Legislature(2021 - 2022)BARNES 124

05/02/2022 03:15 PM House LABOR & COMMERCE

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Audio Topic
03:16:53 PM Start
03:17:21 PM HB301
04:32:34 PM HB382
04:56:32 PM SB190
05:10:14 PM Workers' Compensation Appeal Commission
05:11:56 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+ HB 301 UTILITIES: RENEWABLE PORTFOLIO STANDARD TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Testimony <Invitation Only> --
+ HB 382 INSULIN COVERAGE:INSURANCE;MEDICAID TELECONFERENCED
Moved CSHB 382(HSS) Out of Committee
-- Public Testimony --
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
+= SB 190 REGULATORY COMMISSION AK/REFUSE UTILITIES TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
-- Public Testimony --
            HB 382-INSULIN COVERAGE:INSURANCE;MEDICAID                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:32:34 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FIELDS announced  that the next order  of business would                                                               
be HOUSE  BILL NO.  382, "An Act  relating to  insurance coverage                                                               
for  pharmacy   services."    [Before  the   committee  was  CSHB
382(HSS).]                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:32:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SNYDER,  as  prime   sponsor,  stated  that  CSHB
382(HSS)  could  have immediate  and  meaningful  impacts to  the                                                               
pocketbooks of  Alaskans because it addresses  the astronomically                                                               
high cost of  insulin.  In 1996, she related,  the list price for                                                               
a vial of insulin was $21; today  that list price is about $300 -                                                               
four times  the cost  that would be  expected based  on inflation                                                               
alone.    She said  this  puts  many  folks  with diabetes  in  a                                                               
situation  where they  are  making choices  about  what they  can                                                               
spend  their  limited  household  income on  when  they  need  to                                                               
purchase insulin plus pay rent or buy food.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SNYDER  specified that about 49,000  Alaskans have                                                               
been  diagnosed  with  diabetes and  an  additional  15,000  have                                                               
diabetes  but don't  know it  yet.   Another  5,000 Alaskans  are                                                               
diagnosed with diabetes every year,  making it a growing problem.                                                               
About  34 percent  of Alaska's  adult  population, about  182,000                                                               
people,  have pre-diabetes.   So,  she added,  this bill  has the                                                               
potential  to   impact  a  significant  proportion   of  Alaska's                                                               
population.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SNYDER pointed  out that about 20  states now have                                                               
similar legislation.   In Minnesota, two  health insurers decided                                                               
independently  to cap  insulin costs  at  $25 a  month for  their                                                               
patients, and  Blue Cross/Blue Shield  has announced a  $0 co-pay                                                               
cap on insulin for its patients.   So, she continued, capping the                                                               
co-pay   is  becoming   an  important   mitigation  measure   for                                                               
Americans.   Medicare Part D plans  agreed to cap insulin  at $35                                                               
per month  starting in  2021.   This bill  is an  opportunity for                                                               
Alaskans  to  directly  feel this  same  benefit,  she  stressed.                                                               
Regarding  whether  capping  co-pays could  result  in  increased                                                               
insurance  premiums for  everyone,  she cited  the 2017  Milliman                                                               
Study which found  that the cost to provide the  benefit would be                                                               
about 70-95 cents per member per  year.  That doesn't account for                                                               
the potential  to reduce premiums overall,  Representative Snyder                                                               
continued,  because  better  managed  diabetes  through  improved                                                               
access to insulin decreases healthcare  costs associated with the                                                               
complications of  poorly managed  diabetes, such  as amputations.                                                               
She further noted  that in 2021 the state of  Washington voted to                                                               
cap its  insulin co-pays at  $100 a  month, which resulted  in an                                                               
average proposed  rate decrease of  almost 2 percent  within that                                                               
year.   Kentucky introduced an insulin  co-pay cap [at a  cost to                                                               
provide the benefit] of 7-24 cents  per person per month on fully                                                               
insured policies, and California is similar.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
JAMES HOLZENBERG, Staff, Representative  Liz Snyder, Alaska State                                                               
Legislature, during the  hearing on HB 382,  explained the change                                                               
made in CSHB  382(HSS) on behalf of  Representative Snyder, prime                                                               
sponsor.  He  said the change was  on page 2, line  6, Section 2,                                                               
coverage  for treatment  of diabetes,  where the  proposed co-pay                                                               
cap was brought down to $35.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SNYDER  added that the  bill is an  opportunity to                                                               
make a small change to  something that affects many Alaskans, and                                                               
it  will have  a  long-term beneficial  impact  for all  Alaskans                                                               
regardless of whether they experience diabetes themselves.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FIELDS  noted that $35  is consistent with  other states                                                               
