SF4138

Definition for covered insulin for the insulin safety net program and manufacturer registration fee provision
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)

Related bill: HF3756

AI Generated Summary

Purpose and goals

  • Establish an insulin safety net program to help people in Minnesota get urgent, affordable access to insulin (the “urgent-need covered insulin”).
  • Clarify what counts as “covered insulin” and how manufacturers, pharmacists, and state agencies work together to make insulin available when a person is in urgent need.
  • Create financial support mechanisms to reimburse manufacturers and support access, while adding oversight, privacy protections, and reporting requirements.

Key concepts and terms used in the bill

  • urgent-need covered insulin, covered insulin
  • insulin safety net program
  • manufacturer patient assistance program
  • copayment, out-of-pocket costs
  • MNsure (Minnesota’s health insurance marketplace)
  • Board of Pharmacy
  • navigator
  • 30-day supply, 90-day supply
  • wholesale acquisition cost (WAC)
  • 340B program
  • MinnesotaCare
  • Health Care Access Fund, insulin repayment account
  • private data on individuals (privacy protections)

What the bill changes or adds (main provisions)

  • Defines and protects data related to people seeking urgent-need insulin (privacy safeguards).
  • Establishes who must participate and how covered insulin is defined and priced, including exemptions for small manufacturers and price thresholds to keep insulin affordable.
  • Sets eligibility rules for people to receive urgent-need insulin, including residency, lack of other coverage, and a threshold for cost-sharing.
  • Creates a process to apply for urgent-need insulin via MNsure and by presenting a prescription at a pharmacy; outlines what information is needed and what the pharmacist must do.
  • Requires pharmacists to dispense a 30-day supply (and, in some cases, a 90-day supply) of insulin at no charge to the patient, with possible copayments under certain limits.
  • Allows pharmacists to request reimbursement from manufacturers for the cost of dispensed insulin; manufacturers may also provide a 90-day (or 30-day) supply directly to patients, with state reimbursement to the manufacturer.
  • Requires manufacturers to run patient assistance programs and to help eligible Minnesota residents access insulin, with income and residency checks and timelines for eligibility decisions.
  • Creates a framework for copayments, reimbursements, and possible mail-order insulin distribution.
  • Establishes duties for the Board of Pharmacy and MNsure to train navigators, provide information sheets, and maintain a list of trained navigators to help people access long-term insulin options.
  • Establishes penalties for manufacturers that fail to comply with the program, including large monthly penalties and hotline requirements.
  • Sets up a system to report yearly on how many Minnesotans used the program, how much insulin was provided, and how many were helped by manufacturer programs; authorizes a program review by the Legislative Auditor.
  • Creates an insulin repayment account in the state’s special revenue fund to reimburse manufacturers and to cover related administrative costs; transfers funds from the Health Care Access Fund as needed.
  • Repeals a prior subsection related to a satisfaction survey component and updates related definitions.

How the urgent-need insulin safety net works (high-level flow)

  • A Minnesota resident applies for urgent-need insulin, via MNsure or at a pharmacy, by attesting to eligibility rules (resident, lack of other coverage, low enough cost-sharing, urgent need).
  • If eligible, the patient can receive a 30-day supply from a pharmacy; the pharmacist must notify the prescriber within 72 hours.
  • The pharmacy may seek reimbursement from the insulin manufacturers for the cost of dispensing; manufacturers may replace dispensed insulin if needed.
  • The patient may pay a small copayment (limits apply: up to a certain amount per 30-day supply, and higher limits may apply for 90-day supplies).
  • If the patient has access to manufacturer or other assistance programs, those options may be used to reduce costs, with navigation support to help access long-term solutions.
  • The state and Board of Pharmacy oversee information sheets, navigator training, and a directory of navigators to help people find ongoing affordable insulin options and other benefits (e.g., medical assistance, MinnesotaCare, or qualified health plans).

