Share your story
in the fight for #InsuranceReform

Our state and federal legislators, as well as other governmental bodies, rely heavily on stories from patients and providers to (1) identify issues affecting our nation’s healthcare system and (2) find meaningful solutions to those issues, many of which will or have already required legislative reform. This is especially true in our industry, where little to a complete lack of transparency, among other systemic issues, has allowed Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM) abuse to grow out of control while few people remain aware of it.

Whether you’re a patient or pharmacy provider, below you’ll find helpful information about how and with whom you should share your story (including submitting official complaints) about problems you face accessing/providing pharmacy care or filling your/patients’ prescriptions.

A few tips & tricks

  • When in doubt, submit a complaint! Regulatory bodies are legally required to look into each and every complaint they receive from concerns citizens or consumers—it’s their job. Additionally, just because a complaint isn’t “valid” in the sense that it, technically, “broke the rules” as they currently stand doesn’t mean it isn’t valuable (especially because rules, of course, aren’t always fair, equitable, etc.). Every single story that these agencies hear about is an opportunity for the word to spread—our leaders can’t change things they don’t know about or don’t understand, and that knowing and understanding often comes from everyday people like you and us. So, if you’re doubtful of whether your complaint is warranted, submit one anyway—it can’t hurt, but it might help.

  • Before submitting any complaint, make sure to save a copy of it along with any supporting documents by doing one of the following. This way, you’ll have a record of what you submitted if the applicable entity contacts you for more information.

    • Utilize the online portal of whatever entity you submitted a complaint to: This isn’t offered by every governmental or other regulatory body that accepts complaints and usually requires setting up an account, but offers more features than submitting a complaint manually via email or verbally via phone, including saving past submissions and tracking the status of a complaint as it’s investigated.

    • Take a screenshot on your device: Hold the control (Windows) / ⌘ (Mac) and P keys on your keyboard at the same time to print a screenshot of your filled out complaint and attach it to whatever file(s) you’re planning to upload to support your complaint.

    • Copy and paste the details of your complaint (i.e., your story) somewhere safe, such as in your phone’s note-taking app or on another other personal device.

For patients

Submitting an official complaint

If your insurance company and/or your plan’s Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM) have ever impeded your pharmacy care, please file a complaint with either the Minnesota Department of Commerce (MN DOC)** or Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Their staff read each and every complaint, and we know firsthand from fellow independent pharmacists across our state that they are listening, and learning, and becoming more and more concerned about the misconduct of health insurance companies and PBMs. They’ve been receiving Pharmacists’ and pharmacies’ complaints for years; now it’s time they hear the stories of patients like YOU. See below for instructions on how to submit a complaint to each of these entities.

*Examples of this include:

  • Being forced by your insurance company to move your prescriptions to a mail order service or pay 100% of your prescription costs at a local pharmacy (a classic example of “patient steering”)

  • Being forced to pay a higher copay for a brand-name medication when there are far more cost-effective generic alternatives

  • An insurance company you are no longer covered by allowing a prescription claim to go through on your behalf (i.e., being wrongly represented as covered by an insurance entity you are no longer a member with)

**If you’re not from Minnesota, consider submitting a complaint to your state’s Department of Commerce (or equivalent

Click here to view Minnesota Statute 62W, otherwise known as the “Minnesota Pharmacy Benefit Manager Licensure and Regulation Act,” which legally defines patients’ rights in the state of Minnesota in regard to PBM conduct and their obligation to covered patients and the pharmacies serving them.

Submitting a complaint to MN Department of Commerce (DOC)

If you have commercial insurance (e.g., through your employer or school), click here to be led to MN DOC’s “File a Complaint” page. Submitting complaints through their online portal is the most efficient way to do so and allows you to see the status of your complaint, communicate with the investigator, and add supporting documents through the investigation, but does require an email address. You can also submit your complaint via email or phone.

After submitting your complaint, you should receive an email from either Victoria or Norman from MN DOC confirming they received your complaint and that it’s in progress. If you don’t hear anything right away, don’t be discouraged! For example, a fellow independent pharmacy owner thought they were ignoring one of their complaints for two years, but they later found out that MN DOC didn’t want to close the complaint because it became part of a lawsuit the AG brought against CVS. Since it was an ongoing investigation, they could not tell this Pharmacist anything at the time. 

Submitting a complain to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)

If you have health insurance through Medicare, click here to be led to CMS’s online complaint form. You’ll need information from your Medicare card in order to submit your complaint. If your complaint is regarding an urgent issue that requires a resolution within 10 days, Medicare requests that you give them a call at 1 (800) MEDICARE.

