This is the preview version of the Wisconsin State Legislature site.
Please see http://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov for the production version.
This bill provides that a disability insurance policy or self-insured health plan that provides a prescription drug benefit shall make the formulary and all drug costs associated with the formulary available to plan sponsors and individuals prior to selection or enrollment. Further, the bill provides that no disability insurance policy, self-insured health plan, or pharmacy benefit manager acting on behalf of a disability insurance policy or self-insured health plan may remove a prescription drug from the formulary except at the time of coverage renewal. Finally, the bill provides that advanced written notice of a formulary change must be provided no fewer than 90 days before the expected date of the removal or reassignment of a prescription drug on the formulary.
Pharmacy networks
Under the bill, if an enrollee utilizes a pharmacy or pharmacist in a preferred network of pharmacies or pharmacists, no disability insurance policy or self-insured health plan that provides a prescription drug benefit or pharmacy benefit manager that provides services under a contract with a policy or plan may require the enrollee to pay any amount or impose on the enrollee any condition that would not be required if the enrollee utilized a different pharmacy or pharmacist in the same preferred network. Further, the bill provides that any disability insurance policy or self-insured health plan that provides a prescription drug benefit, or any pharmacy benefit manager that provides services under a contract with a policy or plan, that has established a preferred network of pharmacies or pharmacists must reimburse each pharmacy or pharmacist in the same network at the same rates.
Audits of pharmacists and pharmacies
This bill makes several changes to audits of pharmacists and pharmacies. The bill requires an entity that conducts audits of pharmacists and pharmacies to ensure that each pharmacist or pharmacy audited by the entity is audited under the same standards and parameters as other similarly situated pharmacists or pharmacies audited by the entity, that the entity randomizes the prescriptions that the entity audits and the entity audits the same number of prescriptions in each prescription benefit tier, and that each audit of a prescription reimbursed under Part D of the federal Medicare program is conducted separately from audits of prescriptions reimbursed under other policies or plans. The bill prohibits any pharmacy benefit manager from recouping reimbursements made to a pharmacist or pharmacy for errors that involve no actual financial harm to an enrollee or a policy or plan sponsor unless the error is the result of the pharmacist or pharmacy failing to comply with a formal corrective action plan. The bill further prohibits any pharmacy benefit manager from using extrapolation in calculating reimbursements that it may recoup, and instead requires a pharmacy benefit manager to base the finding of errors for which reimbursements will be recouped on an actual error in reimbursement and not a projection of the number of patients served having a similar diagnosis or on a projection of the number of similar orders or refills for similar prescription drugs. The bill provides that a pharmacy benefit manager that recoups any reimbursements made to a pharmacist or pharmacy for an error that was the cause of financial harm must return the recouped reimbursement to the enrollee or the policy or plan sponsor who was harmed by the error.
Pharmacy benefit manager fiduciary and disclosure requirements
The bill provides that a pharmacy benefit manager owes a fiduciary duty to a health benefit plan sponsor. The bill also requires that a pharmacy benefit manager annually disclose all of the following information to the health benefit plan sponsor:
1. The indirect profit received by the pharmacy benefit manager from owning a pharmacy or health service provider.
2. Any payments made to a consultant or broker who works on behalf of the plan sponsor.
3. From the amounts received from drug manufacturers, the amounts retained by the pharmacy benefit manager that are related to the plan sponsors claims or bona fide service fees.
4. The amounts received from network pharmacies and pharmacists and the amount retained by the pharmacy benefit manager.
Discriminatory reimbursement of 340B entities
The bill prohibits a pharmacy benefit manager from taking certain actions with respect to 340B covered entities, pharmacies and pharmacists contracted with 340B covered entities, and patients who obtain prescription drugs from 340B covered entities. The 340B drug pricing program is a federal program that requires pharmaceutical manufacturers that participate in the federal Medicaid program to sell outpatient drugs at discounted prices to certain health care organizations that provide health care for uninsured and low-income patients. Entities that are eligible for discounted prices under the 340B drug pricing program include federally qualified health centers, critical access hospitals, and certain public and nonprofit disproportionate share hospitals. The bill prohibits pharmacy benefit managers from doing any of the following:
1. Refusing to reimburse a 340B covered entity or a pharmacy or pharmacist contracted with a 340B covered entity for dispensing 340B drugs.
