ICYMI in Axios: Blackburn Looks To Put Stamp On PBMs, Rural Health
September 18, 2023
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), a member of the Senate Finance Committee, sat down with Axios to discuss her health care work on behalf of the Volunteer State – including PBM reform and her Rural Health Agenda.
Blackburn looks to put stamp on PBMs, rural health
Victoria Knight
Sen. Marsha Blackburn, one of the newest members of the Senate Finance Committee, hasn't wasted time trying to position herself as one of the panel's leaders on PBMs, rural health and other aspects of health policy.
- Blackburn seldom talks to the press in the hallways, but she sat down with Axios last week to discuss next steps now that the bipartisan Patients Before Middlemen Act, which she co-sponsored, passed out of the committee. Responses have been edited for length and clarity.
Requiring PBMs to contract with rural independent pharmacies: "In Tennessee, we have 70 of our 95 counties considered rural. We have lost 15 rural hospitals over the last few years, so access is an issue. Most of these towns have a pharmacy. It'll be there on the courthouse square. And this is the access point for a lot of health care and health care information for many Tennesseans."
- Blackburn has a bill with Sen. Joe Manchin that would address this PBM issue, and a bipartisan version was also introduced in the House this week.
How she addressed rural health access with a CMS waiver: "We assisted Fentress County, who got involved with the University of Tennessee Medical Center, and we got a waiver from CMS. At the end of June we opened a freestanding emergency room where you can get X-rays, you can get lab work. So if people are going to Cookeville or Knoxville for a procedure, they don't have to go until it's time for the procedure. It gets them the urgent care they have not had."
- Fentress County previously had its rural hospital close in 2019.
- Blackburn also has a bipartisan rural health care agenda she introduced earlier this year.
Changing the VA care model to allow access at local facilities: "Having that local hospital, that local physician as the entry point for our veterans, that is something that they want. They want to be able to show that VA card and have the VA billed back for those services. We have an enormous veterans population in the state. They don't want to have to go to Nashville or Knoxville or Memphis. They would like to be able to go in their community many times."
- Blackburn has a bill with Rep. Andy Biggs and several other Republican senators that would create a pilot program allowing veterans to access care outside the VA without a referral process.
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