N.Y. Public Health Law 280-A – Pharmacy benefit managers
§ 280-a. Pharmacy benefit managers. 1. Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
Terms Used In N.Y. Public Health Law 280-A
- Appeal: A request made after a trial, asking another court (usually the court of appeals) to decide whether the trial was conducted properly. To make such a request is "to appeal" or "to take an appeal." One who appeals is called the appellant.
- Beneficiary: A person who is entitled to receive the benefits or proceeds of a will, trust, insurance policy, retirement plan, annuity, or other contract. Source: OCC
- Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
- drug: means a drug defined in subdivision seven of § 6802 of the education law, for which a prescription is required under the federal food, drug and cosmetic act. See N.Y. Public Health Law 270
- Obligation: An order placed, contract awarded, service received, or similar transaction during a given period that will require payments during the same or a future period.
- Preferred drug: means a prescription drug that is either (a) in a therapeutic class that is included in the preferred drug program and is one of the drugs on the preferred drug list in that class or (b) a preferred drug under a manufacturer agreement. See N.Y. Public Health Law 270
- Prior authorization: means a process requiring the prescriber or the dispenser to verify with the applicable state public health plan or its authorized agent that the drug is appropriate for the needs of the specific patient. See N.Y. Public Health Law 270
- Prosecute: To charge someone with a crime. A prosecutor tries a criminal case on behalf of the government.
(a) "Health plan " means an entity for which a pharmacy benefit manager provides pharmacy benefit management services and that is a health benefit plan or other entity that approves, provides, arranges for, or pays or reimburses in whole or in part for health care items or services, to include at least prescription drugs, for a substantial number of beneficiaries who work or reside in this state. The superintendent shall determine, in his or her sole discretion, by regulation how the phrase "a substantial number of beneficiaries who work or reside in this state" shall be interpreted.
(b) "Pharmacy benefit management services" means the management or administration of prescription drug benefits for a health plan, directly or through another entity, and regardless of whether the pharmacy benefit manager and the health plan are related, or associated by ownership, common ownership, organization or otherwise; including the procurement of prescription drugs to be dispensed to patients, or the administration or management of prescription drug benefits, including but not limited to, any of the following:
(i) mail service pharmacy;
(ii) claims processing, retail network management, or payment of claims to pharmacies for dispensing prescription drugs;
(iii) clinical or other formulary or preferred drug list development or management;
(iv) negotiation or administration of rebates, discounts, payment differentials, or other incentives, for the inclusion of particular prescription drugs in a particular category or to promote the purchase of particular prescription drugs;
(v) patient compliance, therapeutic intervention, or generic substitution programs;
(vi) disease management;
(vii) drug utilization review or prior authorization;
(viii) adjudication of appeals or grievances related to prescription drug coverage;
(ix) contracting with network pharmacies; and
(x) controlling the cost of covered prescription drugs.
(c) "Pharmacy benefit manager" means any entity that performs pharmacy benefit management services for a health plan.
(d) "Maximum allowable cost price" means a maximum reimbursement amount set by the pharmacy benefit manager for therapeutically equivalent multiple source generic drugs.
(e) "Controlling person" means any person or other entity who or which directly or indirectly has the power to direct or cause to be directed the management, control or activities of a pharmacy benefit manager.
(f) "Covered individual" means a member, participant, enrollee, contract holder or policy holder or beneficiary of a health plan.
(g) "License" means a license to be a pharmacy benefit manager, under Article 29 of the insurance law.
(h) "Spread pricing" means the practice of a pharmacy benefit manager retaining an additional amount of money in addition to the amount paid to the pharmacy to fill a prescription.
(i) "Superintendent" means the superintendent of financial services.
2. Duty, accountability and transparency. (a) (i) The pharmacy benefit manager shall have a duty and obligation to perform pharmacy benefit management services with care, skill, prudence, diligence, and professionalism.
(ii) In addition to the duties as may be prescribed by regulation pursuant to Article 29 of the insurance law:
(1) A pharmacy benefit manager interacting with a covered individual shall have the same duty to a covered individual as the health plan for whom it is performing pharmacy benefit management services.
(2) A pharmacy benefit manager shall have a duty of good faith and fair dealing with all parties, including but not limited to covered individuals and pharmacies, with whom it interacts in the performance of pharmacy benefit management services.
(b) All funds received by the pharmacy benefit manager in relation to providing pharmacy benefit management services shall be received by the pharmacy benefit manager in trust and shall be used or distributed only pursuant to the pharmacy benefit manager's contract with the health plan or applicable law; including any administrative fee or payment to the pharmacy benefit manager expressly provided for in the contract to compensate the pharmacy benefit manager for its services. Any funds received by the pharmacy benefit manager through spread pricing shall be subject to this paragraph. In addition to any other power conferred by law the superintendent shall have the authority to prescribe rules concerning pharmacy benefit manager administrative fees, including limitations on their form and use.