2. Imposing requirements or restrictions on 340B covered entities or pharmacies or pharmacists contracted with 340B covered entities that are not imposed on other entities, pharmacies, or pharmacists.
3. Reimbursing a 340B covered entity or a pharmacy or pharmacist contracted with a 340B covered entity for a 340B drug at a rate lower than the amount paid for the same drug to pharmacies or pharmacists that are not 340B covered entities or pharmacies or pharmacists contracted with a 340B covered entity.
4. Assessing a fee, charge back, or other adjustment against a 340B covered entity or a pharmacy or pharmacist contracted with a 340B covered entity after a claim has been paid or adjudicated.
5. Restricting the access of a 340B covered entity or a pharmacy or pharmacist contracted with a 340B covered entity to a third-party payers pharmacy network solely because the 340B covered entity or the pharmacy or pharmacist contracted with a 340B covered entity participates in the 340B drug pricing program.
6. Requiring a 340B covered entity or a pharmacy or pharmacist contracted with a 340B covered entity to contract with a specific pharmacy or pharmacist or health benefit plan in order to access a third-party payers pharmacy network.
7. Imposing a restriction or an additional charge on a patient who obtains a 340B drug from a 340B covered entity or a pharmacy or pharmacist contracted with a 340B covered entity.
8. Restricting the methods by which a 340B covered entity or a pharmacy or pharmacist contracted with a 340B covered entity may dispense or deliver 340B drugs.
9. Requiring a 340B covered entity or a pharmacy or pharmacist contracted with a 340B covered entity to share pharmacy bills or invoices with a pharmacy benefit manager, a third-party payer, or a health benefit plan.
Application of prescription drug payments
Health insurance policies and plans often apply cost-sharing requirements and out-of-pocket maximum amounts to the benefits covered by the policy or plan. A cost-sharing requirement is a share of covered benefits that an insured is required to pay under a health insurance policy or plan. Cost-sharing requirements include copayments, deductibles, and coinsurance. An out-of-pocket maximum amount is a limit specified by a policy or plan on the amount that an insured pays, and, once that limit is reached, the policy or plan covers the benefit entirely. The bill generally requires health insurance policies that offer prescription drug benefits, self-insured health plans, and pharmacy benefit managers acting on behalf of policies or plans to apply amounts paid by or on behalf of an individual covered under the policy or plan for brand name prescription drugs to any cost-sharing requirement or to any calculation of an out-of-pocket maximum amount of the policy or plan. Health insurance policies are referred to in the bill as disability insurance policies.
Prohibited retaliation
The bill prohibits a pharmacy benefit manager from retaliating against a pharmacy or pharmacist for reporting an alleged violation of certain laws applicable to pharmacy benefit managers or for exercising certain rights or remedies. Retaliation includes terminating or refusing to renew a contract with a pharmacy or pharmacist, subjecting a pharmacy or pharmacist to increased audits, or failing to promptly pay a pharmacy or pharmacist any money that the pharmacy benefit manager owes to the pharmacy or pharmacist. The bill provides that a pharmacy or pharmacist may bring an action in court for injunctive relief if a pharmacy benefit manager is retaliating against the pharmacy or pharmacist as provided in the bill. In addition to equitable relief, the court may award a pharmacy or pharmacist that prevails in such an action reasonable attorney fees and costs.
For further information see the state fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:
AB173,1
1Section 1. 40.51 (8) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB173,2,6240.51 (8) Every health care coverage plan offered by the state under sub. (6)
3shall comply with ss. 631.89, 631.90, 631.93 (2), 631.95, 632.72 (2), 632.722,
4632.729, 632.746 (1) to (8) and (10), 632.747, 632.748, 632.798, 632.83, 632.835,
5632.85, 632.853, 632.855, 632.861, 632.862, 632.867, 632.87 (3) to (6), 632.885,
6632.89, 632.895 (5m) and (8) to (17), and 632.896.
