregate amount of all rebates provided to PBM’s |
· Total (aggregate) amount of rebates negotiated with manufacturers during the previous year
· Total amount of rebates retained by the PBM · Total amount of rebates negotiated for purchases of drugs for use by Medicare and Medicaid recipients, and persons covered by third parties that are or are not governmental entities |
| Texas | · Total company level research and development costs for the previous calendar year | · Aggregated rebates, fees, price concessions, and other payments from manufacturers
· Aggregated dollar amount of rebates, fees, price concessions from manufacturers that were (a) passed to insurers, (b) passed to enrollees at point of sale; and (c) retained by the PBM |
| Washington | · Annual manufacturing costs
· Annual marketing and advertising costs · Total research and development costs · Total costs of clinical trials and regulation · Total costs for acquisition of the drug · Total financial assistance given by the manufacturer through assistance programs, rebates, and coupons |
· All discounts (total dollar amount and percentage discount) and all rebates received from manufacturers for each drug on the PBM’s formularies
· Total dollar amount of discounts and rebates that are retained by the PBM for each drug · Actual total reimbursement amounts for each drug the PBM pays retail pharmacies after all fees · Negotiated price health plan pays PBM for each drug · Amount, terms, and conditions relating to copayments, reimbursement policies, etc. · Disclosure of any ownership interest the PBM has in a pharmacy or health plan with which it conducts business |
Sources: Connecticut HB 5384/Public Act 18-41(2018); Nevada Department of Health and Human Services (2018a); Texas HB 2536 (2019); and Washington HB 1224, Chapter 334 (2019).
* Maine also requires reporting from manufacturers and PBMs. The Maine Health Data Organization will adopt rules specifying the data elements to be reported.
** In addition to the items indicated, each state requires manufacturers to report reasons for price increases, if any.
As of August 2019, Nevada was the only state that had publicly reported information about manufacturer costs and the role of PBMs in the final cost of drugs to consumers that are privately insured or enrolled in Medicare or Medicare.[7] Together with manufacturer reporting, reporting by PBMs offers a reasonably complete (if aggregated) picture of factors that contribute to essential diabetes drug costs in Nevada.
Nevada asks both manufacturers and PBMs to report pricing information for essential diabetes drugs in the aggregate and, in general, at the national level. Manufacturers report only one item specific to Nevada: rebates paid to PBMs for essential diabetes drugs in Nevada.
A summary of the information reported by manufacturers and PBMs, as shown in Nevada’s public report, is shown in Table 4. Because Nevada reported PBM-negotiated rebates for essential diabetes drugs ($1.9 billion) at the aggregate national level and manufacturer rebates only in Nevada and as the average aggregated across manufacturers, they cannot be compared. Such discrepancies make it impossible to track the supply chain for these drugs nationally or in Nevada. Nevertheless, some insights can be drawn within the information reported by manufacturers and PBMs, respectively.
Table 4. Summary of data reported by manufacturers and PBMs in Nevada for essential diabetes drugs
| Average amount per manufacturer (simple averages) | Percent of estimated average manufacturer revenue after rebates | |
| Manufacturer-reported data for essential diabetes drugs | ||
| Estimated total revenue after rebates (national)* | $204,353,658 | 100.0 percent |
| Production cost | $58,934,388 | 28.8 percent |
| Administrative expenses | $65,548,748 | 32.1 percent |
| Profit | $51,979,630 | 25.4 percent |
| Cost of consumer financial assistance | $27,890,892 | 13.6 percent |
| Total provided through any patient prescription assistance program | $12,874,326 | 6.3 percent |
| Consumer coupons and consumer copayment assistance programs | $14,036,828 | 6.9 percent |
| Manufacturer cost of redeeming coupons and use of consumer copayment assistance programs | $979,738 | 0.5 percent |
| Aggregate rebates to PBMs in Nevada | $3,039,646 | 1.5 percent |
| Total amount (all PBMs) | Percent of PBMs’ total negotiated rebates | |
| PBM-reported data for essential diabetes drugs (Nevada only): | ||
| Total rebates negotiated with manufacturers | $1,922,857,158 | 100.0 percent |
| Total rebates negotiated for persons covered by | ||
| Medicaid | $31,648,939 | 1.6 percent |
| 3rd party governmental entities, not Medicare or Medicaid | $597,759,023 | 31.1 percent |
| 3rd parties that are not governmental entities (potentially including self-insured employer plans) | $1,293,449,196 | 67.3 percent |
| Total rebates retained by the PBM | $126,754,864 | 6.6 percent |
Source: S. Jones, et al. (2019), Tables 4, 5 and 6.
*Calculated as the sum of all shown manufacturer-reported amounts excluding aggregate rebates to PBMs in Nevada.
- Manufacturer cost, profit, and consumer assistance
In 2018, average manufacturer costs and profits for essential diabetes drugs, reported at the national level, totaled nearly $204.4 million (Figure 1). Drug production costs accounted for just 29 percent of the total ($58.9 million).
Figure 1. Reported profits and production and administrative costs for essential diabetes drugs (Nevada)
Source: S. Jones, et al. (2019), Tables 4 and 5.
Manufacturers’ administrative expenditures, which may include executive compensation, accounting and legal fees, marketing, advertising, and other administrative expenses as each manufacturer deems reasonable, accounted for $65.5 million. This amount exceeded their reported average production costs (although the Nevada report indicates multiple drug manufacturers reported $0 for total administrative expenditures, and likely included all their costs for manufacturing the drug in the drug production costs).
