health California’s Medicaid drug program suffers under private sector
The new Medicaid drug program debuted this January, with a private company in charge. But it was woefully unprepared, and thousands of low-income Californians were left without critical medications for weeks, some waiting on hold for hours when they called to get help.
What happened in the two years between the contract award and the start of the program is a case study in what can go wrong when government outsources core functions to the private sector.
for prescription drugs and pharmacy services and settled to the tune of
KHN has learned
Handing over control
In his 2019 inauguration speech, Newsom vowed to use California’s “market power and our moral power to demand fairer prices” from the “drug companies that gouge Californians with sky-high prices.”
Drug spending by the state for its Medicaid, prison, state hospital, and other programs had been climbing 20% a year since 2012, so the first-term Democrat issued an executive order requiring
Newsom no longer wanted to allow the state’s two dozen
That December,
Even though Magellan’s biggest money maker is mental health insurance, it met a key requirement of the state’s call for bids: It didn’t provide health insurance to any Medicaid enrollees in
Magellan was supposed to take over the drug program in
But the state bent over backward to make it work, delaying implementation of the program while Magellan set up firewalls, sectioned off its business operations from
State regulators reviewed the merger in a 30-minute public hearing in
The state
Centene’s legal troubles
In the past 10 months,
The company has set aside
From the start, other
They were even more furious when the state allowed one of their biggest competitors to seize the reins — especially given its legal entanglements.
The state
“DHCS takes all allegations of fraud, waste, and abuse seriously and investigates allegations when warranted,” department spokesperson
A Sale in the Offing?
When Medi-Cal Rx debuted
Magellan blamed the problems on staff shortages during the covid-19 omicron surge and missing patient data from insurance plans. State health officials went to great lengths to fix the problems and appeared before legislative committees to provide lawmakers with assurances that the contractor wouldn’t be paid in full.
But
Not long after Magellan took over California’s
“Once you tell a PBM they actually have to behave, that’s when there’s no more money in it. It’s time to go,” said
Yet another ownership change in California’s drug program could bring more disruption to the state’s most vulnerable residents, some of whom are still having trouble getting their drugs and specialty medical supplies after Magellan’s rocky takeover.
“I don’t know what kind of instability that creates internally when there’s a change of this magnitude,” said
Koopmans and other
But consumer advocates say the
“In an ideal world, this is all backroom machinations that people don’t notice — until they do, until there is a problem,” said
This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the
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