Amended in Assembly August 2, 2016

Amended in Senate May 31, 2016

Amended in Senate March 30, 2016

Senate BillNo. 1010


Introduced by Senator Hernandez

begin insert

(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Chiu)

end insert

February 11, 2016


An act to amend Section 1385.045 of, to add Section 1367.245 to, and to add Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 127675) to Part 2 of Division 107 of, the Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 10181.45 of, and to add Section 10123.204 to, the Insurance Code, relating to health care.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SB 1010, as amended, Hernandez. Health care: prescription drug costs.

Existing law, the Knox-Keene Health Care Service Plan Act of 1975 (Knox-Keene Act), provides for the licensure and regulation of health care service plans by the Department of Managed Health Care (DMHC) and makes a willful violation of the act a crime. Existing law also provides for the regulation of health insurers by the Department of Insurance (DOI). Existing law requires health care service plans and health insurers to file specified rate information with DMHC or DOI, as applicable, for health care service plan contracts or health insurance policies in the individual or small group markets and for health care service plan contracts and health insurance policies in the large group market.

This bill would require health care service plans or health insurers that file the above-described rate information to report to DMHC or DOI, on a date no later than the reporting of the rate information, specified cost information regarding covered prescription drugs, including generic drugs, brand name drugs, and specialty drugs provided in an outpatient setting. The information reported would include, but not be limited to, the 25 most frequently prescribed drugs and the 25 most costly drugs by total plan or insurer spending. DMHC and DOI would be required to compile the reported information into a report for the public and legislators that demonstrates the overall impact of drug costs on health care premiums and publish the reports on their Internet Web sites by October 1 of each year. Except for the report, DMHC and DOI would be required to keep confidential all information provided pursuant to these provisions.

Because a willful violation of the Knox-Keene Act is a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

Thisbegin delete billend deletebegin insert bill, except as provided,end insert would require a manufacturer of a branded prescription drug to notify in writing state purchasers, health care service plans, health insurers, pharmacy benefit managers, and the chairs of specified Senate and Assembly committees if it is increasing the wholesale acquisition cost of the drug by more than 10% or by more than $10,000 during any 12-month period. Thebegin delete billend deletebegin insert bill, except as provided,end insert would require a manufacturer of a generic prescriptionbegin delete drugend deletebegin insert drug, as defined,end insert with a specified wholesale acquisition cost to notify state purchasers, health care service plans, health insurers, pharmacy benefit managers, and the chairs of specified Senate and Assembly committees if it is increasing the wholesale acquisition cost of the drug by more than 25% during any 12-month period. The bill would require a manufacturer of a prescription drug to notify in writing, within 3 days of approval by the federal Food and Drug Administration, state purchasers, health care service plans, health insurers, pharmacy benefit managers, and the chairs of specified Senate and Assembly committees if it is introducing a new prescription drug to market at a wholesale acquisition cost of $10,000 or more annually or per course of treatment. The bill would require a manufacturer, within 30 days of notification of a price increase, or notification of the introduction to market of a prescription drug that has a wholesale acquisition cost of $10,000 or more annually or per course of treatment, to report specified information regarding the drug price to each state purchaser, health care service plan, health insurer, or pharmacy benefit manager and would require a manufacturer who fails to provide the required information within the 30 days to be subject to a civil penalty of $1,000 per day.begin delete The bill would also require the Legislature to conduct an annual public hearing regarding the aggregate trends in prescription drug pricing, as prescribed. Except for the hearing, theend deletebegin insert The bill would also require a pharmacy benefit manager that receives notice of a price increase consistent with these provisions to provide notice of the price increase to its contracting public and private purchasers, as provided. Theend insert Legislature would be required to keep confidential all information provided pursuant to these provisions.

Existing law requires, for large group health care service plan contracts and health insurance policies, each health care service plan or health insurer to file with DMHC or DOI the weighted average rate increase for all large group benefit designs during the 12-month period ending January 1 of the following calendar year, and to also disclose specified information for the aggregate rate information for the large group market.