AB173,27Section 2. 40.51 (8m) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB173,2,11840.51 (8m) Every health care coverage plan offered by the group insurance
9board under sub. (7) shall comply with ss. 631.95, 632.722, 632.729, 632.746 (1) to
10(8) and (10), 632.747, 632.748, 632.798, 632.83, 632.835, 632.85, 632.853, 632.855,
11632.861, 632.862, 632.867, 632.885, 632.89, and 632.895 (11) to (17).
AB173,312Section 3. 66.0137 (4) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB173,2,191366.0137 (4) Self-insured health plans. If a city, including a 1st class city,
14or a village provides health care benefits under its home rule power, or if a town
15provides health care benefits, to its officers and employees on a self-insured basis,
16the self-insured plan shall comply with ss. 49.493 (3) (d), 631.89, 631.90, 631.93 (2),
17632.722, 632.729, 632.746 (10) (a) 2. and (b) 2., 632.747 (3), 632.798, 632.85,
18632.853, 632.855, 632.861, 632.862, 632.867, 632.87 (4) to (6), 632.885, 632.89,
19632.895 (9) to (17), 632.896, and 767.513 (4).
AB173,420Section 4. 120.13 (2) (g) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB173,3,221120.13 (2) (g) Every self-insured plan under par. (b) shall comply with ss.
2249.493 (3) (d), 631.89, 631.90, 631.93 (2), 632.722, 632.729, 632.746 (10) (a) 2. and

1(b) 2., 632.747 (3), 632.798, 632.85, 632.853, 632.855, 632.861, 632.862, 632.867,
2632.87 (4) to (6), 632.885, 632.89, 632.895 (9) to (17), 632.896, and 767.513 (4).
AB173,53Section 5. 185.983 (1) (intro.) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB173,3,114185.983 (1) (intro.) Every voluntary nonprofit health care plan operated by a
5cooperative association organized under s. 185.981 shall be exempt from chs. 600 to
6646, with the exception of ss. 601.04, 601.13, 601.31, 601.41, 601.42, 601.43, 601.44,
7601.45, 611.26, 611.67, 619.04, 623.11, 623.12, 628.34 (10), 631.17, 631.89, 631.93,
8631.95, 632.72 (2), 632.722, 632.729, 632.745 to 632.749, 632.775, 632.79, 632.795,
9632.798, 632.85, 632.853, 632.855, 632.861, 632.862, 632.867, 632.87 (2) to (6),
10632.885, 632.89, 632.895 (5) and (8) to (17), 632.896, and 632.897 (10) and chs. 609,
11620, 630, 635, 645, and 646, but the sponsoring association shall:
AB173,612Section 6. 609.83 of the statutes is amended to read:
AB173,3,1613609.83 Coverage of drugs and devices; application of payments.
14Limited service health organizations, preferred provider plans, and defined
15network plans are subject to ss. 632.853, 632.861, 632.862, and 632.895 (16t) and
16(16v).
AB173,717Section 7. 632.861 (1m) of the statutes is created to read:
AB173,3,2118632.861 (1m) Required disclosures. A disability insurance policy or self-
19insured health plan that provides a prescription drug benefit shall make the
20formulary and all drug costs associated with the formulary available to plan
21sponsors and individuals prior to selection or enrollment.
AB173,822Section 8. 632.861 (3g) of the statutes is created to read:
AB173,4,623632.861 (3g) Choice of provider; penalty prohibited. No insurer, self-

1insured health plan, or pharmacy benefit manager may require, or penalize a
2person who is covered under a disability insurance policy or self-insured health
3plan for using or for not using, a specific retail, specific mail-order, or other specific
4pharmacy provider within the network of pharmacy providers under the policy or
5plan. A prohibited penalty under this subsection includes an increase in premium,
6deductible, copayment, or coinsurance.
AB173,97Section 9. 632.861 (3r) of the statutes is created to read:
AB173,4,148632.861 (3r) Pharmacy networks. (a) If an enrollee utilizes a pharmacy or
9pharmacist in a preferred network of pharmacies or pharmacists, no disability
10insurance policy or self-insured health plan that provides a prescription drug
11benefit or pharmacy benefit manager that provides services under a contract with
12a policy or plan may require the enrollee to pay any amount or impose on the
13enrollee any condition that would not be required if the enrollee utilized a different
14pharmacy or pharmacist in the same preferred network.
