Senator Wiener’s Bill to Rein In Pharmaceutical Middlemen Raising Prescription Drug Prices Passes Assembly Health Committee
SACRAMENTO – The Assembly Health Committee passed Senator Scott Wiener’s (D-San Francisco) Senate Bill 41 — reining in abusive behavior by pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) — in a bipartisan vote of 14-0. Prescription drugs are a major driver of high costs: three in ten adults ration or skip medications they are prescribed to take due to cost, and California has fallen behind dozens of other states that have passed laws to contain these costs. The bill heads next to the Assembly Judiciary Committee.
“Cracking down on abusive practices by mega corporations is critical to tackling our affordability crisis in California,” said Senator Wiener. “While other states take major steps to protect consumers from pharmacy benefit manager abuses, they’re going entirely unregulated here. I’m grateful my colleagues chose to advance the bill today and I look forward to advancing it through the legislative process.”
Virtually unregulated in California, PBMs have grown to provide drugs to nearly all insured Americans. As the middlemen of the pharmaceutical industry, they buy prescription drugs from manufacturers and wholesalers and then sell them to pharmacies and health plans. In recent years, PBMs have increasingly taken advantage of their position as essential go-betweens to steer patients to higher-cost drugs and pharmacies, charge high administrative fees, and charge pharmacies more – sometimes much more – for drugs than they paid for them. The result is that PBMs – which play no role in producing prescription drugs – are capturing a larger and larger share of total prescription drug spending at a time when prices are rising precipitously.
The result is that the share of total spending on prescription drugs that goes to drug manufacturers has declined, while over half of every dollar spent on brand medicines goes to pharmaceutical industry middlemen like PBMs.
Families in California are struggling to afford the swiftly rising cost of medications. In 2022, drug spending in California grew by 12%–much faster than the overall rate of inflation–while total health premiums rose by just 4%. Last year, more than half of Californians either skipped or postponed mental and physical healthcare due to cost, putting their safety and wellbeing at risk. One in three reported holding medical debt, including half of low-income Californians.
Unregulated PBMs Have Become Big Business
The PBM industry is highly concentrated, with the three largest PBMs – CVS Caremark, Express Scripts, and OptumRx controlling 79% of the PBM market. They operate under the umbrellas of large insurers Aetna CVS Health, Cigna, and UnitedHealth Group, creating a conflict of interest.
Cost-Raising Practices
Because they buy medications in bulk, PBMs negotiate large rebates with drug manufacturers. However, instead of passing the cost savings on to consumers, PBMs keep part of the rebate as profit. It appears that they often keep a large portion of the rebates as profit, but patients and regulators have very little visibility into the practice because the deals are negotiated behind closed doors.
PBMs frequently charge insurance companies more for prescription drugs than they pay to reimburse pharmacies, a practice known as spread pricing.
Researchers at University of Southern California found that PBMs often steer patients away from low-cost generic drugs and towards higher-priced branded medications that the PBMs have negotiated profitable deals with. As a result,“[g]enerics accounted for 90% of U.S. prescriptions but only 18% of drug expenditures—and about 3% of all U.S. healthcare spending in 2020.
Some PBMs own and operate pharmacies and specialty pharmacies that allow them to steer patients to pharmacies that will further increase their profits, a practice known as patient steering. For example, PBMs offer to purchase a pharmacy, and then deny the pharmacy’s credentials and declare them out of network when they refuse. The PBM then notifies patients their pharmacies are no longer in-network, and offers them alternatives that are owned by the PBM. Such practices deny patients the right to choose their providers and are blatantly anti competitive.
PBMs Are Going Unregulated in California
PBMs have become a major focus of regulation in recent years, with the Federal Trade Commission investigating anticompetitive practices in the industry and multiple bipartisan efforts moving through Congress. PBMs are staffing up their teams of lobbyists to navigate the heightened scrutiny.
States across the country have taken action to combat the growing challenge presented by PBMs, with Michigan and Florida enacting recent landmark packages. Fifteen states ban spread pricing, while California does not.
One challenge is the lack of a clear regulator for PBMs. 25 states PBMs to be licensed by state boards, but California requires a less stringent form of registration.
SB 41 Reins In PBM Abuses
SB 41 requires that all PBMs be licensed and disclose basic information regarding their business practices to the licensing entity. In addition, SB 41 enacts other pro-consumer requirements and prohibitions:
- Requires all PBMs to be licensed through the California Department of Insurance
- Prohibits steering patients to affiliated pharmacies and instead allows patients to choose which in-network pharmacy best meets their needs.
- Prohibits spread pricing, where PBMs charge a plan more for a drug than it pays a pharmacy.
- Requires that the PBM pass through all negotiated drug rebates to the payers or patients.
- Outlaws making any untrue, deceptive, or misleading statements.
- Prohibits PBMs from negotiating exclusive arrangements with manufacturers for drugs, devices, or other products.
- Limits how fees may be charged and requires transparency in fees.
SB 41 is sponsored by the California Pharmacists Association, the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, the Los Angeles LGBT Center, and the California Chronic Care Coalition.
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