Vol. 67, Issue 11
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IN THIS ISSUE
- GUEST COLUMN: Industry Voices—Let's be Transparent About Hospital Price Transparency
- As Drug Costs and PhRMA Profits Soar, New National Alliance Forms to Threaten 340B
- Republican Lawmakers Announce Legislation Providing New Exceptions to Wisconsin’s 1849 Abortion Law
- Advocate Health’s Carlson Recognized with WHA 2022 Distinguished Service Award
- WHA Celebrates National Patient Safety Awareness Week: March 12 -18, 2023
- Sen. Marklein Asks Hospital Leaders to “Keep Me Educated”
- GUEST COLUMN: Cyber Risk Report: What to Expect in 2023
EDUCATION EVENTS
Apr. 9, 2025
2025 Advocacy DayApr. 22, 2025
Nursing ServicesMay. 14, 2025
2025 WHA Workforce ForumClick here to view quality event calendar
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Thursday, March 16, 2023
As Drug Costs and PhRMA Profits Soar, New National Alliance Forms to Threaten 340B
On March 9, a group billing itself as the Alliance to Save America's 340B Program (ASAP) announced its formation as well as the set of principles it would like to see implemented that would vastly alter the 340B prescription drug discount program. The alliance is headed up by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) and the National Association of Community Health Centers and includes 10 other groups.
While the group assembled under the guise of "saving" 340B, its policy proposals would ironically serve only to boost record profits enjoyed by PhRMA at the expense of 340B safety-net hospitals. The American Hospital Association put out a statement shortly after the group was announced.
“They can try to call themselves Alliance to Save America’s 340B Program,” said AHA Vice President of Advocacy and Grassroots Aimee Kuhlman. "But the drug companies don’t want to ‘save’ the 340B program—they want to end it because it makes a small dent in their sky-high profits. No amount of Orwellian language can hide the fact that the real victims of this self-interested proposal will be the millions of patients and communities that 340B hospitals serve each day."
Last month, WHA joined a group of rural hospital leaders to stress the importance of the program with our Wisconsin congressional delegation. WHA will continue to advocate on the importance of protecting 340B given that it is one of the only tools hospitals have to offset runaway rising prescription drug costs.
"Hospitals are already operating in a very challenging fiscal environment, with rising labor and supply chain costs. And now, with drug costs exploding for hospitals, the drug makers have created this misleading coalition to raise drugs costs even more," said WHA President and CEO Eric Borgerding. "Proposals that erode the 340B program would only serve to benefit large drug makers while making it more challenging for safety-net hospitals to offer the many services they already operate at a loss—services that serve the most vulnerable members of their community."
While the group assembled under the guise of "saving" 340B, its policy proposals would ironically serve only to boost record profits enjoyed by PhRMA at the expense of 340B safety-net hospitals. The American Hospital Association put out a statement shortly after the group was announced.
“They can try to call themselves Alliance to Save America’s 340B Program,” said AHA Vice President of Advocacy and Grassroots Aimee Kuhlman. "But the drug companies don’t want to ‘save’ the 340B program—they want to end it because it makes a small dent in their sky-high profits. No amount of Orwellian language can hide the fact that the real victims of this self-interested proposal will be the millions of patients and communities that 340B hospitals serve each day."
Last month, WHA joined a group of rural hospital leaders to stress the importance of the program with our Wisconsin congressional delegation. WHA will continue to advocate on the importance of protecting 340B given that it is one of the only tools hospitals have to offset runaway rising prescription drug costs.
"Hospitals are already operating in a very challenging fiscal environment, with rising labor and supply chain costs. And now, with drug costs exploding for hospitals, the drug makers have created this misleading coalition to raise drugs costs even more," said WHA President and CEO Eric Borgerding. "Proposals that erode the 340B program would only serve to benefit large drug makers while making it more challenging for safety-net hospitals to offer the many services they already operate at a loss—services that serve the most vulnerable members of their community."