DRUG PRODUCT SUBSTITUTE: COST SAVING H.B. 5805:
SUMMARY OF BILL
REPORTED FROM COMMITTEE
House Bill 5805 (as reported without amendment)
Sponsor: Representative John Bizon, M.D.
House Committee: Health Policy
Senate Committee: Health Policy
CONTENT
The bill would amend the Public Health Code to revise certain cost savings requirements associated with the substitution of a generically equivalent drug product or an interchangeable drug product.
The Code specifies that, except as otherwise provided, when a pharmacist receives a prescription for a brand name drug product or biological drug product, he or she may, or when a purchaser requests a lower cost genetically equivalent drug product or interchangeable drug biological drug product, the pharmacist must dispense a lower, but not higher, cost generically equivalent drug product or interchangeable biological drug product if available in the pharmacy.
If a pharmacist dispenses a generically equivalent drug product or interchangeable biological drug product, the pharmacist must pass on the savings in cost to the purchaser or to a third party payment source if the prescription purchase is covered by a third party pay contract. The savings in cost is the difference between the wholesale cost to the pharmacist of the two drug products.
The bill would delete the existing cost-savings provision and, instead, would require a pharmacist to charge the purchaser not more than the current selling price for the lower cost drug product, if the pharmacist substituted a lower cost generically equivalent drug product or interchangeable biological drug product to a purchaser who was not submitting a claim to a third-party payment source.
MCL 333.17755 Legislative Analyst: Stephen Jackson
FISCAL IMPACT
The bill would reflect current practice; therefore, it would not have any fiscal impact on the cost of public employee health insurance or the State's Medicaid program.
Date Completed: 6-7-18 Fiscal Analyst: Steve Angelotti
This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.