This bill would add to that disclosure of information for the aggregate rate information for the large group market, the requirement for health care service plans or health insurers to disclose specifiedbegin delete costend delete information regardingbegin insert the cost ofend insert covered prescription drugs, including generic drugs but excluding generic specialty drugs, brand name drugs excluding specialty drugs, and specialty drugs dispensed at a pharmacy, network pharmacy, or mail order pharmacy for outpatientbegin delete use.end deletebegin insert use and regarding the use of a pharmacy benefit manager, as prescribed.end insert

Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.

This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.

The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.

This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P4    1

SECTION 1.  

Section 1367.245 is added to the Health and
2Safety Code
, immediately preceding Section 1367.25, to read:

3

1367.245.  

(a) (1) A health care service plan that reports rate
4information pursuant to Section 1385.03 or 1385.045 shall report
5the information described in paragraph (2) to the department on a
6date no later than it reports the rate information.

7(2) For all covered prescription drugs, including generic drugs,
8brand name drugs, and specialty drugs provided in an outpatient
9setting, all of the following shall be reported:

10(A) The 25 most frequently prescribed drugs.

11(B) The 25 most costly drugs by total plan spending.

12(C) The 25 drugs with the highest year-over-year increase in
13spending.

14(b) The department shall compile the information reported
15pursuant to subdivision (a) into a report for the public and
16legislators that demonstrates the overall impact of drug costs on
17health care premiums. The data in the report shall be aggregated
18and shall not reveal information specific to individual health care
19service plans.

20(c) For the purposes of this section, a “specialty drug” is one
21that exceeds the threshold for a specialty drug under the Medicare
22Part D program (Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
23Modernization Act of 2003 (Public Law 108-173)).

24(d) By October 1 of each year, the department shall publish on
25its Internet Web site the report required pursuant to subdivision
26 (b).

27(e) After the report required in subdivision (b) is released, the
28department shall include the report as part of the public meeting
29required pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 1385.045.

30(f) Except for the report required pursuant to subdivision (b),
31the department shall keep confidential all of the information
32provided to the department pursuant to this section, and that
33information shall be exempt from disclosure under the California
34Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250)
35of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code).

36

SEC. 2.  

Section 1385.045 of the Health and Safety Code is
37amended to read:

P5    1

1385.045.  

(a) For large group health care service plan
2contracts, each health plan shall file with the department the
3weighted average rate increase for all large group benefit designs
4during the 12-month period ending January 1 of the following
5calendar year. The average shall be weighted by the number of
6enrollees in each large group benefit design in the plan’s large
7group market and adjusted to the most commonly sold large group
8benefit design by enrollment during the 12-month period. For the
9purposes of this section, the large group benefit design includes,
10but is not limited to, benefits such as basic health care services
11and prescription drugs. The large group benefit design shall not
12include cost sharing, including, but not limited to, deductibles,
13copays, and coinsurance.

14(b) (1) A plan shall also submit any other information required
15pursuant to any regulation adopted by the department to comply
16with this article.

17(2) The department shall conduct an annual public meeting
18regarding large group rates within three months of posting the
19aggregate information described in this section in order to permit
20a public discussion of the reasons for the changes in the rates,
21benefits, and cost sharing in the large group market. The meeting
22shall be held in either the Los Angeles area or the San Francisco
23Bay area.

24(c) A health care service plan subject to subdivision (a) shall
25also disclose the following for the aggregate rate information for
26the large group market submitted under this section:

27(1) For rates effective during the 12-month period ending
28January 1 of the following year, number and percentage of rate
29changes reviewed by the following:

30(A) Plan year.

31(B) Segment type, including whether the rate is community
32rated, in whole or in part.

33(C) Product type.

34(D) Number of enrollees.

35(E) The number of products sold that have materially different
36benefits, cost sharing, or other elements of benefit design.

37(2) For rates effective during the 12-month period ending
38January 1 of the following year, any factors affecting the base rate,
39and the actuarial basis for those factors, including all of the
40following:

P6    1(A) Geographic region.

2(B) Age, including age rating factors.

3(C) Occupation.

