Specialty drug legislation pits hospitals vs. insurers at state Capitol [The Wisconsin State Journal]
Jan. 21—Hospitals and patients vied against health insurers and businesses Thursday at a public hearing in the state
Hospitals said the insurer practice, called "white bagging" and sometimes requiring the use of insurer-owned pharmacies, can disrupt patient care and pose safety risks by adding more steps to drug delivery.
"These decisions have negative consequences on patient safety, drug supply chain, cost, waste and administrative burden on patients and medical care providers," said
Insurers said controlling where certain expensive drugs are purchased saves money by avoiding hospital mark-ups.
The bill "removes nearly every existing tool health insurance providers have to encourage lower cost, higher quality, and more convenient drug administration," said
Introduced in November, the bill has many legislative sponsors from both parties, with hospital and patient groups registering in support and insurance and business groups registering against it.
The bill concerns some specialty drugs that must be administered at hospitals, including for conditions including cancer, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease and cerebral palsy. More such drugs have been approved in recent years, and many are expensive.
At the hearing Thursday before the state
The insurer, which Holmes did not identify, said its selected pharmacy would send the medication for her to use at the hospital. Hospitals typically oppose using drugs, in part because they say delivery can be unreliable.
Holmes, who had recently given birth to a second child, eventually got a 90-day reprieve that allowed her to finish her treatment at the
"That was scary, frustrating and honestly unfair," said Holmes, for whom supporters have dubbed the bill "Koreen's Law."
"Alternate sourcing has been important tool for us, and we've been able to use it quite successfully without interruption, without disruption, without delay," Walker said.
"As we continue to disrupt patient-provider relationships, our patients suffer," Ambord said.
"It is quite shocking that the legislature would consider giving hospitals a monopoly on these drugs and push other competition out of the market,"
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