HF3756
Definition for covered insulin provided for the insulin safety net program and manufacturer registration fee.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
Related bill: SF4138
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
Explain and expand Minnesota’s approach to help people access insulin when they are in urgent need. Create a formal system where manufacturers, pharmacies, and state agencies work together to provide affordable, temporary insulin while people pursue long-term coverage or assistance. The bill defines what counts as “covered insulin,” sets up an urgent-need safety net, requires manufacturers to participate, and establishes funding, oversight, and penalties to ensure access and accountability.
Key concepts and definitions
- Covered insulin: insulin drugs prescribed for diabetes that are eligible for this program.
- Urgent need: a situation where a person would have less than a 7-day supply and risks significant health problems if they don’t get insulin soon.
- Insulin safety net program: the state program to rapidly provide a 30-day (or longer) supply of insulin when urgent need exists.
- Manufacturer: a company licensed to manufacture prescription covered insulin.
- MNsure: Minnesota’s health insurance marketplace/portal.
- Navigator: trained staff who help people access medical assistance, MNsure plans, or manufacturer programs.
- Patient assistance programs (PAPs): manufacturer programs that help people pay for insulin.
- 340B program: a federal program referenced as a source of information for providers and patient support.
- Health care access fund and insulin repayment account: state funds used to reimburse manufacturers and support the program.
- Private data on individuals: protection of personal information collected through the program.
How urgent-need access works (eligibility and process)
- Eligibility for urgent-need insulin:
- Must be a Minnesota resident.
- Not enrolled in medical assistance (MA) or MinnesotaCare.
- Not enrolled in prescription drug coverage with cost-sharing for a 30-day supply exceeding 75 (copays, deductibles, or coinsurance) regardless of insulin type.
- Has not received an urgent-need insulin supply in the prior 12 months unless authorized for a later exception.
- Is in urgent need of insulin.
- What “urgent need” means:
- Readily available less than a 7-day supply and necessary to avoid significant health consequences.
- Application and dispensing:
- MNsure will develop a standardized application form (accessible online and through pharmacies, prescribers, hospitals, clinics).
- To get insulin, a person must have a valid prescription and Minnesota residency ID, except for guardians of minors.
- A completed application is reviewed at the pharmacy; the pharmacist dispenses a 30-day supply once the form is signed and submitted.
- The pharmacist must notify the prescriber within 72 hours after dispensing.
- Pharmacies can submit a claim to the insulin’s manufacturer to be reimbursed for dispensing costs; manufacturers may replace the dispensed insulin if they choose.
- Copayment for the 30-day supply cannot exceed 35.
- The pharmacy provides an information sheet and a list of navigators to help with ongoing coverage options (medical assistance, MinnesotaCare, MNsure plans, and access to other programs).
- Pharmacy keeps a copy of the application for reporting and auditing.
Roles and responsibilities (who does what)
- Manufacturers:
- Must participate in the urgent-need program and maintain PAPs.
- May be reimbursed by the state for urgent-need insulin dispensed under the program (see funding).
- Offer eligibility determinations within defined timeframes; provide documentation when eligible; ensure access to copayment assistance if long-term coverage is pursued.
- If a patient has other coverage, manufacturers can steer them toward copayment assistance to minimize out-of-pocket costs.
- Pharmacies:
- Dispense a 30-day (urgent-need) or 90-day (continuing safety net) supply of insulin at no charge to the patient, with possible copayments for processing/dispensing.
- May submit claims to manufacturers for reimbursement (or receive replacements if the manufacturer opts to replace).
- For 90-day supplies, may collect up to 50 copay for processing/dispensing if the insulin is shipped to the pharmacy.
- May place 90-day orders to manufacturers; may use mail-order pathways.
- MNsure and Board of Pharmacy:
- Create and manage application forms, navigator training, and information materials.
- Maintain lists of trained navigators and coordinate with providers and pharmacies.
- Develop an information sheet describing programs and access routes; ensure information is accessible to patients and providers.
- Manage reimbursement processes and oversee program administration.
- Navigators:
- Help individuals understand eligibility and access to ongoing insulin coverage (medical assistance, MinnesotaCare, MNsure plans, PAPs, etc.).
- May receive a one-time bonus for helping with applications, funded within available appropriations.
Financials and funding (how money moves)
- Manufacturer registration fee:
- The Board of Pharmacy assesses an annual registration fee of $100,000 per manufacturer, with possible exemptions if a manufacturer’s Minnesota sales of prescription covered insulin are very small compared to national sales.