Manufacturers reported average profits (nearly $52.0 million) — equal to 25.4 percent of the sum of production cost, administrative cost, consumer assistance, and profit — or 41.8 percent of total production and administrative cost. That is, aggregated across reporting manufacturers, manufacturers of essential diabetes drugs earned $42 in profits for every $100 they spent on production and administrative cost.[8]
Nationally, financial assistance to consumers accounted for an estimated 13.6 percent ($27.9 million) of manufacturers’ estimated average total revenues after rebates for essential diabetes drugs. This financial assistance included patient prescription programs, coupons, or copayment assistance programs. However, more than half of the reporting manufacturers indicated that they provided no financial assistance through patient prescription assistance programs (58 percent), and also provided no rebates to PBMs or pharmacies (55 percent). By inference, the average dollar amount of financial assistance among manufacturers that provided any financial assistance (presumably the larger manufacturers) was more than twice the average across all manufacturers (including those that provided none).
- PBM negotiated and retained rebates
PBMs reported negotiating more than $1.9 billion in rebates for essential diabetes drugs for Nevadans (Table 4). Nearly this entire amount was negotiated on behalf of private third parties—predominantly private insurers and self-insured employer plans ($1.3 billion) or other nongovernmental third parties ($598 million). PBMs reported retaining 6.6 percent of all rebates that they negotiated, whether on behalf of private third parties or Medicaid.
Differences in how Nevada’s public report summarized the data obtained from manufacturers and PBMs make it impossible to develop a picture of the supply chain from the information offered—although it seems likely that Nevada has the information necessary to do this. Nevada’s report demonstrates the crucial importance of requiring manufacturers and PBMs to report information at the same level of aggregation—at the state level or nationally (but not either/or), and for the same individual drugs or narrowly specified groups of drugs—in order to build a coherent picture of the factors that contribute to high consumer cost.
Summary
This report summarizes information that five states—California, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, and Vermont—have obtained from insurers, manufacturers, and/or PBMs to achieve greater drug price transparency. Each of these states is in a relatively early stage of obtaining and understanding their data. Nevertheless, the information they have made public suggests some early lessons for states interested in obtaining meaningful reporting for drug price transparency.
- States share concerns regarding the affordability of many of the same drugs. We identified 120 drugs that concern at least two of the five states—due to high cost, fast-rising cost, and/or the frequency with which the drug is prescribed. The large number of drugs that are of concern across states indicates that there might be substantial value in sharing information across states. State efforts such as Maryland’s recently enacted Drug Affordability Review Board might initially focus on many of these same drugs.[9] States that are developing statutory authority to require manufacturer reporting for these drugs might consider explicitly authorizing data sharing with other states that have compatible confidentiality protections—or else explore other options available in current law or regulation to reduce manufacturers’ burden of redundant reporting to multiple states.
- There is substantial value in understanding pricing across the entire supply chain, from the manufacturer to the consumer, for drugs that drive increases in health insurance premiums and consumer costs. States that design reporting templates using consistent and compatible concepts and measures, and report those measures publicly, can foster mutual understanding of facts among policymakers and stakeholders in a complex system. However, if rebates and other information are reported collectively for all drugs, it frustrates the ability of policymakers to understand impacts on costs for specific drugs. PBM reporting by manufacturer/product code (if not by NDC) is critical to understanding the supply chain for the specific drugs of interest to the states. Nevada’s PBM reporting requirement — for a list of specified NDCs—demonstrates that PBMs are able to report on specific drugs, not only on their aggregate business.[10]
- When requiring manufacturers, PBMs, or other entities to report drug price data, it is critical that the responsible agency be given the authority and resources necessary to follow up when reported data are not complete or credible. Especially in the first years of implementation, the reporting entities may be learning how to report, and they may be reluctant to invest in getting the data right. Accurate reporting is essential for drug transparency laws to help states develop a fair approach to ensuring that prescription drugs are affordable.
References and Appendix
Arkansas
Arkansas SB 520/Act No. 994, 2019. Available at: http://www.arkleg.state.ar.us/assembly/2019/2019R/Acts/Act994.pdf. Accessed August 1, 2019.
California:
California Department of Managed Health Care. “Prescription Drug Cost Transparency Report (SB 17): Measurement Year 2017.” Sacramento, CA: Department of Managed Health Care, December 2018. Available at https://www.dmhc.ca.gov/Portals/0/Docs/DO/sb17.pdf. Accessed July 31, 2019.
California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development. “Cost Transparency: Prescription Drugs (CTRx),” 2019. Available at https://oshpd.ca.gov/data-and-reports/cost-transparency/rx/. Accessed July 31, 2019.
Connecticut:
State of Connecticut, Substitute House Bill No. 5384/Public Act No. 18-41. Available at https://www.cga.ct.gov/2018/ACT/pa/pdf/2018PA-00041-R00HB-05384-PA.pdf. Accessed July 31, 2019.
Iowa:
Iowa SF 563, 2019. Available at: https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga= 88&ba=SF percent20563. Accessed August 1, 2019.
Louisiana:
Louisiana SB 283/Act No. 371, 2018. Available at: https://legiscan.com/LA/text/SB283/id/1799999/Louisiana-2018-SB283-Chaptered.pdf. Accessed August 1, 2019.