4(D) Industry.

5(E) Health status factors, including, but not limited to,
6experience and utilization.

7(F) Employee, and employee and dependents, including a
8description of the family composition used.

9(G) Enrollees’ share of premiums.

10(H) Enrollees’ costbegin delete sharing.end deletebegin insert sharing, including prescription
11drugs.end insert

12(I) Covered benefits in addition to basic health care services,
13as defined in Section 1345, and other benefits mandated under this
14article.

15(J) Which market segment, if any, is fully experience rated and
16which market segment, if any, is in part experience rated and in
17part community rated.

18(K) Any other factor that affects the rate that is not otherwise
19specified.

20(3) (A) The plan’s overall annual medical trend factor
21assumptions for all benefits and by aggregate benefit category,
22including hospital inpatient, hospital outpatient, physician services,
23prescription drugs and other ancillary services, laboratory, and
24radiology for the applicable 12-month period ending January 1 of
25the following year. A health plan that exclusively contracts with
26no more than two medical groups in the state to provide or arrange
27for professional medical services for the enrollees of the plan shall
28instead disclose the amount of its actual trend experience for the
29prior contract year by aggregate benefit category, using benefit
30categories, to the maximum extent possible, that are the same as,
31or similar to, those used by other plans.

32(B) The amount of the projected trend separately attributable
33to the use of services, price inflation, and fees and risk for annual
34plan contract trends by aggregate benefit category, including
35hospital inpatient, hospital outpatient, physician services,
36prescription drugs and other ancillary services, laboratory, and
37radiology. A health plan that exclusively contracts with no more
38than two medical groups in the state to provide or arrange for
39professional medical services for the enrollees of the plan shall
40instead disclose the amount of its actual trend experience for the
P7    1prior contract year by aggregate benefit category, using benefit
2categories that are, to the maximum extent possible, the same or
3similar to those used by other plans.

4(C) A comparison of the aggregate per enrollee per month costs
5and rate of changes over the last five years for each of the
6following:

7(i) Premiums.

8(ii) Claims costs, if any.

9(iii) Administrative expenses.

10(iv) Taxes and fees.

11(D) Any changes in enrollee cost sharing over the prior year
12associated with the submitted rate information, including both of
13the following:

14(i) Actual copays, coinsurance, deductibles, annual out-of-pocket
15maximums, and any other cost sharing by the benefit categories
16determined by the department.

17(ii) Any aggregate changes in enrollee cost sharing over the
18prior years as measured by the weighted average actuarial value,
19weighted by the number of enrollees.

20(E) Any changes in enrollee benefits over the prior year,
21including a description of benefits added or eliminated, as well as
22any aggregate changes, as measured as a percentage of the
23aggregate claims costs, listed by the categories determined by the
24department.

25(F) Any cost containment and quality improvement efforts since
26the plan’s prior year’s information pursuant to this section for the
27same category of health benefit plan. To the extent possible, the
28plan shall describe any significant new health care cost containment
29and quality improvement efforts and provide an estimate of
30potential savings together with an estimated cost or savings for
31the projection period.

32(G) The number of products covered by the information that
33incurred the excise tax paid by the health plan.

34(4) (A) For covered prescription drugs, including generic drugs
35but excluding specialty generic drugs, brand name drugs excluding
36specialty drugs, and specialty drugs dispensed at a plan pharmacy,
37network pharmacy, or mail order pharmacy for outpatient use all
38of the following shall be disclosed:

P8    1(i) The percentage of the premium attributable to prescription
2drug costs for the prior year for each category of prescription drugs
3as defined in subparagraph (A).

4(ii) The year-over-year increase, as a percentage, in total
5spending for each category of prescription drugs as defined in
6subparagraph (A).

7(iii) The year-over-year increase in per member, per month costs
8for drug prices compared to other components of the health care
9premium.

10(iv) The specialty tier formulary list.