(c) The pharmacy benefit manager shall account, annually or more frequently to the health plan for any pricing discounts, rebates of any kind, inflationary payments, credits, clawbacks, fees, grants, chargebacks, reimbursements, or other benefits received by the pharmacy benefit manager. The health plan shall have access to all financial and utilization information of the pharmacy benefit manager in relation to pharmacy benefit management services provided to the health plan.
(d) The pharmacy benefit manager shall disclose in writing to the health plan the terms and conditions of any contract or arrangement between the pharmacy benefit manager and any party relating to pharmacy benefit management services provided to the health plan including but not limited to, dispensing fees paid to the pharmacies.
(e) The pharmacy benefit manager shall disclose in writing to the health plan any activity, policy, practice, contract or arrangement of the pharmacy benefit manager that directly or indirectly presents any conflict of interest with the pharmacy benefit manager's relationship with or obligation to the health plan.
(f) Any information required to be disclosed by a pharmacy benefit manager to a health plan under this section that is reasonably designated by the pharmacy benefit manager as proprietary or trade secret information shall be kept confidential by the health plan, except as required or permitted by law, including disclosure necessary to prosecute or defend any legitimate legal claim or cause of action. Designation of information as proprietary or trade secret information under this subdivision shall have no effect on the obligations of any pharmacy benefit manager or health plan to provide that information to the department of health or the department of financial services.
(g) The superintendent, in consultation with the commissioner may make regulations defining, limiting, and relating to the duties, obligations, requirements and other provisions relating to pharmacy benefit managers under this subdivision.
3. Prescriptions. A pharmacy benefit manager may not substitute or cause the substituting of one prescription drug for another in dispensing a prescription, or alter or cause the altering of the terms of a prescription, except with the approval of the prescriber or as explicitly required or permitted by law, including regulations of the department of financial services or the department of health. The superintendent and commissioner, in coordination with each other, are authorized to promulgate regulations to determine when substitution of prescription drugs may be required or permitted.
4. Appeals. A pharmacy benefit manager shall, with respect to contracts between a pharmacy benefit manager and a pharmacy or, alternatively, a pharmacy benefit manager and a pharmacy's contracting agent, such as a pharmacy services administrative organization, include a reasonable process to appeal, investigate and resolve disputes regarding multi-source generic drug pricing. The appeals process shall include the following provisions:
(a) the right to appeal by the pharmacy and/or the pharmacy's contracting agent shall be limited to thirty days following the initial claim submitted for payment;
(b) a telephone number through which a network pharmacy may contact the pharmacy benefit manager for the purpose of filing an appeal and an electronic mail address of the individual who is responsible for processing appeals;
(c) the pharmacy benefit manager shall send an electronic mail message acknowledging receipt of the appeal. The pharmacy benefit manager shall respond in an electronic message to the pharmacy and/or the pharmacy's contracting agent filing the appeal within seven business days indicating its determination. If the appeal is determined to be valid, the maximum allowable cost for the drug shall be adjusted for the appealing pharmacy effective as of the date of the original claim for payment. The pharmacy benefit manager shall require the appealing pharmacy to reverse and rebill the claim in question in order to obtain the corrected reimbursement;
(d) if an update to the maximum allowable cost is warranted, the pharmacy benefit manager or covered entity shall adjust the maximum allowable cost of the drug effective for all similarly situated pharmacies in its network in the state on the date the appeal was determined to be valid; and
(e) if an appeal is denied, the pharmacy benefit manager shall identify the national drug code of a therapeutically equivalent drug, as determined by the federal Food and Drug Administration, that is available for purchase by pharmacies in this state from wholesalers registered pursuant to subdivision four of § 6808 of the education law at a price which is equal to or less than the maximum allowable cost for that drug as determined by the pharmacy benefit manager.
5. Contract provisions. No pharmacy benefit manager shall, with respect to contracts between such pharmacy benefit manager and a pharmacy or, alternatively, such pharmacy benefit manager and a pharmacy's contracting agent, such as a pharmacy services administrative organization:
(a) prohibit or penalize a pharmacist or pharmacy from disclosing to an individual purchasing a prescription medication information regarding:
(i) the cost of the prescription medication to the individual, or
(ii) the availability of any therapeutically equivalent alternative medications or alternative methods of purchasing the prescription medication, including but not limited to, paying a cash price; or
(b) charge or collect from an individual a copayment that exceeds the total submitted charges by the pharmacy for which the pharmacy is paid. If an individual pays a copayment, the pharmacy shall retain the adjudicated costs and the pharmacy benefit manager shall not redact or recoup the adjudicated cost.