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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T





SPONSOR: Feldman DATE TYPED: 02/09/01 HB
SHORT TITLE: NM Prescription Drug Discount Act SB 142
ANALYST: Dunbar


APPROPRIATION



Appropriation Contained
Estimated Additional Impact
Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY01 FY02 FY01 FY02
$ 5,000.0 See Narrative Non Recurring General Fund
See Narrative Non-Recurring Federal Funds



(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)



Relates to HB 2, HB 298, HB 299, HB300, HB 301, HB 302, HB 303, SB 98, SB 140, SB 143, and SB 144



Duplicates HB 297



SOURCES OF INFORMATION



Human Services Department

Health Policy Commission

State Agency on Aging



SUMMARY



Synopsis of Bill

HB 297 appropriates $5 million non-recurring from the general fund to the Human Services Department (HSD) to design and implement a prescription drug discount plan under the state's Medicaid program that would provide prescription drugs only. The bill contains an emergency clause.



Significant Issues



Eligibility for the program would include New Mexico residency, lack of a prescription drug benefit, and having an income that is less than 300% of the federal poverty level. Income definitions would be the same as those used to determine Medicaid eligibility. Clients would pay an annual enrollment fee of $24.



SB 142 would require HSD to apply for an 1115 waiver no later than July 1, 2001.



SB 142 would require that the enrollment fees and drug manufacturer rebates be deposited into the general fund.



HSD would be required to publish in its monthly statistical report the number of program members, the amount of participating pharmacies, the total paid for prescription drugs under the program, the amount of rebates received, the volume of the top 50 prescriptions filled by type, and the average amount paid for each type.



FISCAL IMPLICATIONS



SB 142 appropriates $5,000.0 non-recurring in general funds for FY 01 and FY 02 which will be distributed as follows:



The FTE discussed below will result in a recurring expense throughout the length of the program.



Expenditures of this appropriation is contingent upon the department receiving a waiver from the federal health care financing department of certain state plan provisions required pursuant to Title 19 of the federal Social Security Act.



Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of the fiscal year 2002 shall revert to the general fund.



The question needs to be asked could this general fund appropriation could result in leveraging $14 million in federal funds?



HSD reports on the difficulty of determining the fiscal impact by noting that the department does not have access to data on potential enrollment and utilization, and it is unlikely that pharmacies would be willing to provide such information without additional payments to compensate for administrative overhead.

ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS



The following concerns were expressed by HSD:



a target date of July 2001 for waiver submission is problematic.







Based on previous waivers submitted by HSD the process may take 6 months to a year to complete.



RELATIONSHIP



HB 2, General Appropriations Act of 2001

HB 298, Indians: Prescription Drugs

HB 299, Health Insurance

HB300, Prescription Drug Senior Program

HB 301 Prescriptions: Fair Pricing Act

HB 302 Prescription Drug Program: Seniors

HB 303 Standard Co-Payments: Prescriptions

SB 98, General Appropriations Bill of 2001

SB 140, Indian Prescription Drug Purchasing

SB 143, Prescription Drug Senior Program

SB 144, Prescription Drug Bulk Purchasing



Duplicates HB 297



OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES



Comments provided by HSD list the following as problematic issues for the department:



This could be addressed in the bill by eliminating paragraph C since the income maximum is discussed in Section 3, paragraph B or by amending Section 3, paragraph C by eliminating lines 6 thru 9.



These concerns could be addressed by amending Section 4, paragraph C to indicate that

the department shall provide the data that pharmacies require to implement the program (see HPC comments below). The language of SB 142 should provide the greatest amount of flexibility to allow HSD to implement a workable system.

The State Agency on Aging indicates that persons with very limited drug benefits or those who had exhausted benefits would not be covered by the legislation. The Agency goes on to say that

even if the State negotiates a good rebate price from a drug manufacturer, what safeguards keep that supplier from shifting a cost burden onto other customers?



The following data was provided by the HPC:



HPC also provided the following information on discounts and rebates:





BD/ar