11(B) The plan shall include the percentage of the premium
12attributable to prescription drugs administered in a doctor’s office
13that are covered under the medical benefit as separate from the
14pharmacy benefit, if available.

begin insert

15
(C) (i) The plan shall include information on its use of a
16pharmacy benefit manager, if any, including the components of
17the prescription drug coverage described in subparagraphs (A)
18and (B) for which the pharmacy benefit manager is responsible.

end insert
begin insert

19
(ii) The plan shall also include the name of the pharmacy benefit
20manager.

end insert

21(d) The information required pursuant to this section shall be
22submitted to the department on or before October 1, 2016, and on
23or before October 1 annually thereafter. Information submitted
24pursuant to this section is subject to Section 1385.07.

25(e) For the purposes of this section, a “specialty drug” is one
26that exceeds the threshold for a specialty drug under the Medicare
27Part D program (Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
28Modernization Act of 2003 (Public Law 108-173)).

29

SEC. 3.  

Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 127675) is added
30 to Part 2 of Division 107 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:

31 

32Chapter  9. Prescription Drug Pricing for Purchasers
33

 

34

127675.  

(a) This chapter shall apply to any manufacturer of
35a prescription drug that is purchased or reimbursed by any of the
36following:

37(1) A state purchaser in California, including, but not limited
38to, the Public Employees’ Retirement System, the State Department
39of Health Care Services, the Department of General Services, and
P9    1the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, or an entity
2acting on behalf of a state purchaser.

3(2) A health care service plan licensed pursuant to Section 1353.

4(3) A health insurer holding a valid outstanding certificate of
5authority from the Insurance Commissioner.

6(4) A pharmacy benefit manager as defined in subdivision (j)
7of Section 4430 of the Business and Professions Code.

8(b) (1) A manufacturer of a branded prescription drug shall
9notify each state purchaser, health care service plan, health insurer,
10or pharmacy benefit manager if it is increasing the wholesale
11acquisition cost of a prescription drug by more than 10 percent or
12by more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) during any 12-month
13period. The notice shall be provided in writing at leastbegin delete 60end deletebegin insert 30end insert days
14prior to the planned effective date of the increase. A copy of the
15notice shall be provided concurrently to the Chairs of the Senate
16Committee on Appropriations, the Senate Committee on Budget
17and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on Appropriations,
18and the Assembly Committee on Budget.

19(2) begin insert(A)end insertbegin insertend insert A manufacturer of a generic prescription drug with a
20 wholesale acquisition cost of one hundred dollars ($100) or more
21per month supplybegin insert end insertbegin insertor per a course of treatment that lasts less than
22a monthend insert
shall notify a state purchaser, health care service plan,
23health insurer, or pharmacy benefit manager if it is increasing the
24wholesale acquisition cost of the prescription drug by more than
2525 percent during a 12-month period. The notice shall be provided
26in writing at leastbegin delete 60end deletebegin insert 30end insert days prior to the planned effective date of
27the increase. A copy of the notice shall be provided concurrently
28to the Chairs of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, the
29Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly
30Committee on Appropriations, and the Assembly Committee on
31Budget.

begin insert

32
(B) For purposes of this section, a generic prescription drug is
33any product that qualifies as a “noninnovator multi-source drug”
34as defined by Section 1396r-8 (k)(7)(A)(iii) of Title 42 of the United
35States Code, excluding any product approved by the federal Food
36and Drug Administration under Section 262(k) of Title 42 of the
37United States Code. Prescription drugs that do not meet this
38definition are subject to reporting requirements pursuant to
39paragraph (1).

end insert

P10   1(3) Within 30 days of notification of a price increase under
2paragraph (1) or (2), a manufacturer shall report all of the following
3information to each state purchaser, health care service plan, health
4insurer, or pharmacy benefit manager:

5(A) A justification for the proposed price increase. The
6manufacturer may limit the information in the justification to that
7which is publicly available.

8(B) The previous year’s marketing budget for the drug.

9(C) The date and price of acquisition if the drug was not
10developed by the manufacturer.

