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Dana Nessel for Attorney General: AG Nessel Joins Bipartisan Coalition to Regulate Abusive Practices of Pharmacy Benefit Managers

Michigan

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LANSING — Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel  joined a bipartisan coalition of 35 attorneys general from across the  country in an amicus brief to the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals  supporting Oklahoma’s laws that regulate abusive behavior of pharmacy  benefit managers (PBMs). Oklahoma’s laws regulating PBMs are similar to  newly enacted laws in Michigan.  

Oklahoma’s laws are being challenged in the latest of a string of  lawsuits by the PBM industry’s national lobbying association,  Pharmaceutical Care Management Association (PCMA). In this case, the  PCMA alleges that federal law (ERISA and Medicare Part D) preempts  Oklahoma’s laws. The district court held that federal law did not  preempt the state laws. PCMA appealed to the Tenth Circuit, which will  decide whether ERISA or Medicare preempts Oklahoma’s laws.

AG Nessel and the bipartisan coalition seek to protect Michigan  consumers by assuring that Michigan and all states can regulate PBMs. As  the coalition writes in the amicus brief to the Tenth Circuit, “states  have an interest in preserving states’ authority to regulate companies  doing business in their states, protecting their residents’ access to  healthcare, and curbing abusive business practices. To advance these  interests, nearly all states regulate pharmacy benefit managers.” PCMA’s  broad approach to federal preemption, however, would “severely impede  states’ abilities to protect their residents and potentially upend  licensing and regulatory structures in nearly every state.”

“I have made it clear that reducing prescription drug costs is a top  priority for me,” Nessel said. “The actions of unregulated PBMs drive up  the cost of prescription drugs. Without meaningful regulation, PBMs  will continue to operate irresponsibly, motivated only by profits. These  entities need to know they cannot set their own rules to the detriment  of pharmacies and consumer health and well-being. I have joined actions  that support regulating PBMs in the past and I gladly join my colleagues  now in supporting Oklahoma's necessary law.” 

The case in which AG Nessel filed the brief, PCMA v. Mulready, is the second case to reach a federal court of appeals since the U.S. Supreme Court made clear in PCMA v. Rutledge in 2020 that PBMs cannot evade state consumer protection regulations  under the cloak of Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)  preemption. In Rutledge, the Supreme Court held that ERISA  preemption is limited to the questions of who receives benefits and what  benefits they receive, rejecting PCMA’s challenge to Arkansas’s  pharmacy-reimbursement regulations. AG Nessel was part of a bipartisan  coalition of 46 attorneys general who supported Arkansas in an amicus brief to the Supreme Court.

Following Rutledge, in 2021, AG Nessel joined another bipartisan coalition of 34 attorneys general in an amicus brief to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of North Dakota’s laws regulating PBMs. In that case, PCMA v. Wehbi,  the Eighth Circuit agreed with the states that ERISA did not prohibit  states from generally regulating PBMs to protect consumers, such as by  prohibiting PBMs from imposing conditions on pharmacies that reduced  consumer choice and pharmacy access. The court also rejected PCMA’s  sweeping approach to Medicare preemption and upheld several of North  Dakota’s laws as applied to Part D health plans.

Abusive business practices of PBMs    

PBMs are intermediaries in the prescription pharmaceutical industry  between prescription-drug plans, pharmacies, and drug manufacturers.  PBMs profit from fees charged to market participants and by reimbursing  pharmacies less than the PBM is paid by plans for dispensing  medications. PBMs have imposed self-serving protections that reduce  competition, limit prescription medication access, and impose various  confidentiality requirements. For example, PBMs have tried to force  consumers to use PBM-affiliated pharmacies at the expense of  independent, often more convenient, pharmacies, by giving consumers  preferential rates if they use a PBM-affiliated pharmacy, or by denying  coverage at non-affiliated pharmacies altogether. 

These business practices have harmed consumers, pharmacies, and  states. Rural and independent pharmacies have especially struggled to  survive when PBMs impose financially unsustainable conditions. The PBM  industry, however, reaps hundreds of billions of dollars annually. 

PBMs have been largely unregulated for decades. States like Michigan,  Oklahoma, and others have stepped up with PBM regulation to protect  consumers and pharmacies. 

Regulating PBMs in Michigan  

In 2022, Michigan passed legislation to regulate PBMs and combat some  of the abusive practices in the industry. This included the Pharmacy  Benefit Manager Licensure and Regulation Act which, beginning January 1,  2023, charges the Michigan Department of Insurance and Financial  Services (DIFS) with the responsibility to regulate PBMs’ licenses. The  Act further requires PBMs to file transparency reports with DIFS to  ensure Michiganders have access to information about the backend cost  and profits of the medications they are prescribed.

In addition to providing greater oversight of PBMs by DIFS, this Act  and other companion legislation is aimed at making medications more  affordable for Michigan residents. The legislation prohibits a PBM from  requiring a patient to pay a co-pay that is higher than the selling cost  of the drug dispensed to him or her. Additionally, it prohibits a PBM  from excluding or discriminating against a pharmacy solely because the  pharmacy is not affiliated with the PBM, thereby limiting options for  consumers. 

Joining AG Nessel in filing the brief are Minnesota Attorney General  Keith Ellison, who led the bipartisan coalition, and the attorneys  general of Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut,  Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois,  Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi,  Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina,  North Dakota, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas,  Utah, Virginia, and Washington.  

Original source can be found here.

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