Maine:
Maine Health Data Organization. “MHDO Prescription Drug Reports,” June 2018. Available at https://mhdo.maine.gov/tableau/prescriptionReports.cshtml. Accessed July 31, 2019.
Minnesota:
Minnesota SF 278, 2019. Available at: https://www.revisor.mn.gov/bills/bill.php?b=senate&f=SF0278&ssn=0&y=2019. Accessed August 1, 2019.
Nevada:
Nevada Department of Health and Human Services, SB539 Reporting Timeline v08.10.2018, August 10, 2018a. Available at: http://dhhs.nv.gov/uploadedFiles/dhhsnvgov/content/HCPWD/SB539 percent20Drug percent20Transparency percent20Reporting percent20Timeline_v08.10.2018_website.pdf. Accessed July 31, 2019.
Nevada Department of Health and Human Services. “Essential Diabetes Drugs Price Increase Report.” Carson City, NV: Division of Public and Behavioral Health, Primary Care Office. September 2018. Available at http://dhhs.nv.gov/uploadedFiles/dhhsnvgov/content/HCPWD/09.11.2018 percent20Nevada percent20Essential percent20Diabetes percent20Drugs percent20Price percent20Increase percent20Report_Final.pdf. Accessed July 31. 2019.
Jones, S., P. Thompson, J. Tucker, H. Mitchell, T. McKnight, H. Wallace, and K. Devine. “Drug Transparency Report 2019 Essential Diabetes Drugs” Carson City, NV: Nevada Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Public and Behavioral Health, May 2019. Available at http://dhhs.nv.gov/uploadedFiles/dhhsnvgov/content/HCPWD/DHHS percent202019 percent20Drug percent20Transparency percent20Report percent205-31-2019(1).pdf. Accessed July 31, 2019.
Oregon:
Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services. “Insurer Reports on Prescription Drugs Drug Price Transparency Program,” 2019. Available at https://dfr.oregon.gov/drugtransparency/data/Documents/insurer-reports-rx-drugs-2019.pdf. Accessed October 16, 2019.
Texas:
Texas HB 2536, 86th Legislature, 2019-2020. Available at: https://legiscan.com/TX/text/HB2536/id/2027782/Texas-2019-HB2536-Enrolled.html. Accessed July 31, 2019.
Vermont:
Office of the Vermont Attorney General. “Prescription Drug Cost Transparency-Manufacturer and Health Insurer Annual Reporting” (undated). https://ago.vermont.gov/drug-price-transparency-manufacturer-and-health-insurer-annual-reporting/. Accessed July 31, 2019.
State of Vermont Green Mountain Care Board. “Impact of Prescription Drug Costs on Health Insurance Premiums.” Montpelier, VT: State of Vermont Green Mountain Care Board, January 2019. Available at https://legislature.vermont.gov/assets/Legislative-Reports/Act-193-Report-Impact-of-Prescription-Drug-Costs-on-Health-Insurance-Premiums.pdf. Accessed July 31, 2019.
Washington:
Washington HB 1224/Chapter 334, 2019. Available at: http://lawfilesext.leg.wa.gov/biennium/2019-20/Pdf/Bills/House percent20Passed percent20Legislature/1224-S2.PL.pdf
Appendix 1: Drugs reported by two or more states: California, Maine, Nevada, Oregon, and Vermont
| NDC | Drug | States | Therapy Class |
| 00173069600 | Advair (Diskus) | CA, ME | Respiratory Tract Agents |
| Multiple NDCs | Amlodipine Besylate | CA, OR | Antihypertensives |
| Multiple NDCs | Amoxicillin | CA, OR | Antibacterials |
| 60505258009 | Atorvastatin | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Antihyperlipidemics |
| 60505257909 | Atorvastatin | CA, OR, VT, | Antihyperlipidemics |
| 50111078766 | Azithromycin | CA, VT | Antibacterials |
| 50111078751 | Azithromycin | CA, ME, OR | Antibacterials |
| 00002771559 | Basaglar (Kwikpen) | ME, NV, OR | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 00173085910 | Breo Ellipta | CA, ME | Respiratory Tract Agents |
| 45963014205 | Bupropion Hcl | CA, OR, VT, | Antidepressants |
| 10370010150 | Bupropion Hcl | CA, OR, VT, | Antidepressants |
| 00069046903 | Chantix | CA, VT | Antidotes, Deterrents, and Toxicological Agents |
| 00069047103 | Chantix | CA, VT | Antidotes, Deterrents, and Toxicological Agents |
| 68546032512 | Copaxone | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents; Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents (Platelet-Aggregation Inhibitors) |
| Cosentyx | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Immunological Agents | |
| 61958200201 | Descovy | CA, ME, VT | Antivirals |
| 00024591401 | Dupixent | ME, OR | Immunological Agents |
| 00003089421 | Eliquis | CA, ME, OR | Blood Formation, Coagulation, and Thrombosis Agents |
| 58406044504 | Enbrel | CA, ,ME, ,OR, VT | Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents; Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents (Platelet-Aggregation Inhibitors) |
| 61958220101 | Epclusa | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Antivirals |
| 00173071920 | Flovent | CA, VT | Corticosteroids |
| Multiple NDCs | Fluoxetine | CA, OR | Antidepressants |
| 00054327099 | Fluticasone Prop | CA, ME, VT | Respiratory Tract Agents |
| 60505082901 | Fluticasone Prop | CA, VT | Respiratory Tract Agents |
| 69097081412 | Gabapentin | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Anticonvulsants |
| 61958190101 | Genvoya | CA, OR | Antivirals |
| 00078060715 | Gilenya | CA, VT | Immunological Agents |
| 68084011201 | Glipizide ER | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 68084029521 | Glipizide ER | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 68084011101 | Glipizide ER | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 61958180101 | Harvoni | CA, ME, VT | Anti-infective Agents |
| 00002879959 | Humalog (Kwikpen) | ME, NV, OR | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 00002751001 | Humalog | CA, ME, OR | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 00074433902 | Humira (Pen) | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Gastrointestinal Drugs; Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents; Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents (Platelet-Aggregation Inhibitors) |
| 00074379902 | Humira (Syringe) | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Gastrointestinal Drugs; Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents; Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents (Platelet-Aggregation Inhibitors) |