and pending federal legislation, hence the change.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:39:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCCARTY  asked whether insulin could  be purchased                                                               
in bulk to bring down the price, as is being done in Utah.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SNYDER  replied that this opportunity  has not yet                                                               
been explored by  the Division of Insurance, but  it is something                                                               
that can  be pursued.  She  said the Utah program  has been going                                                               
for a  couple years  but there  is not yet  data on  its success.                                                               
She said she shares Representative  McCarty's interest in whether                                                               
this would be a good option for Alaska.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
4:40:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LORI   WING-HEIER,  Director,   Division  of   Insurance,  Alaska                                                               
Department  of  Commerce,  Community,  and  Economic  Development                                                               
(DCCED),  replied  that  the House  Health  and  Social  Services                                                               
Standing  Committee   asked  the   division  about   the  Vaccine                                                               
Assessment Council.   The council, she explained,  is run through                                                               
the  Department of  Health and  Social Services  (DHSS), and  the                                                               
state buys  vaccines in  bulk and then  the providers  access the                                                               
vaccines  from the  state to  get  the lowest  cost possible  for                                                               
vaccines for  children, infants,  and adults.   She  related that                                                               
DHSS has responded  that it could look at  the Vaccine Assessment                                                               
Council much  like looking  at the  Utah program,  but it  is not                                                               
addressed in  this legislation and would  need to be taken  up in                                                               
another bill at another date to  either mirror what Utah has done                                                               
or look at Alaska's own resources.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  MCCARTY  inquired  whether DHSS  could  do  this,                                                               
provided insulin  could be  purchased in  bulk, rather  than wait                                                               
for a statute change.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  WING-HEIER deferred  to DHSS  to answer  the question.   She                                                               
offered her belief that when  DHSS was before the other committee                                                               
the department  said it did  need the legislation and  would need                                                               
to do  an analysis  to see what  it would take  to bring  it into                                                               
Alaska as a bulk purchase.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
4:42:43 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KAUFMAN inquired  about the  root cause  for high                                                               
insulin prices.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SNYDER replied  that  while  there are  different                                                               
forms of insulin, different ways  of delivering it, and different                                                               
manufacturers, there are no cheaper  generic options for insulin.                                                               
So, she said,  it opens the door for  pharmaceutical companies to                                                               
charge ever increasing  prices, which has happened  over the past                                                               
several decades because individuals need insulin to survive.                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KAUFMAN  surmised  that "if  we're  not  actually                                                               
affecting the  price, then what  we're left with  is distributing                                                               
the cost across the system."                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SNYDER stated  that this  bill is  not where  she                                                               
would like  to stop with this  issue.  She agreed  that initially                                                               
it  is distributing  the  cost but  that  various studies  across                                                               
multiple states show  it is very minimal and is  a net savings to                                                               
everyone due to lower costs  associated with hospitalizations and                                                               
adverse  impacts  associated  with uncontrolled  diabetes.    She                                                               
argued  that  passing legislation  on  co-pay  will motivate  the                                                               
insurance  companies  to  put   pressure  on  the  pharmaceutical                                                               
companies to drive down those costs.   She related that there has                                                               
not been  pushback on  the bill  except for  one letter  from the                                                               
Association for  Health Insurance  Providers (AHIP), which  is in                                                               
the committee packet.  She said  the letter identifies a range of                                                               
other things that  can also be done, with which  she agrees, such                                                               
as  improving  drug  pricing transparency  and  banning  pay  for                                                               
delay.  She  explained that banning pay for delay  has to do with                                                               
companies  paying other  pharmaceutical  companies  to delay  the                                                               
release  of  generic  options.    However,  she  continued,  that                                                               
doesn't  really  apply  here  for diabetes,  so  there  are  some                                                               
challenging  recommendations in  this single  letter that  aren't                                                               