- Reimbursement and funding mechanisms:
- A separate insulin repayment account is created in the state’s special revenue fund.
- Money in that account is used to reimburse manufacturers for 30-day or 90-day insulin dispensed under the safety net program and to cover related administration costs.
- The state transfers funds into the insulin repayment account from the health care access fund as directed (starting in 2025 and annually thereafter, based on certified expenditures).
- Reimbursement amounts:
- For 30-day supplies dispensed under the urgent-need process, the state may reimburse the manufacturer up to a set amount per 30-day supply (specific cap described in the text for different scenarios).
- For 90-day supplies dispensed under the continuing safety net program, the state may reimburse up to 105 for each 90-day supply (if the supply qualifies under the program) or up to 35 per 30-day unit for shorter supplies if needed.
- Patient costs:
- For urgent-need 30-day supplies, the patient’s out-of-pocket copayment cannot exceed 35.
- For 90-day supplies, the patient may face a copayment up to 50 to cover processing and dispensing costs if the 90-day supply is sent to the pharmacy.
- Penalties for noncompliance:
- Manufacturers failing to comply can face escalating administrative penalties (up to 200,000 per month, increasing to 400,000 after six months, 600,000 after one year, and staying at 600,000 thereafter).
- Penalties also apply if a manufacturer does not provide a hotline or post eligibility information on their site.
- Penalties are deposited into the new covered insulin assistance account.
Data privacy, reporting, and program review
- Data privacy:
- Data collected about individuals seeking urgent-need insulin or participating in manufacturer PAPs are classified as private data on individuals and may not be retained longer than ten years.
- Manufacturers must protect privacy and cannot sell or share data except as required by the program or with signed authorizations.
- Reporting:
- By February 15 each year, manufacturers must report to the Board of Pharmacy the number of Minnesota residents who accessed insulin on an urgent-need basis and the number participating in PAPs, plus the total value of insulin provided (based on wholesale cost).
- By March 15 each year, the Board must share these reports with state legislative committees and include any penalties assessed.
- Program review:
- The Legislative Auditor is asked to conduct a review of program effectiveness, including:
- Whether manufacturers reimburse pharmacies in a timely manner.
- Whether eligibility determinations and notifications are timely.
- Whether pharmacists receive and dispense insulin from PAPs efficiently.
- Whether navigator training and availability are adequate.
- Repeal and appendices:
- The statute repeals a prior subdivision related to program satisfaction surveys, with related expectations moved into an Appendix.
Oversight, enforcement, and accountability
- The Board of Pharmacy enforces compliance with penalties for noncompliance.
- The program requires a hotline and public-facing eligibility information.
- Data and reporting are designed to ensure transparency to legislators and the public.
- A legislative auditor review provides independent evaluation of program performance and vendor compliance.
Implementation timeline and expected effects
- Establishes a formal system by which urgent-need insulin can be accessed quickly, with ongoing access through manufacturer PAPs and copayment assistance where appropriate.
- Creates a dedicated funding stream (insulin repayment account) to reimburse manufacturers for urgent-need and 90-day supplies.
- Sets up oversight, reporting, and accountability mechanisms to monitor program performance and ensure data privacy.
- Aims to reduce gaps in insulin access for Minnesota residents who are uninsured or underinsured and who cannot immediately obtain affordable insulin through existing programs.
Potential changes to existing law
- Amends multiple Minnesota Statutes to create the insulin safety net program, define covered insulin, and establish roles, funding, and penalties.
- Adds new definitions and modifies how manufacturers register and interact with state agencies.
- Repeals a former satisfaction-survey provision and replaces it with a new framework and reporting requirements.
- Introduces a new insulin repayment account and funding flow from the Health Care Access Fund.
Relevant Terms - insulin safety net program - covered insulin - urgentneed - MNsure - Board of Pharmacy - manufacturer registration fee - manufacturer - patient assistance program (PAP) - copayment - wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) - 30-day supply - 90-day supply - navigator - 340B program - health care access fund - insulin repayment account - private data on individuals - administrative penalties - hotline - eligibility requirements - long-term coverage options - medical assistance (MA) - MinnesotaCare - Minnesota resident - private data retention limits - reporting and audits - legislative auditor review
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Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| February 26, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Health Finance and Policy | |
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