| 00002880559 | Humulin N | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00002831501 | Humulin N | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00002831517 | Humulin N | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00002821501 | Humulin R | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00002821517 | Humulin R | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00002882427 | Humulin R U-500 KwikPen | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00002850101 | Humulin R U-500 | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 16729018317 | Hydrochlorothiazide | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Diuretics |
| 00406012301 | Hydrocodone/Acetaminophen | ME, OR, VT, | Analgesics – Opioid |
| 00069018921 | Ibrance | CA, VT | Antineoplastics |
| 50458014030 | Invokana | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 50458014090 | Invokana | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 50458014130 | Invokana | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 50458014190 | Invokana | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006057761 | Janumet | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006057762 | Janumet | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006057782 | Janumet | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006057561 | Janumet | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006057562 | Janumet | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006057582 | Janumet | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006027731 | Januvia | CA, ME, NV, VT | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006011254 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006027733 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006027754 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006027782 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006022128 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006022131 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006022154 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006011228 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006011231 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006027702 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00006027728 | Januvia | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00597015230 | Jardiance | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00597015237 | Jardiance | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00597015290 | Jardiance | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00597015330 | Jardiance | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00597015337 | Jardiance | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00597015390 | Jardiance | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00088222033 | Lantus | ME, NV | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 00088221905 | Lantus Solostar | CA, ME, NV, VT | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 00169643810 | Levemir | ME, NV | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 00378180310 | Levothyroxine Sodium | ,CA, OR, VT | Hormonal Agents – Thyroid |
| 00185060501 | Lisinopril | CA, ,OR, VT | Antihypertensives |
| 68180098103 | Lisinopril | CA, ME, OR | Antihypertensives |
| 65862020390 | Losartan Potassium | CA, ,OR, VT | Antihypertensives |
| 00071101668 | Lyrica | CA, VT | Neuropathic Pain |
| 60687014301 | Metformin HCL | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 49483062350 | Metformin Hcl Er | CA, VT | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 62037083101 | Metoprolol Succinate Er | CA, ,OR, VT | Beta Blockers |
| Multiple NDCs | Montelukast Sodium | CA, OR | Respiratory Tract Agents, Asthma |
| 55513019001 | Neulasta | OR, VT | Blood products and modifiers (Anti-infective for chemotherapy) |
| 00169633910 | Novolog | ME, NV, OR, VT, | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 00052027303 | Nuvaring | CA, VT | Contraceptives, Intravaginal, Systemic |
| 61958210101 | Odefsey | CA, OR | Antivirals (HIV Treatment) |
| 55111015810 | Omeprazole | ME, ,OR, VT | Gastrointestinal Drugs |
| 00378773293 | Ondansetron | CA, OR | Antiemetics |
| 53885024510 | Onetouch Ultra Test Strip | CA, VT | Blood Sugar Diagnostics |
| Non-matching NDCs | Orkambi | ME, VT | Respiratory Agents – Misc. |
| 59310057922 | Proair | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Beta-Adrenergic Agents |
| 00023530105 | Restasis (Multidose) | CA, ME | Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat (EENT) Preparations |
| 59572041028 | Revlimid | CA, ME, OR | Antineoplastics |
| 59572041000 | Revlimid | CA, ME, OR | Antineoplastics |
| 68180035302 | Sertraline | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Antidepressants |
| 69097083502 | Sertraline | CA, VT, OR | Antidepressants |
| 65862001305 | Sertraline | CA, VT, OR | Antidepressants |
| 16729000517 | Simvastatin | CA, VT | Antihyperlipidemics |
| 16714068202 | Simvastatin | CA, VT | Antihyperlipidemics |
| 16714068101 | Simvastatin | CA, VT | Antihyperlipidemics |
| 16714068201 | Simvastatin | CA, VT | Antihyperlipidemics |
| 00093715498 | Simvastatin | CA, VT | Antihyperlipidemics |
| 00093715598 | Simvastatin | CA, VT | Antihyperlipidemics |
| 16729000617 | Simvastatin | CA, VT | Antihyperlipidemics |
| Non-matching NDCs | Spiriva (Respimat/Handihaler) | ME, VT | Autonomic Drugs; Respiratory Tract Agents |
| 12496120803 | Suboxone | ME, VT | Central Nervous System Agents; Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents; Miscellaneous Therapeutic Agents (Platelet-Aggregation Inhibitors) |
| 52268001201 | Suprep Bowel Prep Kit | CA, OR | Gastrointestinal Agents (Colonoscopy prep) |
| 57894006103 | Stelara | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Immunological Agents |
| 00186037020 | Symbicort | CA, ME, VT | Antiasthmatic And Bronchodilator Agents |
| 64406000602 | Tecfidera | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Psychotherapeutic And Neurological Agents – Misc. |