quite transparent or accurate.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FIELDS  noted that  he asked about  root cause  when the                                                               
bill  was before  the  House Health  &  Social Services  Standing                                                               
Committee.  He  said the pharmaceutical companies  are engaged in                                                               
price gouging and he understands  the administration is exploring                                                               
action through  the attorney general's  office because  the price                                                               
increases far  exceed anything that could  possibly be attributed                                                               
to production costs.  He  expressed his support for investigation                                                               
and follow-up by the attorney general.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  KAUFMAN submitted  that  capping  the co-pay  and                                                               
spreading  the cost  across all  insurance  subscribers does  not                                                               
result  in downward  pressure because  the  insurance company  is                                                               
flexible and can  share those costs and it  doesn't transmit back                                                               
to the insulin manufacturer.   He asked whether a mechanism could                                                               
be put into the  bill so it would not be a  cost sharing bill but                                                               
would instead apply downward pressure.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SNYDER answered  that she  would look  forward to                                                               
exploring such  an amendment  with Representative  Kaufman either                                                               
in this committee or ahead of the floor.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR SPOHNHOLZ offered her appreciation  for the sentiment in                                                               
Representative Kaufman's  questions.   She related that  when the                                                               
bill was  before the  House Health  and Social  Services Standing                                                               
Committee it was learned that this  is a case of making sure that                                                               
people  are getting  their insulin  and not  rationing this  life                                                               
saving medication.  She pointed out  that in addition to the cost                                                               
savings  of 70-95  cents per  member per  year identified  in the                                                               
2017 Milliman Study,  there is a net increase  in productivity of                                                               
the  Americans who  receive access  to this  care and  not having                                                               
amputations, becoming blind, or having ulcers.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE SNYDER  confirmed that the statements  by Co-Chair                                                               
Spohnholz  are  in  the  ballpark.   She  said  data  shows  that                                                               
irregular insulin  use can increase  in-patient hospital  cost by                                                               
up to 41 percent.  A  common issue associated with poorly managed                                                               
diabetes, she  explained, is  foot ulcers.   The charge  per foot                                                               
ulcer can  be up to $17,000  per ulcer, which if  not treated can                                                               
lead  to  amputation,  a horrendous  and  horrendously  expensive                                                               
experience.   Another complication,  she continued, is  end stage                                                               
renal  disease and  the price  tag  for complications  associated                                                               
with  that.   She said  she agrees  that there  is an  additional                                                               
opportunity  to deal  with  the  high prices  coming  out of  the                                                               
pharmaceutical industry  itself, but that  a co-pay cap  can have                                                               
an  initial first  and quick  reduction in  expenses to  both the                                                               
individual with diabetes and those sharing a plan.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
4:50:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FIELDS opened public testimony on CSHB 382(HSS).                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
4:50:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
LAURA KELLER,  American Diabetes Association (ADA),  testified in                                                               
support of CSHB 382(HSS).  She  confirmed that many levers can be                                                               
pulled throughout  the chain to  address the cost  of medications                                                               
like insulin.  However, she advised  that as a person with type 1                                                               
diabetes, there is  no other option and people  are rationing and                                                               
they are dying because they do  not have access to the lifesaving                                                               
medication.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
MS. KELLER  said ADA is urging  the committee to act  now because                                                               
this helps  people with  insurance, which is  a great  first step                                                               
that makes a  difference in people's lives.  She  stated that the                                                               
Utah scenario  would be a great  secondary thing to do  and would                                                               
impact people who don't have  health insurance.  She related that                                                               
a non-partisan  study in California  showed that with  an insulin                                                               
co-pay cap  a state can reduce  diabetes related hospitalizations                                                               
by  10  percent  in  the  first couple  years  after  the  bill's                                                               
passage,  and there  will be  other savings  to the  state.   She                                                               
stressed that people with diabetes  need the insulin, there is no                                                               
