North Alabama pharmacist worries about business future, legislature considers drug dispensing fees

MORGAN COUNTY, Ala. (WHNT) — A bill approved by the Alabama Senate sets a $10 drug dispensing fee for pharmacists while also seeking to regulate the companies that administer prescription drug plans for health insurance providers.

Alabama’s independent pharmacists have argued that the current reimbursement system for independent pharmacies in the state is driving them out of business.

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Senate Bill 252, which takes up the dispensing fee proposal for private insurance plans, was approved by the Alabama House Insurance Committee Wednesday, sending it to the full House for consideration.

Along with the proposed dispensing fee, the bill would include regulations on pharmacy benefit managers – PBMs – which administer prescription drug plans around the U.S. The largest PBMs in the U.S. are CVS Caremark, OptumRx, Express Scripts and Prime Therapeutics, according to the American Medical Association.

The Alabama bill calls for a $10.64 dispensing fee for pharmacists. It also directs that PBMs take 100 percent of the rebate money they collect from drug makers and pay it to Alabama health insurance providers. The rebates are money paid by drug makers to PBMs to be included on lists of approved drugs in prescription drug plans administered by PBMs for insurers. Supporters of SB 252 say those rebate payments will cover the proposed pharmacist dispensing fees, with money still left over for health insurance providers.

But Alabama business groups have pushed back on the bill. During the House Insurance Committee hearing Wednesday, William Newman, director of governmental affairs for the Business Council of Alabama, spoke against the proposed bill.

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“While the bill aims to alleviate burdens on pharmacists in Alabama, we’re concerned its approach could place undue financial burden on Alabama’s businesses,” Newman told the committee. “Outlined in the bill there is a mechanism for pharmacists to be reimbursed for the costs of the drugs they buy, that is the average acquisition costs of the drug, plus a $10.64 dispensing fee for every prescription filled. We believe this will ultimately result in higher health care expenses for businesses across the state.”

Jason Spencer, owner of Quality Discount Drugs in Eva, told News 19 the current system is unsustainable. Spencer said independent pharmacists, often in rural areas, provide multiple services to people in their communities that go far beyond just dispensing prescriptions.