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SNAP Asks PA Delegation to Co-Sponsor, Support 340B Bill

SNAP has asked members of Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation to co-sponsor and support bills (H.R. 3203 and S. 773) that would temporarily enable Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals and others already eligible for the 340B prescription drug discount program to remain eligible for the program despite short-term changes in their admissions patterns brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Because of the manner in which the COVID-19 pandemic affected hospital admissions, some hospitals that have been eligible to participate in the 340B program could lose that eligibility for what is, in effect, a one-year anomaly.  The proposed bills would temporarily enable current 340B participants to retain their eligibility for the program until hospitals’ inpatient volume returns to normal and they can demonstrate whether they still meet the criteria to continue participating in the program.

340B has long been a vital tool through which Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals receive significant discounts on the prescription drugs their low-income patients need, enabling these hospitals and other eligible providers to stretch scarce resources in services to the communities that depend on them.

Learn more from SNAP’s letter to members of Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation.

2021-06-15T17:52:15+00:00June 15th, 2021|340b, Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals, Safety-Net Association of Pennsylvania|Comments Off on SNAP Asks PA Delegation to Co-Sponsor, Support 340B Bill

Bill Seeks to Block 340B Cut

Legislation introduced in Congress would block the attempt by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to slash $1.6 billion in annual payments to hospitals for prescription drugs for outpatients prescribed through the federal section 340B prescription drug discount program.
Earlier this month CMS finalized its plan to reduce controversial 340B payments and shift $1.6 billion in savings into Medicare provider payments.  If adopted, the bipartisan legislation co-sponsored by Representatives David McKinley (R-WV) and Mike Thompson (D-CA) would prevent the reduction of 340B payments, which are made to hospitals that care for especially large proportions of low-income patients.
The 340B program is an essential source of resources for private Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals and many stand to lose hundreds of thousands of dollars, or even millions of dollars a year, if the payment cut is not reversed.
Go here to see Rep. McKinley’s news release on the bill and here to see the bill itself, which is H.R. 4392, “To provide that the provision of the Medicare Program: Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment and Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment Systems and Quality Reporting Programs final regulation relating to changes in the payment amount for certain drugs and biologicals purchased under the 340B drug discount program shall have no force or effect, and for other purposes.”

2017-11-17T06:00:20+00:00November 17th, 2017|Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals|Comments Off on Bill Seeks to Block 340B Cut

U.S. House Committee Looks at 340B

Are hospitals using the savings generated by their participation in the section 340B prescription drug discount program to help their low-income and uninsured patients?
That’s what the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Health Subcommittee is asking.
Earlier this year the committee requested such information from the Health Services and Resources Administration, which runs the 340B program, and now it’s asking hospitals as well.
Specifically, the subcommittee sent five-page letters to 19 providers that participate in the 340B program asking them about:

  • the quantity of 340B-purchased drugs they dispense to Medicare beneficiaries, Medicaid beneficiaries, and those with private insurance
  • the quantity of 340B-purchased drugs they dispense to uninsured patients
  • their savings from the 340B program and how they calculate those savings
  • how much charity care they provide
  • how they use 340B savings to serve vulnerable populations

The letters address many other 340B-related issues as well.
Most Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals participate in the 340B program and view it as a critical tool in their ability to meet the needs of their many low-income patients.
Learn more about the Health Subcommittee’s letter by reading this news release describing this initiative and go here to view the letters the subcommittee sent to selected 340B providers.
 

2017-09-22T06:00:05+00:00September 22nd, 2017|Uncategorized|Comments Off on U.S. House Committee Looks at 340B

New 340B Rules Expected Soon

The federal Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) is expected to release new rules governing its section 340B prescription drug discount pricing program in the near future.
The new rules have long been in development and were in the verge of being published late last year when the agency decided to try another approach to addressing some of the program’s problems, but now, new draft guidelines are being reviewed by the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in anticipation of being published soon in the Federal Register.
Bookshelf with law booksThe 340B program, which provides discounts on prescription drugs to hospitals and others that serve large numbers of low-income patients, has encountered controversy in recent years with providers complaining about the lack of transparency in drug manufacturers’ prices and the manufacturers claiming that the program’s benefits are being extended to some patients who do not qualify for the assistance.
The 340B program is a vital resource for most Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals.
To learn more about the program and what might be expected when the new rules are proposed, see this CQ HealthBeat article presented by the Commonwealth Fund.

2015-05-13T06:00:39+00:00May 13th, 2015|Pennsylvania safety-net hospitals|Comments Off on New 340B Rules Expected Soon
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