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VETERANS MAY NOW FILL VA PRESCRIPTIONS AT
LOW-COST RETAILERS --
VA doctors can now write prescriptions that can
be filled at non-VA
pharmacies. Vets can save on co-pays by having
prescriptions
filled at Wal-Mart, Target and other
discounters.

As reported first on VA Watchdog dot Org,
the VA has developed a policy that will allow VA doctors to write
prescriptions that can be filled at non-system pharmacies. That
story here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/nfNOV06/nf112106-1.htm
This means that vets who have to pay the
$8 co-pay, can use the Wal-Mart or Target $4 plans and save some
money...not to mention the money it will save the VA as 2.6 million
veterans have to pay co-pays.
Here's a hint for vets: If your VA
doctor is not aware of this program, just ask him or her to look up the
November 21, 2006 memo from William F. Feeley, Deputy Under Secretary
for Health for Operations and Management in the Veterans Health
Administration (VHA). It will be on their computer system.
Story here...
http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/
pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061211/NEWS01/612110353/1001/NEWS
Story below:
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Veterans now may purchase drugs from low-cost
retailers
By Dennis Camire
Advertiser Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — Wal-Mart has been known to set pricing trends in the retail
industry, but this time it seems to have influenced the way the
government provides prescription drugs to the nation's military
veterans.
When the retailing giant rolled out $4 pricing on generic drugs in
September, first in Florida, and in Hawai'i by late November, it caught
the eye of some of the 2.6 million veterans who pay $8 per prescription
to the Veterans Affairs Department.
At first, the government agency told veterans they couldn't take their
prescriptions to Wal-Mart or other outside pharmacies, because the
prescriptions were written specifically for VA pharmacies.
But after some veterans asked to use the low-cost retailers, the VA
started changing the rules, allowing VA doctors to more easily write
prescriptions that could be filled at outside pharmacies.
New guidelines issued last month allow veterans to save money by going
to Wal-Mart, Target, Costco and other stores that have started low-price
generic programs, according to Michael Valentino, chief consultant for
pharmacy benefits management in the VA.
"Veterans are price sensitive like everyone else," Valentino said. "We
try to accommodate not only their medical needs but also their economic
desires."
The change in policy apparently is not widely known yet among veterans
who use the VA medical system, according to several veterans' groups.
Fred Ballard, spokesman for the VA Pacific Islands Health Care System,
said a survey of the VA doctors found that no one has requested an
outside prescription in Hawai'i, where Wal-Mart began its program on
Nov. 27.
"They (doctors) have the instructions on what to do if someone should,
but so far, there have been no questions or requests for transfer," he
said.
About 2.6 million of the 4.3 million veterans who received drugs from
the VA last year were required to make the $8 payments. Generally,
veterans don't qualify for free drugs because their medical conditions
are not service-related or they have too much income.
Valentino said he does not know how many veterans are interested in
going to outside pharmacies.
"We really don't have hard numbers, but it's more than a few," he said.
"We have a lot of anecdotal information."
Veterans welcomed the new rules. "I go along with that," said Gerald
Yohman, 71, a Korean War veteran in Apollo Beach, Fla. "I got six
prescriptions, so I spend about $150 every three months (at the VA).
Looks like it might cut my costs in half, if I can get the
prescriptions."
The VA also is looking for ways to reduce veterans' co-payments for
generic drugs at its pharmacies, but no deadline has been set for any
action.
Joey Ilem, a legislative director for Disabled American Veterans, said
that one concern about letting VA patients fill prescriptions outside
the agency is that it could present problems in monitoring their drug
intake and interactions.
Now, when veterans go to a VA medical facility, doctors see records of
their prescriptions having been filled. But records from outside
pharmacies won't show up.
"Whenever you start to break up that care ... you lose a little bit of
control in terms of the person taking his medication and being
monitored," she said.
Joe Davis, spokesman for Veterans of Foreign Wars, said the low-priced
generic drugs was a good thing for all Americans, but he wanted to know
why the VA couldn't follow suit.
"We know that Wal-Mart is doing this as a loss leader to get people into
their stores. It makes sense," he said. "Well, if they can do that, why
can't the VA, because the VA is the largest healthcare system in the
country."
As for Wal-Mart, officials there said the generic drug program is
proving very popular, increasing prescriptions by 2.1 million across the
first 27 states to get the program in an initial six-week period,
compared with the same period last year. The Bentonville, Ark., company
won't say how many prescriptions it fills, company spokesman Jami Arms
said.
Reach Dennis Camire at
dcamire@gns.gannett.com.
---------------
Larry Scott