Roles of key players

  • Manufacturers: run patient assistance programs, determine eligibility for their programs, reimburse pharmacies for urgent-need insulin dispensed, and provide wholesale-cost-based support. Must report eligible patients and program activity.
  • Pharmacies: dispense urgent-need insulin, collect limited copayments, submit reimbursement claims, and supply information and navigator contacts to patients.
  • Navigators: trained by MNsure with input from the Board of Pharmacy to help people access long-term coverage and insulin options; may receive a one-time application assistance payment for helping enrollments.
  • MNsure and Board of Pharmacy: develop application forms, provide training, maintain navigator lists, and ensure information is available to pharmacies and health care providers.
  • Commissioner of Administration: processes and pays approved manufacturer reimbursements; oversees a separate insulin repayment account funded from the Health Care Access Fund.
  • Legislative Auditor: may review program implementation and effectiveness.

Eligibility and benefits (who can get urgent-need insulin and how it works)

  • Eligible individuals must be Minnesota residents, not enrolled in Medical Assistance or MinnesotaCare, not enrolled in a prescription-drug plan that limits cost-sharing to a low level for a 30-day supply, and must have urgent need (less than a 7-day supply or risk of significant health consequences).
  • A 30-day supply is dispensed at no charge to the patient; copays may apply up to defined limits.
  • In certain cases, a 90-day supply can be dispensed, with separate copayment limits and reimbursement rules.
  • For people already enrolled in manufacturer programs or who have other coverage, the bill allows use of manufacturer copayment assistance so long as the patient’s out-of-pocket costs stay within the program’s rules.

Funding, fees, and reimbursement

  • Manufacturers must pay an annual registration fee (with an exemption for some small manufacturers based on revenue, to avoid significant cost barriers).
  • An insulin repayment account is created in the state’s special revenue fund; money there is used to reimburse manufacturers for insulin dispensed under the safety net and to cover related administration costs.
  • Transfers from the Health Care Access Fund support the insulin repayment account, with annual certification of expenditures and transfers to the insulin repayment account to match those expenditures.
  • Reimbursements to manufacturers have defined caps for different supply types (e.g., up to $35 per 30-day supply; up to $105 per 90-day supply; other caps apply for different distribution arrangements).

Oversight, accountability, and data privacy

  • Data about individuals seeking urgent-need insulin or participating in manufacturer programs is protected as private data and kept for a limited time.
  • Penalties apply to manufacturers who fail to comply, including escalating monthly penalties and the need to maintain a hotline and clear eligibility information on their websites.
  • Annual reporting requirements: manufacturers report usage and program activity; the Board of Pharmacy reports to legislative committees; penalties are disclosed.
  • A program review by the Legislative Auditor is planned to assess how well manufacturers are meeting responsibilities, including reimbursement, eligibility processing, and navigator training.

Implementation timeline and changes to law

  • The bill updates definitions and creates a new framework for the insulin safety net, including how covered insulin is defined and how the safety net interacts with existing programs like MNsure and MinnesotaCare.
  • It repeals a former subsection related to program satisfaction surveys and replaces it with a broader set of reporting and oversight provisions.
  • It creates new funding mechanisms (insulin repayment account) and adjusts how manufacturers pay registration fees and how reimbursements are calculated and paid.

Practical implications (what this means for people)

  • It aims to make urgent, short-term insulin access more reliable and affordable for Minnesotans who lack other coverage and are in urgent need.
  • It provides a structured process at the pharmacy and through manufacturers to obtain insulin quickly, with clear rules for reimbursement and cost-sharing limits.
  • It emphasizes privacy protections for people’s data and establishes state oversight to monitor program effectiveness and ensure accountability.

Note on terminology and public relevance

  • The bill uses terms like urgent-need insulin, covered insulin, insulin safety net program, and manufacturer patient assistance programs. It also involves familiar elements like copayments, the 30-day and 90-day supply concepts, and well-known programs and agencies like MNsure and the Board of Pharmacy.

Relevant Terms - urgent-need insulin, covered insulin, insulin safety net program - MNsure, Board of Pharmacy, navigator - manufacturer patient assistance program - copayment, cost-sharing, wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) - 30-day supply, 90-day supply - 340B program, MinnesotaCare - Health Care Access Fund, insulin repayment account - private data on individuals, data privacy, reporting, statutory penalties - Medical Assistance, Medicare Part D (in eligibility considerations)

Bill text versions

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Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
March 04, 2026SenateActionIntroduction and first reading
March 04, 2026SenateActionReferred toHealth and Human Services
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Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee

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