AB173,4,1915(b) Any disability insurance policy or self-insured health plan that provides a
16prescription drug benefit, or any pharmacy benefit manager that provides services
17under a contract with a policy or plan, that has established a preferred network of
18pharmacies or pharmacists shall reimburse each pharmacy or pharmacist in the
19same network at the same rates.
AB173,1020Section 10. 632.861 (4) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB173,5,1221632.861 (4) (a) Except as provided in par. (b) and subject to par. (e), a
22disability insurance policy that offers a prescription drug benefit, a self-insured
23health plan that offers a prescription drug benefit, or a pharmacy benefit manager

1acting on behalf of a disability insurance policy or self-insured health plan shall
2provide to an enrollee advanced written notice of a formulary change that removes
3a prescription drug from the formulary of the policy or plan or that reassigns a
4prescription drug to a benefit tier for the policy or plan that has a higher deductible,
5copayment, or coinsurance. The advanced written notice of a formulary change
6under this paragraph shall be provided no fewer than 30 90 days before the
7expected date of the removal or reassignment and shall include information on the
8procedure for the enrollee to request an exception to the formulary change. The
9policy, plan, or pharmacy benefit manager is required to provide the advanced
10written notice under this paragraph only to those enrollees in the policy or plan
11who are using the drug at the time the notification must be sent according to
12available claims history.
AB173,1113Section 11. 632.861 (4) (e) of the statutes is created to read:
AB173,5,1714632.861 (4) (e) No disability insurance policy, self-insured health plan, or
15pharmacy benefit manager acting on behalf of a disability insurance policy or self-
16insured health plan may remove a prescription drug from the formulary except at
17the time of coverage renewal.
AB173,1218Section 12. 632.862 of the statutes is created to read:
AB173,5,2019632.862 Application of prescription drug payments. (1) Definitions.
20In this section:
AB173,5,2121(a) Brand name has the meaning given in s. 450.12 (1) (a).
AB173,5,2222(b) Brand name drug means any of the following:
AB173,6,2
11. A prescription drug that contains a brand name and that has no medically
2appropriate generic equivalent.
AB173,6,532. A prescription drug that contains a brand name and that has a medically
4appropriate generic equivalent but to which the enrollee or other covered individual
5has obtained access through any of the following:
AB173,6,66a. Prior authorization.
AB173,6,77b. A step therapy protocol.
AB173,6,98c. The exceptions and appeals process of the disability insurance policy, self-
9insured health plan, or pharmacy benefit manager.
AB173,6,1110(c) Cost-sharing requirement means a deductible, copayment, or
11coinsurance.
AB173,6,1212(d) Disability insurance policy has the meaning given in s. 632.895 (1) (a).
AB173,6,1413(e) Generic equivalent means a drug product equivalent, as defined in s.
14450.13 (1e), that is nationally available.
AB173,6,1515(f) Pharmacy benefit manager has the meaning given in s. 632.865 (1) (c).
AB173,6,1616(g) Self-insured health plan has the meaning given in s. 632.85 (1) (c).
AB173,7,417(2) Application of payments. Except as provided in sub. (4), a disability
18insurance policy that offers a prescription drug benefit, a self-insured health plan,
19or a pharmacy benefit manager acting on behalf of a disability insurance policy or
20self-insured health plan shall apply to any cost-sharing requirement or to any
21calculation of an out-of-pocket maximum amount of the disability insurance policy
22or self-insured health plan, including the annual limitations on cost sharing
23established under 42 USC 18022 (c) and 42 USC 300gg-6 (b), any amounts paid by

1an enrollee or other individual covered under the disability insurance policy or self-
2insured health plan, or by any person on behalf of the enrollee or individual, for
3brand name drugs that are covered under the disability insurance policy or self-
4insured health plan.
AB173,7,155(3) Calculation of cost-sharing annual limitations. For purposes of
6calculating an enrollees contribution to the annual limitations on cost sharing
7under 42 USC 18022 (c) and 42 USC 300gg-6 (b), a disability insurance policy that
8offers a prescription drug benefit, a self-insured health plan, or a pharmacy benefit
9manager acting on behalf of a disability insurance policy or self-insured health plan
10shall include expenditures for any item or service covered under the disability
11insurance policy or self-insured health plan if the item or service is included within
12a category of essential health benefits, as described in 42 USC 18022 (b) (1), and
13regardless of whether the disability insurance policy, self-insured health plan, or
14pharmacy benefit manager classifies the item or service as an essential health
15benefit.