11(D) A schedule of price increases for the drug for the previous
12fivebegin delete years.end deletebegin insert years if it was manufactured by the company, or if the
13drug was acquired by the manufacturer within the previous five
14years, the price of the drug at the time of the acquisition and in
15the calendar year prior to acquisition.end insert

16(4) (A) A manufacturer of a prescription drug shall notify in
17writing each state purchaser, health care service plan, health
18insurer, or pharmacy benefit manager if it is introducing a new
19prescription drug to market at a wholesale acquisition cost of ten
20thousand dollars ($10,000) or more annually or per course of
21treatment. The notice shall be provided in writing within three
22days of the federal Food and Drug Administration approval. A
23copy of the notice shall be provided concurrently to the Chairs of
24the Senate Committee on Appropriations, the Senate Committee
25on Budget and Fiscal Review, the Assembly Committee on
26Appropriations, and the Assembly Committee on Budget.

27(B) Within 30 days of notification of a new drug under this
28paragraph, a manufacturer shall report all of the following
29information to each state purchaser, health care service plan, health
30insurer, or pharmacy benefit manager:

31(i) A justification for the introductory price. The manufacturer
32may limit the contents of the justification to publicly available
33information.

34(ii) The expected marketing budget for the drug.

35(iii) The date and price of acquisition if the drug was not
36developed by the manufacturer.

37(5) Failure to report the information required pursuant to
38paragraph (3) or subparagraph (B) of paragraph (4) to state
39purchasers, health care service plans, health insurers, or pharmacy
40benefit managers shall result in a civil penalty of one thousand
P11   1dollars ($1,000) per day for every day after the 30-day notification
2period.

begin delete

3(c) The Legislature shall conduct an annual public hearing on
4aggregate trends in prescription drug pricing. The hearing shall
5provide for public discussion of overall price increases, emerging
6trends, decreases in drug spending, and the impact of prescription
7drug spending on health care affordability and premiums.

end delete
begin delete

8(d) Except for the hearing required pursuant to subdivision (c),
9the

end delete
begin insert

10
(c) Except for prescription drugs subject to paragraph (4) of
11subdivision (b), notice shall not be required for a prescription
12drug that is not already purchased or reimbursed by a purchaser
13described in subdivision (a).

end insert

14begin insert(d)end insertbegin insertend insertbegin insertTheend insert Legislature shall keep confidential all of the information
15provided to the Legislature pursuant to this section, and that
16information shall be exempt from disclosure under the California
17Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250)
18of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Governmentbegin delete Code).end deletebegin insert Code) and the
19Legislative Open Records Act (Article 3.5 (commencing with
20Section 9071) of Chapter 1.5 of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 2 of
21the Government Code).end insert

begin insert

22
(e) If a pharmacy benefit manager receives a notice of a price
23increase consistent with subdivision (b), the pharmacy benefit
24manager shall provide notice of the price increase to its contracting
25public and private purchasers. Upon request of the purchaser, the
26pharmacy benefit manager shall also provide the purchaser the
27justification provided by the pharmaceutical manufacturer
28consistent with subdivision (b).

end insert
begin delete

29(e)

end delete

30begin insert(f)end insert This chapter shall not restrict the legal ability of a
31pharmaceutical manufacturer to change prices as permitted under
32federal law.

33

SEC. 4.  

Section 10123.204 is added to the Insurance Code, 34immediately preceding Section 10123.206, to read:

35

10123.204.  

(a) (1) A health insurer that reports rate
36information pursuant to Section 10181.3 or 10181.45 shall report
37the information described in paragraph (2) to the department on a
38date no later than it reports the rate information.

P12   1(2) For all covered prescription drugs, including generic drugs,
2brand name drugs, and specialty drugs provided in an outpatient
3setting, all of the following shall be reported:

4(A) The 25 most frequently prescribed drugs.

5(B) The 25 most costly drugs by total insurer spending.

6(C) The 25 drugs with the highest year-over-year increase in
7spending.

8(b) The department shall compile the information reported
9pursuant to subdivision (a) into a report for the public and
10legislators that demonstrates the overall impact of drug costs on
11health care premiums. The data in the report shall be aggregated
12and shall not reveal information specific to individual health
13insurers.