| 49702022813 | Tivicay | CA, VT | Antivirals, Hiv-Spec, Non-Peptidic Protease Inhib |
| 00597014030 | Tradjenta | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00597014061 | Tradjenta | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 00597014090 | Tradjenta | CA, NV | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 50111043301 | Trazodone | ME, OR, VT, | Antidepressants |
| 00169255013 | Tresiba (Flextouch) | ME, NV | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 49702023113 | Triumeq | CA, OR, VT, | Antivirals |
| Non-matching NDCs | Trulicity | ME, NV | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 61958070101 | Truvada | CA, OR | HIV Treatment |
| 61958070301 | Truvada | CA, OR | HIV Treatment |
| 00173068220 | Ventolin | CA, ME, OR, VT, | Autonomic Drugs; Respiratory Tract Agents |
| 00169406013 | Victoza (3-Pak) | ME, NV, VT | Hormones and Synthetic Substitutes |
| 50458057930 | Xarelto | CA, ME, VT | Anticoagulants,Coumarin Type |
| 54092060601 | Xiidra | CA, VT | Opthalmic Agents |
| Non-matching NDCs | Metformin | CA, NV, OR, VT, | Blood Glucose Regulators |
| 57894019506 | Zytiga | ME, OR | Antineoplastics |
Source: Mathematica analysis of data reported in: California Department of Managed Health Care (2018); Maine Health Data Organization (2018); Nevada Department of Health and Human Services (2018b); Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services (2019); and State of Vermont Green Mountain Care Board (2019).
Notes
[1] These states are California, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Texas, and Vermont. See: National Academy for State Health Policy Center for State Rx Pricing, Newly Enacted Laws at https://www.oldsite.nashp.org/new-laws/, accessed August 8, 2019.
[2] See: California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (2018), Nevada Department of Health and Human Services (2018b), Maine Health Data Organization (2018), and State of Vermont Green Mountain Care Board (2019).
[3] See: California Department of Managed Health Care (December 2019).
[4] See: Vermont Green Mountain Care Board (January 2019).
[5] See: Oregon Department of Consumer and Business Services (2019).
[6] Washington defines a covered drug as one that “is currently on the market, is manufactured by a covered manufacturer, and has a wholesale acquisition cost of more than one hundred dollars for a course of treatment lasting less than one month or a thirty-day supply, and … the manufacturer increases the wholesale acquisition cost at least … [20] percent, including the proposed increase and the cumulative increase over one calendar year prior to the date of the proposed increase [or] [50] percent, including the proposed increase and the cumulative increase over three calendar years prior to the date of the proposed increase.” See: Washington HB 1224/Chapter 334 (2019), Section 2.
[7] A number of other states recently passed (but have not yet enacted) legislation that would require PBM reporting. Such states include Arkansas, Iowa, Louisiana, and Minnesota. These states variously would require PBM reporting of total rebates (all states); rebates retained by the PBM (Minnesota—like Nevada, Texas, and Washington); rebates the PBM did (or did not) pass through to insurers (Arkansas, Iowa, Louisiana, and Minnesota—like Connecticut and Texas); rebates passed through to enrollees at point of sale (Arkansas—like Texas); the amount paid for pharmacy services (Arkansas—like Washington); administrative fees received by the PBM (Iowa and Louisiana); and the highest, lowest, and mean aggregate retained rebate percentage (Iowa, Louisiana, and Minnesota). See: Arkansas SB 520/Act No. 994 (2019); Iowa SF 563 (2019), Louisiana SB 283/Act No. 371 (2018); and Minnesota SF 278/Session Law Chapter 39 (2019).
[8] Nevada’s report notes that the variation among manufacturers (and potentially among drugs produced by the same manufacturer) is significant: a simple unweighted average per manufacturer, then calculated across manufacturers, produced an average profit of 152 percent of the sum of production and administrative cost—that is, for every dollar spent on combined production and administrative costs, the manufacturers earned, on average, $1.52 in profit. The report states that larger manufacturers (with lower profit rates) tend to reduce the aggregate profit ratio, as calculated in Figure 1.
[9] Built on the National Academy for State Health Policy’s model legislation, Maryland’s Prescription Drug Affordability Board is an independent body with the authority to review high-cost prescription drugs and identify fair, appropriate rates for Marylanders to pay.
[10] To obtain consistent information from all reporting entities, NASHP’s model legislation and reporting templates call for reporting at the NDC level, and they align national and state-level reporting to support a coherent picture of pricing along the supply chain for each drug. See: https://www.oldsite.nashp.org/policy/prescription-drug-pricing/model-legislation/#toggle-id-1, accessed August 9, 2019.
Acknowledgements: The National Academy for State Healthy Policy’s Center for State Rx Drug Pricing, with support from Arnold Ventures, commissioned this analysis from experts affiliated with Mathematica Policy Research.
State Insurance Reforms Tackle Price Transparency, Rising Costs, and the Uninsured
/in Policy California, Connecticut, Nevada Blogs, Featured News Home Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Eligibility and Enrollment, Essential Health Benefits, Health Coverage and Access, Health System Costs, State Insurance Marketplaces /by Christina CousartSeptember was a busy time for state insurance regulators as they worked to finalize rate filings and prepare for the upcoming health insurance open enrollment season. While initial filings indicate nominal increases to individual market premiums for the 2020 plan year, insurance costs are escalating for individuals and families who receive coverage through their employers.
