The broken 340B program, designed to provide affordable care for at-risk patients, creates massive profits for providers without necessarily improving patient health outcomes and should be reformed, finds a new issue brief released today by the Center for Medical Economics and Innovation at the nonpartisan Pacific Research Institute.
SACRAMENTO, Calif., Nov. 16, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- The broken 340B program, designed to provide affordable care for at-risk patients, creates massive profits for providers without necessarily improving patient health outcomes and should be reformed, finds a new issue brief released today by the Center for Medical Economics and Innovation at the nonpartisan Pacific Research Institute. Click here to download a copy of the brief "The 340B program is growing unsustainably and isn't improving health outcomes for at-risk patients," said Dr. Wayne Winegarden, the Center's director and the study's author. "340B providers reap the benefits of the program's higher revenues but provide less charitable care than average hospitals. To ensure needy patients can access affordable care, the 340B program must be reformed to put patients first." The 340B program is a well-intentioned government program to help ensure patients have access to care. Under the 340B program, drug manufacturers are required to sell hospitals and other covered entities medications at steeply discounted prices. The program has turned into a large profit-generator because 340B hospitals pocket the difference between their costs – based on discounted prices from drug manufactures – and reimbursements from Medicare or insurers based on undiscounted prices. These rebates result in profits that can be more than 9 to 10 times those earned by non-340B providers for administering the same drugs. To show how unsustainable 340B has become, Winegarden cites data showing 340B's compound average annual growth was 22.1% between 2016 and 2021, compared to annual list price drug spending growth of 5.9%, and annual net price drug spending growth of 4.6%. To restore the program to its original mission, Winegarden recommends:
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