AB173,8,216(4) Exception; high deductible health plans. If applying the requirement
17under sub. (2) to payments made by or on behalf of an enrollee or other individual
18covered under a high deductible health plan, as defined under 26 USC 223 (c) (2),
19would result in the enrollee failing to meet the definition of an eligible individual
20under 26 USC 223 (c) (1), the disability insurance policy, self-insured health plan,
21or pharmacy benefit manager shall begin applying the requirement under sub. (2)
22to the disability insurance policy or self-insured health plans deductible after the
23enrollee has satisfied the minimum deductible requirement under 26 USC 223 (c)

1(2) (A) (i). This subsection does not apply to any amounts paid for items or services
2that are preventive care, as described in 26 USC 223 (c) (2) (C).
AB173,133Section 13. 632.865 (1) (ab) and (ac) of the statutes are created to read:
AB173,8,54632.865 (1) (ab) 340B covered entity has the meaning given for covered
5entity under 42 USC 256b (a) (4).
AB173,8,76(ac) 340B drug has the meaning given for covered drug under 42 USC
7256b (b) (2).
AB173,148Section 14. 632.865 (1) (ae) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB173,8,129632.865 (1) (ae) Health benefit plan has the meaning given means a health
10benefit plan, as defined in s. 632.745 (11), that is not prescription drug coverage
11provided under part D of medicare under Title XVIII of the federal Social Security
12Act, 42 USC 1395 to 1395lll.
AB173,1513Section 15. 632.865 (1) (an), (aq) and (at) of the statutes are created to read:
AB173,8,1814632.865 (1) (an) Maximum allowable cost list means a list of
15pharmaceutical products that sets forth the maximum amount a pharmacy benefit
16manager will pay to a pharmacy or pharmacist for dispensing a pharmaceutical
17product. The list may directly establish the maximum amounts or set forth a
18method for how the maximum amounts are calculated.
AB173,8,2119(aq) Pharmaceutical product means a prescription generic drug,
20prescription brand-name drug, prescription biologic, or other prescription drug,
21vaccine, or device.
AB173,9,222(at) Pharmaceutical wholesaler means a person that sells and distributes,

1directly or indirectly, a pharmaceutical product and that offers to deliver the
2pharmaceutical product to a pharmacy or pharmacist.
AB173,163Section 16. 632.865 (1) (bm) of the statutes is created to read:
AB173,9,64632.865 (1) (bm) Pharmacy acquisition cost means the amount that a
5pharmaceutical wholesaler charges a pharmacy or pharmacist for a
6pharmaceutical product as listed on the pharmacys or pharmacists billing invoice.
AB173,177Section 17. 632.865 (1) (cg) and (cr) of the statutes are created to read:
AB173,9,98632.865 (1) (cg) Pharmacy benefit manager affiliate means a pharmacy or
9pharmacist that is an affiliate of a pharmacy benefit manager.
AB173,9,1310(cr) Pharmacy services administrative organization means an entity that
11provides contracting and other administrative services to pharmacies or
12pharmacists to assist them in their interactions with 3rd-party payers, pharmacy
13benefit managers, pharmaceutical wholesalers, and other entities.
AB173,1814Section 18. 632.865 (2) of the statutes is repealed.
AB173,1915Section 19. 632.865 (2d) of the statutes is created to read:
AB173,9,1916632.865 (2d) Pharmaceutical product reimbursements. (ag) Contents of
17maximum allowable cost lists. A pharmacy benefit manager that uses a maximum
18allowable cost list shall include all of the following information on the maximum
19allowable cost list:
AB173,9,22201. The average acquisition cost of each pharmaceutical product and the cost of
21the pharmaceutical product set forth in the national average drug acquisition cost
22data published by the federal centers for medicare and medicaid services.
AB173,9,23232. The average manufacturer price of each pharmaceutical product.
AB173,10,1
13. The average wholesale price of each pharmaceutical product.
Loading...
Loading...