Beyond monitoring rates, state regulators continue to take action to ensure that all consumers across their markets have access to affordable, high-value coverage. Below are a few notable updates from states:
California enacts bills to address cost transparency. During the last month of its legislative session, California enacted two new laws that require insurers to provide enhanced reporting on health costs and quality.
- AB 731 (Health Care Coverage: Rate Review) requires insurers, including large group health plans, to submit data to the state on medical use trends by geographic region and enhances requirements for plans to report data on spending compared to Medicare rates. The law will go into effect by July of 2021.
- AB 929 (California Health Benefit Exchange: Data Collection) mandates that insurers provide data to the health insurance marketplace so that it can evaluate progress toward lowering costs, improving quality, and reducing disparities in the state. The law also requires that the marketplace make data on costs, quality, and health disparities public.
Connecticut seeks to “redefine the health care dynamic” through state employee plans. The state comptroller recently issued a request for proposals for insurers to administer state health benefits. The request for proposal carves out a role for the state to act as an active participant in negotiations between insurers and providers on reimbursement rates, including access to full details about negotiated payments.
Nevada releases detailed report on its uninsured. Reports estimate that nearly 400,000 Nevadans are currently uninsured. Among the uninsured, nearly 22 percent are young adults, 60 percent are Latino, and 63 percent are employed. Nevada’s recently implemented state-based marketplace will use this detailed data to target outreach efforts for the upcoming open enrollment period.
The National Academy for State Health Policy will continue to track and report on these and other insurance initiatives as they unfold in the coming months.
Nevada Fines Rx Manufacturers $17.4 Million for Failing to Explain Diabetes Medications’ Price Hikes
/in Policy Nevada Blogs, Featured News Home Cost, Payment, and Delivery Reform, Health System Costs, Newly-Enacted Laws, Prescription Drug Pricing, State Rx Legislative Action /by Jennifer ReckLast week, Nevada fined 21 pharmaceutical companies $17.4 million for failing to submit a report explaining recent, significant price hikes to essential diabetes drugs, as required by the state’s drug cost transparency law.
Faced with drug price increases far outpacing rates of inflation, states across the country are enacting transparency laws designed to shed light on what’s driving drug price hikes. Nevada’s 2017 transparency law is unique among these laws in its specific focus on public health. Initially, the law required manufacturers to report only on essential diabetes medications, with an additional requirement mandating reporting on asthma medication prices scheduled to go into effect next year.
The law gives Nevada the authority to levy fines of $5,000 a day for failure to report by the April 1 deadline. After warning letters to non-reporting companies generated a sizable uptick in reporting, last week the state sent notice of fines totaling $17.4 million to 21 non-compliant companies. The companies have 30 days to pay the fines or request a dispute resolution meeting with the state within 10 days. Companies have cited a range of reasons for their failure to comply with the transparency law, ranging from a lack of awareness of the new law to personnel transitions.
Other states’ transparency laws also include fines for failure to report information explaining high drug prices, ranging from fines of $1,000 a day in California, Vermont, and Washington State, to a high of $30,000 a day in Maine. Nevada may or may not receive the entire amount assessed in its proposed fines, pending outcomes of resolution meetings with manufacturers. If necessary, the state’s attorney general may seek a court order requiring payment.
While $17.4 million is a notable amount to cash-strapped states, that number pales in comparison to the estimated $2.7 billion that diabetes costs Nevada each year. The state reports that 12.6 percent of its adult population has diabetes, and this group incurs 2.3-times the medical expenses than those without diabetes.
Ensuring compliance with a law that has the potential to help the state monitor the extent, impact, and causes of price increases for essential diabetes medication remains a focus for Nevada’s Department of Health and Human Services drug transparency program.
States Continue to Implement Surprise Medical Billing Protections
/in Policy Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas Blogs, Charts Consumer Affordability, Health Coverage and Access, Health IT/Data, Health System Costs /by Christina CousartBy Christina Cousart
Updated June 24, 2019
During the 2019 legislative session, states have continued to advance protections for consumers against surprise medical balance bills – charges for unexpected, out-of-network medical care. To date, four new states have enacted multi-pronged policies that prohibit balance bills, institute a process for providers and carriers to resolve billing disputes, and foster pricing transparency between providers, carriers, and consumers to avoid situations that lead to balance bills. Texas also approved legislation strengthening its existing consumer protections. Here are highlights of the new legislation.
