Florida Pharmacists Support Legislation to Reform PBM Practices
PRESS RELEASE
Alexandria, Va. Mar. 26, 2014 - Pharmacists strongly support two proposed bills that would take reasonable steps to protect small business community pharmacists in Florida as well as the patients they serve, the
SB1014 would provide for a reasonable degree of transparency into reimbursement for the cost of generic drugs. SB702 would allow legitimate oversight of pharmacies to continue while reining in abusive audit practices that harm patient care, small business community pharmacies and state revenue. These bills would collectively provide common sense small business safeguards while resulting in no cost increase to the system, despite
Billion-dollar pharmaceutical middlemen known as "
Community pharmacies are often forced to pay thousands of dollars as the result of an audit for nothing more than basic clerical or typographical mistakes, many of which are not the fault of the pharmacist or pharmacy staff. Bipartisan legislation similar to SB702 has been enacted in 29 other states, with additional state legislation only waiting on the governor's signature. These bills and enacted laws provide for reasonable standards for pharmacy audits while allowing them to continue for their intended purpose of penalizing true fraud and abuse.
Moreover, PBMs are lax in raising generic drug reimbursement rates even though pharmacy costs of acquiring many generic drugs have been skyrocketing due a wide variety of factors over the past couple of years. Thus PBMs pay pharmacies at outdated, lower prices while charging health plans at a higher rate. When generic drug reimbursement rates finally are raised to reflect market costs, it is rarely done retroactively.
PBMs claim that transparency will increase costs they charge, while in reality they only fear the light that will be shed on the millions of dollars they are pocketing through current practices. Recently national media outlets such as USA Today and Fortune have examined the shadowy world of PBMs and raised significant questions about PBM business practices, in articles entitled "
"When pharmacists dispense the right medication to the right patient at the right time and for the agreed-upon reimbursement, it should not be a punishable offense," said NCPA CEO B. Douglas Hoey, RPh, MBA. "Unfortunately, too often pharmacists are plagued both by egregious audits focused on hyper-technical clerical issues as well as losses of $60, $100 or more per prescription due to outdated reimbursement rates. Not only do these PBM practices undermine patient care, but they also siphon dollars away from local communities and send them out-of-state to Fortune 500 pharmaceutical middlemen."
"NCPA is proud to support the work of the state's lawmakers and a host of pharmacy organizations including the
Upon introduction of SB 702, the bill's author State Sen.
Newsletter
Stay informed on drug updates, treatment guidelines, and pharmacy practice trends—subscribe to Pharmacy Times for weekly clinical insights.
Related Articles
- Effectively Managing Immunizations in the Long-Term Care Setting
September 18th 2025
- Creating a Culture of Quality in Fast-Melt Tablet Development
September 18th 2025
- Advise Patients About Self-Care Measures to Treat Mild to Moderate GI Issues
September 18th 2025