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- Aug 17, 2009
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http://www.stltoday.com/business/lo...cle_5103302c-7cbd-11e1-b87f-0019bb30f31a.html
It's a done deal, folks...
It's a done deal, folks...
I can easily imagine the negatives to this...are there any positives?
Don't think so. The contract is still being honored with Medco until it is up or short term at least... but at that point no one knows if it will get renewed.So supposedly all of this means that Walgreens will get their Express Scripts contract back since they have a contract with Medco. Thoughts?
I wonder what´s going to happen if all independent and big chains declare a boycott to this ESI monster and stop filling rx for its members?
All we need is little bit of more untity, at the very end PBMs are just another intermediaries in the game. They are unnecessary players in the rx business. The basic of this business only requires two licensed professionals,.- a MD and a RPH`, everything else is just a waste. PBMs are the biggest part of the mess of the healthcare system.
Who is going to pay for that $2,000 per dose Simponi Rx? The MD, the RPh, the patient, or the third party?
Who is going to pay for that $2,000 per dose Simponi Rx? The MD, the RPh, the patient, or the third party?
Maybe the big Chains need to start uniting against these PBM's. Walgreens and CVS combined forces alone would force Express Scripts/Medco into accepting their terms which might need to happen in the future for pharmacy to survive.
I am shocked and disappointed at the negativity towards PBMs. PBMs provide a very valuable service and should be well compensated for it. Its hard work managing the pharmacy benefits for these companies.![]()
I am shocked and disappointed at the negativity towards PBMs. PBMs provide a very valuable service and should be well compensated for it. Its hard work managing the pharmacy benefits for these companies.![]()
I am shocked and disappointed at the negativity towards PBMs. PBMs provide a very valuable service and should be well compensated for it. Its hard work managing the pharmacy benefits for these companies.![]()
Your transformation has taken place much faster than anticipated!
Hope you didn't have any trouble with that little weather front that moved through yesterday...
🤣I am a company man what can I say!
Nope, the worst of it was a little bit south and east of me. We did get to spend thirty minutes crammed into the conference room while the tornado sirens went off. I was at work so I knew I was safe. God would never let something happen to us because we are to important and to valuable to the healthcare system. My goodness how would anyone be able to get thier prescriptions if we weren't there to help mamage thier pharmacy benefits?
I am a company man what can I say!
Nope, the worst of it was a little bit south and east of me. We did get to spend thirty minutes crammed into the conference room while the tornado sirens went off. I was at work so I knew I was safe. God would never let something happen to us because we are to important and to valuable to the healthcare system. My goodness how would anyone be able to get thier prescriptions if we weren't there to help mamage thier pharmacy benefits?
I do love this new found sense of humor...amazing what a change of scenery can produce 🙂
His sense of humor is nothing new
It is less dark then it used to be. 😉
I too love the "new" mountain. 🙂
Give him 2 months. He will be pissed and annoyed by his cubicle mates.
You know, I thought the same thing about Mikey, but so far he still seems pretty positive about his new job.
Who gets that anyway? The one package that we had expired on us. 👎Who is going to pay for that $2,000 per dose Simponi Rx? The MD, the RPh, the patient, or the third party?
Maybe the big Chains need to start uniting against these PBM's. Walgreens and CVS combined forces alone would force Express Scripts/Medco into accepting their terms which might need to happen in the future for pharmacy to survive.
That is precisely because the chains weren't united. They are the ones who pointed the finger at wags. "Wags won't take your claims, so come here!" Rather than "ESI is reimbursing too low." Chains just race to the bottom, and they unfortunately have no problem burying each other on the way.They will lose just like Walgreens did. No one really understands PBMs or what they do. The general public thinks of everything as insurance. Medical, prescriptions, PBM whatever its all "the insurance" to the patient. PBMs claim they save the system and the customer money by managing the prescription benefit. Walgreens turning down the ESI contract made them look like a greedy corporation that only cared about getting more money. The PR hit was all on Walgreens. ESI claims all they are doing is saving the plan sponsor and the customer money. To the Wags customers who were displaced it looks like it was all Walgreens fault because they were greedy and wanted more money.