| Colorado (HB 1174) | Nevada (AB 469) | New Mexico (SB 337) | Texas (SB 1264; HB 2041)[1] | Washington (HB 1065) | |
| Balance billing protections | |||||
| Holds consumers harmless | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓* | ✓ |
| Prohibition in case of emergencies |
✓ | ✓[2] | ✓ | ✓[3] | ✓ |
| Prohibition in case of out-of-network (OON) services delivered at an in-network facility |
✓[4] | ✓[5] | ✓[6] | ✓ | |
| Applicable providers/ facilities |
Person who is licensed or otherwise authorized in the state to furnish health care services including: ● Physicians ● Dentists ● Optometrists ● Anesthesiologists ● Hospitals ● X-ray ● LaboratoryExcludes ambulance providers, but charges the insurance commissioner with setting payment methods for ambulance services. |
Physician or other health care practitioner who is licensed or otherwise authorized in this state to furnish any health care service; and institutions providing health care services including: ● Hospitals ● Surgical centers for ambulatory patients ● Skilled nursing facilities ● Residential facilities for groups ● LaboratoriesEmergency facilities include hospitals or independent centers for emergency medical care |
Licensed health care professionals, hospitals, or other facilities licensed to furnish health care.Facilities include entities providing health care services including: ● Hospitals; ● Ambulatory surgical centers; ● Birth centers; ● Drug and alcohol treatment centers; ● Laboratory, diagnostic, and testing centers; ● Health provider’s offices or clinics ● Urgent care centers ● Freestanding emergency rooms ● Therapeutic health care settings |
Individual licensed under the laws of this state to practice medicine or health care facilities.Facilities include: ● hospitals; ● Licensed ambulatory surgical centers ● Licensed chemical dependency treatment facility ● Renal dialysis facilities ● Birthing centers; ● Rural health clinics; ● Federally qualified health centers ● Freestanding imaging centers; ● Freestanding emergency medical care facilities* |
Person licensed under state law to practice health or health-related services, or an employee or agent of such a person acting in the scope of their employment.Facilities include: ● Hospices ● Hospitals ● Rural health care facilities ● Psychiatric hospitals ● Nursing homes ● Community mental health center ● Kidney disease treatment centers ● Ambulatory diagnostic treatment or surgical facilities ● Drug and alcohol treatment facilities; ● Home health agencies.Carriers may not balance bill in the case of emergency services delivered by out-of-state providers. |
| Billing dispute and resolution procedures | |||||
| Reimbursement standard | For emergency services the greater of: ● In non-Denver areas: o 105% of carrier’s median in-network rate for services provided at a similar facility in the same geographic area; or o Median in-network rate for the same service at a similar facility in the same geographic area based on all-payer claims database (APCD) data. ● In the Denver area: o Carrier’s median in-network rate for the same service in a similar facility in the same geographic area; o 250% Medicare rate for the same service in a similar facility in the same geographic area; or o Median in-network rate for the same service in a similar facility in the same geographic area based on APCD data. For OON services at an in-network facility, the greater of: |
For facilities: ● 108% of the previously contracted rate if the facility had been in-network within the last 12 months.● 115% of the previously contracted rate if the facility had been in-network within the last 12-24 months.● If no such contract existed, an amount the carrier determines to be fair and reasonable.For providers:If a provider had been in-network within the past 12 months: ● The previously contracted rate, if the provider terminated the contract before it was set to expire without cause; ● 108% of the previously contracted rate if the provider terminated the contract for cause; ● A fair and reasonable amount, determined by the carrier, if the carrier terminated the contract for cause; ● The previously contracted rate adjusted by the Consumer Price Index, Medical Care Component for the prior year, if neither party terminated the contract.If a provider had not been in-network in the preceding 12 months, carrier may remit whatever payment it determines. |
A 60th percentile of the allowed commercial reimbursement rate for the service performed by a provider in a similar specialty in the same geographic area.
Should not be less than 150% of 2017 Medicare rate. A stakeholder group will convene annually to review the reimbursement rate. |
The usual and customary rate or an agreed-to rate, meaning the allowable amount as described by the applicable master benefit plan document or policy.* | Commercially reasonable amount based on similar services provided in a similar geographic area. |
| Process for arbitration | Baseball arbitration (arbiter will pick the final payment offer submitted by either the health plan or the provider/facility), if carrier and provider do not agree to initial payment.
Arbiter will consider: |
Arbiter will either require the provider to accept the payment issued by the carrier as payment in full, or to demand that the carrier remit an additional amount requested by the provider. | Mediation may be requested through the Department of Insurance.[7]
In the case of mediation of facilities, the mediator shall determine if the amount charged by provider is excessive, and if the amount paid by the insurer is unreasonably low or not the usual and customary rate. In the case of mediation for other providers, the mediator shall take into account whether there is gross disparity between the amount charged by the provider and how much the provider or similarly qualified providers receive for similar services. Other factors may include:* |
Baseball arbitration (arbiter will pick the final payment offer submitted by either the health plan or the provider/facility), if carrier and provider do not agree to initial payment.
Arbiter may consider: |
|
| Data collection and reporting tools | State APCD | Benchmarking database maintained by a nonprofit organization specified by the insurance commissioner.
Enables the commissioner to require carriers to report: |
The insurance commissioner is charged with selecting an organization to maintain a benchmarking database. | Requires state APCD to establish a dataset that provider, facilities, and carrier s may use to determine reasonable rates and to resolve payment disputes.