other option.   She pointed out that the insulin  used in insulin                                                               
pumps ranges from  $3-$7 a vial, which includes  a company making                                                               
back its research  and development and marketing.   So, she said,                                                               
this situation is different than many other medications.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
4:52:40 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR FIELDS  closed public testimony after  ascertaining that                                                               
no one else wished to testify.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
4:52:51 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   MCCARTY  offered   his   understanding  that   a                                                               
medication goes generic  after being around for seven  years.  He                                                               
asked whether  there is  generic insulin  given that  insulin has                                                               
been around a long time.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
MS.  KELLER replied  that there  is  not generic  insulin on  the                                                               
market currently.   She explained  that the companies  which make                                                               
insulin have rebranded  some of their insulin to  be considered a                                                               
generic.  While  it is the exact same product  and the exact same                                                               
manufacturers,  she  continued,  those  generic  medications  are                                                               
priced very similarly and therefore still not a co-pay of $25.                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE   MCCARTY  referenced   the  US   Food  and   Drug                                                               
Administration  (FDA) and  asked whether  cheaper insulin  can be                                                               
found outside the US.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MS.  KELLER responded  that  the  FDA is  looking  at some  "bio-                                                               
similars" and other options of  potentially generic insulins, but                                                               
nothing has  been approved  into the  market yet.   She  said the                                                               
insulin  under discussion  can be  purchased in  other countries,                                                               
such as Canada and Mexico, and  they are the exact same brand and                                                               
formula  at a  much-reduced  cost.   But,  she explained,  health                                                               
insurance is currently  unable to provide those  insulins in that                                                               
way because the FDA and  the federal government have not approved                                                               
that through proper channels.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE MCCARTY said  he has heard that the  State of Utah                                                               
sends employees to Mexico for medication.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MS. KELLER offered  her belief that that is correct  but said she                                                               
is unfamiliar with  how Utah does that and the  cost that Utah is                                                               
paying.   She noted that  she worked with the  representative for                                                               
the  Insulin  Utah  Purchasing Program  which  allows  people  to                                                               
purchase for  the same price as  the employee price in  the state                                                               
of Utah.   That program has been very  successful, she continued,                                                               
and it is a completely online program.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
CO-CHAIR  FIELDS  said he  hopes  the  Department of  Health  and                                                               
Social  Services will  continue examining  how to  obtain insulin                                                               
directly from Canada and bypass "pharma" to get lower prices.                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
4:55:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
REPRESENTATIVE  SPOHNHOLZ moved  to report  CSHB 382(HSS)  out of                                                               
committee  with individual  recommendations and  the accompanying                                                               
fiscal notes.  There being  no objection, CSHB 382(HSS) was moved                                                               
out of the House Labor and Commerce Standing Committee.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HB 301 Transmittal Letter 2.1.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 Ver. A 2.4.22.PDF HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 CS (Energy) ver W. 4.29.22.PDF HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 Sectional Analysis Ver A 2.1.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 Summary of Changes ver A to ver W 5.2.2022.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 Fiscal Note DCCED - RCA 2.1.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 Analysis North Presentation 5.2.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 REAP Presentation 5.2.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 Supporting Docment - RPS&CES Country-Wide Breakdown 5.2.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 Supporting Document - Other State Benchmarks and Statutes 5.2.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
SB 190 Amendment #1 - Fields 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
SB 190
SB 190 Testimony - AKPIRG 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
SB 190
HB 382 Version A 4.29.22.PDF HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
CSHB 382 Version B 4.29.22.PDF HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
HB 382 Sectional Analysis Ver. B 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
HB 382 Sponsor Statement Version B 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
HB 382 Summary of Changes Version B 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
HB 382 Support Document - ADA Insulin Fact Sheet 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
HB 382 Letter of Opposition - AHIP 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
HB 382 Kentucky Fiscal Note 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
HB 382 Research - Health Care Cost Institute Study on Spending on Individuals With Type 1 Diabetes 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
HB 382 Support Document - ADA Alaska Diabetes Fact Sheet 4.29.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 382
HB 301 Testimony Document - Erin Mckittrick 5.2.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301
HB 301 Testimony Document 2 - Erin Mckittrick 5.2.22.pdf HL&C 5/2/2022 3:15:00 PM
HB 301