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Pennsylvania Urged To Crack Down On Drug Benefit Managers

Rich Pedroncelli
/
AP
In this photo, a pharmacist fills a prescription for the anti-diarrhea drug diphenoxylate. Pennsylvania's auditor general is urging lawmakers to rein in pharmacy benefit managers to avoid driving up costs of medicine.

Pennsylvania's independently elected fiscal watchdog is urging state lawmakers to rein in pharmacy benefit managers, saying the companies are allowed to operate in secrecy in ways that let them profit while driving up health care costs.

Auditor General Eugene DePasquale released an 18-page report Tuesday saying many other states have taken action to lower drug costs by forcing more transparency on pharmacy benefit managers.

DePasquale's report says Pennsylvania's Medicaid program paid nearly $2.9 billion in 2017 to pharmacy benefit managers, an increase of 100 percent in four years.

But DePasquale says there's no way to verify how much went to profits because pharmacy benefit managers are subcontractors.

DePasquale's making recommendations to state lawmakers that he says will allow Pennsylvania to increase transparency in drug pricing and potentially cut taxpayer costs.

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