Group Hopes Lawmakers Will Define ‘LTC Pharmacy’ By End Of Next Congress
Published by Inside Health Policy
A long term care pharmacy coalition is calling on Congress to legislatively define the term “LTC pharmacy” in an effort to harmonize what it says are conflicting CMS, FDA and Environmental Protection Agency regulations. The group hopes lawmakers will act by the end of the next Congress and says language in the CMS Medicare Part D Manual could be a starting point for a statutory definition.
“Federal regulation today contains a widely divergent set of actual and proposed definitions of LTC pharmacy,” wrote King & Spalding in a brief on behalf of the Senior Care Pharmacy Coalition. “In several important instances, the definitions conflict with each other, and create the proverbial ‘Hobson’s choice’ for pharmacies to comply with CMS regulations, FDA regulations, or EPA regulations. Particularly if several of the pending regulatory and subregulatory proposals are finalized as proposed, it will be impossible for LTC pharmacies to meet some of the different requirements without violating others.”
The coalition is having “very positive” conversations to educate members of Congress about the issues faced by LTC pharmacies, but legislation has not yet been crafted, SCPC President & CEO Alan Rosenbloom told Inside Health Policy. The coalition hopes to have an agreed-upon proposed statutory definition of LTC pharmacies before the end of the calendar year and to have legislation passed by the end of the next Congress.
SCPC penned a letter in July with the American Society of Consultant Pharmacies and the American Health Care Association/National Center for Assisted Living asking FDA carve out LTC pharmacies from the agency’s February draft compounding guidance on repackaging, arguing inclusion of the pharmacies would directly conflict with CMS regulations.
“FDA’s recent draft Repackaging Guidance — and the focus of SCPC’s current effort to modify it — is overly broad in scope because the FDA lacks a commonly accepted, federally endorsed manner in which to identify and address LTC pharmacy,” SCPC wrote in a Sept. 6 press release.
The FDA guidance requires drugs to be “repackaged and distributed” only after the receipt of a valid prescription for an identified patient or a written order in a patient’s chart in a health care setting. The groups complain that including LTC pharmacies in the guidance would threaten existing business practices that ensure their compliance with CMS requirements, including preventing them from producing prepackaged kits of emergency medicines, known as e-kits. This would conflict with federal Medicare and Medicaid Requirements of Participation, which require LTC facilities to provide access to e-kits, according to the groups.
While FDA has not responded to the groups’ July letter, the coalition hopes a statutory definition would provide FDA the basis for an exception. A statutory definition of LTC pharmacies would give FDA a clear demarcation to allow the agency to exempt LTC pharmacies from the February guidance, Rosenbloom told IHP.
SCPC also takes issue with EPA’s 2015 proposed rule, “Management Standards for Hazardous Waste Pharmaceuticals,” that uses a definition of “health care facility” to define the scope of the legislation, which lumps LTC pharmacies and assisted living facilities together with hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers, among other larger facilities.
“[T]he proposed EPA definition also includes within its scope assisted living facilities (ALFs), which will pose a significant (if not impossible) operational challenge to LTC pharmacy due both the absence of any other federal definition of what constitutes an ALF and how any pharmacy, much less LTC pharmacy, can exert control over medications sold to ALF residents,” states the LTC pharmacy brief. “The EPA’s broad over-regulation is an unfortunate example of misuse of the term LTC pharmacy without a clear understanding of defines an LTC pharmacy.”
Currently, the “sole federal regulatory definition” for LTC pharmacies is in Medicare Part D regulations, according to the brief. The regulations define a long term care pharmacy as “a pharmacy owned by or under contract with a long-term care facility to provide prescription drugs to the faculty’s residents.”
The brief also holds up the CMS Part D Manual as providing a more comprehensive description of LTC pharmacies.
“Although the regulatory definition is somewhat circular and does not include any definitional characteristics of a LTC pharmacy other than being in a contractual relationship with a nursing home, the Part D manual provides extensive guidance regarding the minimum performance and service criteria for long-term care pharmacies,” states the brief.
The brief argues that the Part D manual definition could serve as a starting point for regulators to build on.
“The most comprehensive and most accurate federal definition of LTC pharmacy is found in the CMS Part D Manual, which memorializes (perhaps in somewhat outdated terms) the scope and practice of LTC pharmacy in a manner that ensures quality patient care today and into the future,” the brief states. “The Part D Manual provisions could serve as the starting point for the development of a federal statutory definition of the term.”
Click here to see the original article on the Inside Health Policy website.
Recent Posts
-
SCPC Releases Statement in Support of Government Accountability Office (GAO) Report on the Inflation Reduction Act
SCPC has repeatedly warned about the impact of the Inflation Reduction Act’s (IRA) mandatory Medicare drug price negotiations on LTC pharmacies and the millions of vulnerable seniors they serve. We are glad the Government Accountability Office (GAO) is examining how these policies are affecting pharmacies, particularly LTC pharmacies, which already operate under a broken reimbursement model that often requires them to dispense many of the most commonly used medications at a loss.
-
SCPC Applauds President Trump’s Executive Order Calling on HHS and Congress to Improve the IRA, Rein In PBMs and Lower Drug Costs
The Senior Care Pharmacy Coalition (SCPC), the leading national voice for the long-term care (LTC) pharmacy community, released the following statement applauding President Trump’s recent Executive Order aimed at improving the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), lowering drug prices and addressing the harmful actions of PBMs. “For far too long, pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) have taken […]
-
60 percent of LTC pharmacies warn of closure amid major drug pricing changes
Facing deep losses on high-demand medications, 85% of long-term care pharmacies say they will limit essential services and 60% will close locations without changes to Medicare drug pricing efforts. Those are among the “unintended consequences” revealed in a Senior Care Pharmacy Coalition survey released Wednesday. The trade association has been increasingly vocal about pricing changes set to go into effect in January.
Stay in the Know
Get the latest news and updates on issues impacting the long-term pharmacy community.