• Maeve@kbin.earth
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    8 days ago

    The FTC found that the three largest PBMs — CVS Caremark, Cigna Group’s Express Scripts and UnitedHealth Group’s Optum Rx — now manage nearly 80 percent of prescriptions filled in the United States.

    PBMs leverage their management of formularies, or the list of drugs available on insurance plans, to negotiate rebate payments from drug makers that are supposed to reduce costs for patients and insurers. However, when doctors prescribe costly drugs that do not appear on an insurer’s formulary, patients can be forced to pay the full price out of pocket.

    Earlier this year, New Jersey resident Ann Lewandowski sued her former employer, Johnson & Johnson, after the company’s insurance plan left her facing a $10,000 bill for a three-month supply of a name brand drug for treating multiple sclerosis. A generic version of the drug can be purchased without insurance at a cost between $28 and $77 at major pharmacies, according to the lawsuit, but these options were not available due to the PBM policy.

    • credo@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      We call this vertical integration. Fuck the customer over at every level, from top to bottom.

    • reallykindasorta@slrpnk.net
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      8 days ago

      Last time I changed jobs I had two insurance options so I called them both to see if a specific medication would be covered. Both companies said in order to see if I was covered I would need to sign up for the plan, file some paperwork explain why other medications wouldn’t suffice, and then wait for a decision.

  • ramsorge@discuss.online
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    8 days ago

    But I’m an entrepreneur
    I’m just the middle man
    Choking off the supply
    Gradually
    The suffering is not my fault
    Blame it on the hidden hand
    Still, it’s a mystery to me
    Why people seem to want to be
    Where the money is