14(c) For the purposes of this section, a “specialty drug” is one
15that exceeds the threshold for a specialty drug under the Medicare
16Part D program (Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
17Modernization Act of 2003 (Public Law 108-173)).

18(d) By October 1 of each year, the department shall publish on
19its Internet Web site the report required pursuant to subdivision
20 (b).

21(e) After the report required in subdivision (b) is released, the
22department shall include the report as part of the public meeting
23required pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 10181.45.

24(f) Except for the report required pursuant to subdivision (b),
25the department shall keep confidential all of the information
26provided to the department pursuant to this section, and that
27information shall be exempt from disclosure under the California
28Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250)
29of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code).

30

SEC. 5.  

Section 10181.45 of the Insurance Code is amended
31to read:

32

10181.45.  

(a) For large group health insurance policies, each
33health insurer shall file with the department the weighted average
34rate increase for all large group benefit designs during the 12-month
35period ending January 1 of the following calendar year. The
36average shall be weighted by the number of insureds in each large
37group benefit design in the insurer’s large group market and
38adjusted to the most commonly sold large group benefit design by
39enrollment during the 12-month period. For the purposes of this
40section, the large group benefit design includes, but is not limited
P13   1to, benefits such as basic health care services and prescription
2drugs. The large group benefit design shall not include cost sharing,
3including, but not limited to, deductibles, copays, and coinsurance.

4(b) (1) A health insurer shall also submit any other information
5required pursuant to any regulation adopted by the department to
6comply with this article.

7(2) The department shall conduct an annual public meeting
8regarding large group rates within three months of posting the
9aggregate information described in this section in order to permit
10a public discussion of the reasons for the changes in the rates,
11benefits, and cost sharing in the large group market. The meeting
12shall be held in either the Los Angeles area or the San Francisco
13Bay area.

14(c) A health insurer subject to subdivision (a) shall also disclose
15the following for the aggregate rate information for the large group
16market submitted under this section:

17(1) For rates effective during the 12-month period ending
18January 1 of the following year, number and percentage of rate
19changes reviewed by the following:

20(A) Plan year.

21(B) Segment type, including whether the rate is community
22rated, in whole or in part.

23(C) Product type.

24(D) Number of insureds.

25(E) The number of products sold that have materially different
26benefits, cost sharing, or other elements of benefit design.

27(2) For rates effective during the 12-month period ending
28January 1 of the following year, any factors affecting the base rate,
29and the actuarial basis for those factors, including all of the
30following:

31(A) Geographic region.

32(B) Age, including age rating factors.

33(C) Occupation.

34(D) Industry.

35(E) Health status factors, including, but not limited to,
36experience and utilization.

37(F) Employee, and employee and dependents, including a
38description of the family composition used.

39(G) Insureds’ share of premiums.

P14   1(H) Insureds’ costbegin delete sharing.end deletebegin insert sharing, including for prescription
2drugs.end insert

3(I) Covered benefits in addition to basic health care services,
4as defined in Section 1345 of the Health and Safety Code, and
5other benefits mandated under this article.

6(J) Which market segment, if any, is fully experience rated and
7which market segment, if any, is in part experience rated and in
8part community rated.

9(K) Any other factor that affects the rate that is not otherwise
10specified.

11(3) (A) The insurer’s overall annual medical trend factor
12assumptions for all benefits and by aggregate benefit category,
13including hospital inpatient, hospital outpatient, physician services,
14prescription drugs and other ancillary services, laboratory, and
15radiology for the applicable 12-month period ending January 1 of
16the following year. A health insurer that exclusively contracts with
17no more than two medical groups in the state to provide or arrange
18for professional medical services for the health insurer’s insureds
19shall instead disclose the amount of its actual trend experience for
20the prior contract year by aggregate benefit category, using benefit
21categories, to the maximum extent possible, that are the same or
22similar to those used by other insurers.