Carriers shall provide information concerning the utilization of OON providers and cost savings yielded from the law as part of their annual rate filing. |
|
| Penalties | |||||
| Provider must refund excess payments made by consumers |
✓[8] | ✓[9] | ✓[10] | ||
| Penalty for violations | ✓[11] | ✓[12] | ✓[13]* | ✓[14] | |
| Transparency standards | |||||
| Must provide disclosure of potential repercussions of OON services |
● Carriers ● Providers |
● Providers[15] | ● Carriers ● Providers |
||
| Requires cost estimates to consumers |
✓[16] | ✓[17] | |||
| Additional requirements: | On carriers: ● Must arrange for patient transfer within 24 hours of receiving notice that person is stable and can be transferred.On providers: ● Must send notice to carrier, no later than eight hours after person presents at an OON facility ● Must send notice to carrier that the beneficiary has stabilized and may be transferred to an in-network facility within 24 hours of stabilization |
On carriers: ● Must make claims status information available to providers.On providers: ● Must post in a publicly accessible manner and online information about which carriers it contracts with. ● Must notify the carrier of a beneficiary’s admission within a reasonable period after stabilization. ● Any communication regarding bills, shall clearly state that the beneficiary is responsible only for in-network cost sharing amounts. |
On carriers: ● Explanation of benefits must include information about balance billing protections; the total amount the provider may bill the enrollee under the enrollee’s health benefit plan; and an itemization of cost-sharing included in that total.* [18] On providers: ● Facilities must post notice that o it may charge a facility fee o it may charge rates comparable to a hospital emergency room o the facility or a physician at the facility may be OON and bill separately o Lists all the carriers it contracts with ● Facilities must provide patients with a disclosure that:* o Lists the facility fees that may result from the visit o Lists the carriers the facility is in-network with o Lists other cost information such as median facility fees and observation fees. ● Prohibits facilities from using logos or language to misrepresent that it might be in an insurers network. |
On carriers: ● Must immediately arrange for an alternate plan of treatment if an agreement on post-stabilization services cannot be reached with the emergency provider. ● Must update provider directory within 30 days after the addition or termination of a provider.On providers: ● The provider must contact the carrier within 30 minutes of stabilization before rendering further services. ● Must post online information about which carriers it contracts with. ● Must provide carriers with updated lists of non-employed providers working at the facility |
*Indicates changes made by the new Texas law.
[1] Texas’ 2019 law amends and enhances already existing protections in the state. Changes made by the new law are noted by asterisk.
[2] Does not apply when: 1) Services are received at a critical access hospital; 2) A person is covered by insurance sold outside of the state; 3) Services provided more than 24 hours after notification has been provided and a person has been stabilized.
[3] In the case of a beneficiary who cannot reasonably access a preferred provider, the protections extend to 1) medical screening and examinations require to determine if a medical emergency exists; 2) necessary emergency services to treat and stabilize; 3) services originating in an emergency facility following stabilization; and 4) supplies related to the services rendered by that facility.
[4] Does not apply if the consumer affirmatively consented to receive OON services.
[5] Only applies when; 1) A participating provider is unavailable; 2) Medically necessary care is unavailable in the beneficiary’s network (determined by the provider in conjunction with the health plan); or 3) the patient did not consent to receive services from the OON provider.
[6] Does not apply in the case of a beneficiary that elects, in writing and in advance, to receive services from the out-of-network provider, or in the case that the provider does provide the enrollee with a written disclosure that they are out-of-network and provides an estimate of the projected amount the enrollee will be responsible for. Explicitly includes protections for OON services delivered by diagnostic imaging or labs.
[7] Prior law allowed mediation requests only in the case of claims over $500 and that were for either emergency services, or services rendered by a provider or supplier at an in-network facility.
[8] Refund must be issued within 60 days, or interest will accrue.
[9] Refund must be issued within 45 days, or interest will accrue.
[10] Refund must be issued within 30 days, or interest will accrue.
[11] Punished by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars, or by imprisonment in the county jail for not more than one year, or both.
[12] Insurance superintendent may impose a fine on any provider that offers an unlawful rebate or inducement to entice a person to seek OON services
[13] The Attorney General may bring civil action against entities that exhibit a pattern of repeatedly violating billing protections. Authorizes applicable agencies to take action against providers or facilities who violate billing protections. The Secretary of State may suspend or revoke a license, or bring civil action against entities who violate the disclosure requirements outlined under Texas law. The Department of Health may impose penalties up to $1,000 for certain violations.
[14] Authorizes the Department of Health or an appropriate authority to levy fines against providers or facilities who violate these policies. Commissioner may levy a fine against carriers who violate these policies. Repeated violation may constitute unprofessional conduct and risk licensure of a provider or facility.
[15] If an OON provider has advanced notice that the beneficiary is OON, they must notice the beneficiary of their OON status and recommend the beneficiary contact their carrier to discuss options.
[16] A provider must issue a cost estimate within three days if requested by a patient.
[17] Carrier must provide an estimate of out-of-pocket costs for OON services upon request.
[18] Applicable to Health Maintenance Organizations.
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For individuals living with complex, often chronic conditions, and their families, palliative care can provide relief from symptoms, improve satisfaction and outcomes, and help address critical mental and spiritual needs during difficult times. Now more than ever, there is growing recognition of the importance of palliative care services for individuals with serious illness, such as advance care planning, pain and symptom management, care coordination, and team-based, multi-disciplinary support. These services can help patients and families cope with the symptoms and stressors of disease, better anticipate and avoid crises, and reduce unnecessary and/or unwanted care. While this model is grounded in evidence that demonstrates improved quality of life, better outcomes, and reduced cost for patients, only a fraction of individuals who could benefit from palliative care receive it. 























































































































