The PBMs have the upper hand. Express scripts proved it.
That is precisely because the chains weren't united. They are the ones who pointed the finger at wags. "Wags won't take your claims, so come here!" Rather than "ESI is reimbursing too low." Chains just race to the bottom, and they unfortunately have no problem burying each other on the way.
Exactly! Which is why the PBMs will win and chain pharmacies will lose.
Its amazing what a normal schedule, a comfy chair and an hour lunch everyday will do for a persons attitude.
I want everyone to know that I am hard at work sitting in my comfy chair everyday from 9-6 denying your customers prior auth requests because thier doctor is a ******* and cannot follow simple directions when filling out a three question form. You now know whos fault it is when you are getting your ass chewed off by some idiot customer because their prior auth was denied. A ******* doctor and a pharmacist sitting in a comfy chair.
Exactly! Which is why the PBMs will win and chain pharmacies will lose.
Are you doing what's right for the patientz?
Are you doing what's right for the patientz?
I have only been at the PBM for a month. I am not Mr. Pro-PBM quite yet. I do have an understanding of how things work that I did not have before I started. I do not buy into the argument that PBM's save enough money to justify thier existence. However, I don't think they cost the system any more money. The plan sponsors would be paying the same amount of money with or without the PBM. Since the PBM is the middleman money that would have gone to the pharmacy now goes to the PBM to pay for managing the benefit. I have a huge problem with that being a former retail pharmacist. I think the major insurance companies could manage the prescription benefit just fine and not cost as much as having PBMs do it..
To answer your question, yes I think we are doing what is right for the patient and what is right for the plan sponsor who is picking up the tab. The PBM is not about denying a patient their medication. The PBM is about controlling costs based on parameters selected by the plan sponsor when they signed up for the benefit. If a plan sponsors employees were allowed to get whatever medication they wanted for any reason or no reason at all the cost of the benefit would be so high that it would have to be discontinued.
Should everyone who sees the commercial for the purple pill be allowed to march into thier doctor's office and demand a prescription for it because sometimes when they eat Mexican food right before bed they get a little heart burn? Should a plan sponsor have to pay for everyone of thier employees who wants to do this? Or does it make sense to have a checks and balance system in place that limits a patient from getting the purple pill unless they actually have a documented medical reason for it and have failed the less expensive generic alternatives first. Thats what the PBM does for a plan sponsor and how they keep the cost of the benefit dfown for them.
Z, you are a hospital man. How important is cost control in the hospital? Do you order whatever you want without regard to cost? Why should it be any different in the retail setting?
I have only been at the PBM for a month. I am not Mr. Pro-PBM quite yet. I do have an understanding of how things work that I did not have before I started. I do not buy into the argument that PBM's save enough money to justify thier existence. However, I don't think they cost the system any more money. The plan sponsors would be paying the same amount of money with or without the PBM. Since the PBM is the middleman money that would have gone to the pharmacy now goes to the PBM to pay for managing the benefit. I have a huge problem with that being a former retail pharmacist. I think the major insurance companies could manage the prescription benefit just fine and not cost as much as having PBMs do it..
To answer your question, yes I think we are doing what is right for the patient and what is right for the plan sponsor who is picking up the tab. The PBM is not about denying a patient their medication. The PBM is about controlling costs based on parameters selected by the plan sponsor when they signed up for the benefit. If a plan sponsors employees were allowed to get whatever medication they wanted for any reason or no reason at all the cost of the benefit would be so high that it would have to be discontinued.
Should everyone who sees the commercial for the purple pill be allowed to march into thier doctor's office and demand a prescription for it because sometimes when they eat Mexican food right before bed they get a little heart burn? Should a plan sponsor have to pay for everyone of thier employees who wants to do this? Or does it make sense to have a checks and balance system in place that limits a patient from getting the purple pill unless they actually have a documented medical reason for it and have failed the less expensive generic alternatives first. Thats what the PBM does for a plan sponsor and how they keep the cost of the benefit dfown for them.
Z, you are a hospital man. How important is cost control in the hospital? Do you order whatever you want without regard to cost? Why should it be any different in the retail setting?
Already getting drunk on the koolaid, eh?