23(B) The amount of the projected trend separately attributable
24to the use of services, price inflation, and fees and risk for annual
25policy trends by aggregate benefit category, including hospital
26inpatient, hospital outpatient, physician services, prescription drugs
27and other ancillary services, laboratory, and radiology. A health
28insurer that exclusively contracts with no more than two medical
29groups in the state to provide or arrange for professional medical
30services for the insureds shall instead disclose the amount of its
31actual trend experience for the prior contract year by aggregate
32benefit category, using benefit categories that are, to the maximum
33extent possible, the same or similar to those used by other insurers.

34(C) A comparison of the aggregate per insured per month costs
35and rate of changes over the last five years for each of the
36following:

37(i) Premiums.

38(ii) Claims costs, if any.

39(iii) Administrative expenses.

40(iv) Taxes and fees.

P15   1(D) Any changes in insured cost sharing over the prior year
2associated with the submitted rate information, including both of
3the following:

4(i) Actual copays, coinsurance, deductibles, annual out-of-pocket
5maximums, and any other cost sharing by the benefit categories
6determined by the department.

7(ii) Any aggregate changes in insured cost sharing over the prior
8years as measured by the weighted average actuarial value,
9weighted by the number of insureds.

10(E) Any changes in insured benefits over the prior year,
11including a description of benefits added or eliminated as well as
12any aggregate changes as measured as a percentage of the aggregate
13claims costs, listed by the categories determined by the department.

14(F) Any cost containment and quality improvement efforts made
15since the insurer’s prior year’s information pursuant to this section
16for the same category of health insurer. To the extent possible, the
17insurer shall describe any significant new health care cost
18containment and quality improvement efforts and provide an
19estimate of potential savings together with an estimated cost or
20savings for the projection period.

21(G) The number of products covered by the information that
22incurred the excise tax paid by the health insurer.

23(4) (A) For covered prescription drugs, including generic drugs
24but excluding specialty generic drugs, brand name drugs excluding
25specialty drugs, and specialty drugs dispensed at a pharmacy,
26network pharmacy, or mail order pharmacy for outpatient use all
27of the following shall be disclosed:

28(i) The percentage of the premium attributable to prescription
29drug costs for the prior year for each category of prescription drugs
30as defined in subparagraph (A).

31(ii) The year-over-year increase, as a percentage, in total
32spending for each category of prescription drugs as defined in
33subparagraph (A).

34(iii) The year-over-year increase in per member, per month costs
35for drug prices compared to other components of the health care
36premium.

37(iv) The specialty tier formulary list.

38(B) The insurer shall include the percentage of the premium
39attributable to prescription drugs administered in a doctor’s office
P16   1that are covered under the medical benefit as separate from the
2pharmacy benefit, if available.

begin insert

3
(C) (i) The insurer shall include information on its use of a
4pharmacy benefit manager, if any, including the components of
5the prescription drug coverage described in subparagraphs (A)
6and (B) for which the pharmacy benefit manager is responsible.

end insert
begin insert

7
(ii) The insurer shall also include the name of the pharmacy
8benefit manager.

end insert

9(d) The information required pursuant to this section shall be
10submitted to the department on or before October 1, 2016, and on
11or before October 1 annually thereafter. Information submitted
12pursuant to this section is subject to Section 10181.7.

13(e) For the purposes of this section, a “specialty drug” is one
14that exceeds the threshold for a specialty drug under the Medicare
15Part D program (Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
16Modernization Act of 2003 (Public Law 108-173)).

17

SEC. 6.  

The Legislature finds and declares that Sections 1, 3,
18and 4 of this act, which add Sections 1367.245 and 127675 to the
19Health and Safety Code and Section 10123.204 to the Insurance
20Code, impose a limitation on the public’s right of access to the
21meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and
22agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the
23California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision,
24the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the
25interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting
26that interest:

27In order to protect proprietary, confidential information reported
28by prescription drug manufacturers, health care service plans, and
29health insurers, and to protect the integrity of the competitive
30market, it is necessary that this act limit the public’s right of access
31to that information.

32

SEC. 7.  

No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
33Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
34the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
35district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
36infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
37for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
38the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
P17   1the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
2Constitution.



O

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