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Idaho requires annual 340B program reports from covered entities, detailing costs, payments, claims, contract pharmacy expenses, payer breakdowns, and how savings are used.
Idaho requires annual 340B program reports from covered entities, detailing costs, payments, claims, contract pharmacy expenses, payer breakdowns, and how savings are used.
Topic: 340B Drug Pricing Program reporting (Idaho)
Status and key dates
- Enacted and signed by the Governor: April 1, 2025.
- Session Law Chapter: 246.
- Effective (emergency): July 1, 2025.
- Introduced: February 4, 2025.
Purpose
- Require annual state reporting from entities participating in the federal 340B drug pricing program to increase transparency about program participation and financial flows in Idaho.
Who is affected
- “340B covered entities” — defined as entities authorized under federal law to participate in 340B and expressly includes pharmacies under contract to dispense 340B drugs.
- State agencies: Idaho Department of Health & Welfare (IDHW), State Controller’s Office, and the Attorney General’s Office.
- Indirectly affects payers (commercial insurers, Medicaid, Medicare), contract pharmacies, and the entities’ patients.
Key provisions
1. Annual reporting requirement (due April 1 each year, covering the previous calendar year): covered entities must submit to IDHW, the State Controller, and the Attorney General:
- Entity name;
- Aggregate acquisition cost for prescription drugs obtained under 340B;
- Aggregate payment amount received for those drugs dispensed to patients;
- Aggregate payments made to contract pharmacies to dispense 340B drugs;
- Number of claims for those prescription drugs; and
- How savings from 340B participation were used, including amounts applied to charity care, community benefits, or similar uncompensated care programs.
2. Reports must break out the information by payer type: Commercial, Medicaid, and Medicare.
3. Confidentiality: Individual data submitted under these requirements is confidential and not available for public inspection.
4. State Controller’s aggregation/reporting (due annually before November 15): the Controller will aggregate submitted data, submit an electronic report to the Legislative Council, and publish the aggregated report on the Transparent Idaho website.
5. Attorney General authority: may use reported information to investigate Medicaid fraud and to ensure compliance with Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) requirements related to the 340B program.
Fiscal impact
- Fiscal note attached to the bill claims no net fiscal impact to state or local government (no revenue or expenditure change).
Practical impact and considerations
- Imposes an annual data collection and reporting obligation on 340B entities (including contract pharmacies).
- Balances data confidentiality for submitted records with public availability of aggregated state-level reporting.
- Provides state authorities tools to monitor Medicaid-related issues and federal compliance, while aiming to give legislators and the public aggregated transparency into 340B financial flows and use of savings.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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