Other ways to share your story

  • Participate in MN DOC’s collection of patient feedback regarding their health insurance | MN DOC recently announced that they will be collecting feedback from Minnesotans about their health insurance coverage: what’s working, what isn’t, and what residents would want to see from a publicly funded, universal health insurance option if it were to become available (an expansion of the current MinnesotaCare program). Let’s help our state become the FIRST to ensure that EVERY human living within our borders has access to affordable, effective health insurance! Feedback will be collected through the end of August in the form of online small-group discussions of 8-10 individuals. The completed report of their findings from these discussions will be available on the DOC website. Click here to learn more and express your interest in participating.

  • Complete the MN Department of Health’s (MDH) Public Input on Prescription Drug Price Transparency in Minnesota form | Since 2022, our state has been collecting and posting data on certain prescription drug prices based on specified price thresholds outlined in the Prescription Drug Price Transparency Act. In 2023, the Act was expanded to include “drugs of substantial public interest” to be named by MDH with input from the public. The expanded reporting began in 2024 and now includes data from drug manufacturers, pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), wholesalers, and pharmacies.  As a part of the 2023 expansion, members of the public can now have a say in which drugs may be required for transparency reporting. Click here to complete the form.

  • Contribute to the New York Times’ ongoing PBM investigation | Complete their brief online form that asks questions about when you’ve had trouble getting your medication

  • Submit a complaint to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the independent agency of the United States government whose principal mission is the enforcement of civil antitrust law and the promotion of consumer protection. Link(s) to their ongoing investigation(s) are listed below:

    • Solicitation for Public Comment to Understand Lack of Competition and Contracting Practices that May be Contributing to Drug Shortages | Click here to share how you have been or are currently being impacted by shortages of the drug(s) you take (e.g., stimulants, injectables, and antibiotics; a dynamic list of current drug shortages can be found here)

  • Submit a complaint to the Department of Justice (DOJ)/FTC/Department of Health & Human Services' (DHS) joint investigation into healthcare competition | Click here to share about your knowledge of anticompetitive practices in the healthcare field or complain about how lack of competition in healthcare has impacted your own life/health. Of note, this form is only to be used to submit complaints about healthcare competition; do NOT submit complaints about failure to pay claims or cover healthcare services, increases in individual insurers’ rates, billing disputes, or general unhappiness about the healthcare system.

  • Share your story with Patients United for Insurance Reform (PUIR) | As part of their mission to “advocate for transparency, accountability, and a patient-centered approach to reshape health care and ensure the welfare of individuals takes precedence over corporate interests,” PUIR is actively collecting patient stories about how they’ve been impacted by their health insurance provider. Click here to complete their brief Google Form, after which they’ll follow up with you to discuss your issue(s) in more detail.

  • Share your story with PatientProtector.us | A non-profit originally started in Wisconsin to help educate patients and collect their stories about PBM abuse, PatientProtector.us is now collecting patients’ stories nationwide and working alongside Pharmacists United for Truth and Transparency (PUTT) and several other patient advocacy groups and working on a soon-to-be-released documentary on PBM abuse. Click here to learn how to send them either a recorded or written version of your story.

Questions or need help submitting a complaint? Email hildie@stpaulcornerdrug.com

For healthcare providers

While regulatory bodies often prioritize hearing directly from or about patients’ challenges with our healthcare system, our stories are important, too—especially when it comes to those of us operating and working in independent pharmacies, which are currently facing financial turmoil at the hands of PBMs and their abusive conduct. Below is a collection of complaint opportunities we’ve discovered on our own or through interactions with fellow healthcare providers. While most are focused on pharmacists and other pharmacy workers, some are applicable to other healthcare providers as well.

Some opportunities listed below are focused on our home state of Minnesota; however, if you practice in a different state, they may still serve as helpful examples for submitting similar complaints to the applicable entities in your own state.

Submitting a complaint to MN DOC [if you practice in Minnesota]

Click here to be led to MN DOC’s “File a Complaint” page. Like patients themselves, we can submit complaints on behalf of the individuals we care for when we believe their rights have been violated by their insurance company or their plan’s PBM. Additionally, MN DOC fields complaints regarding other commerce-related issues, including PBM abuse that affects pharmacies directly. Of note, MN DOC’s scope of complaints that they are legally able to investigate appears limited and inconsistent (or, in some cases, still being debated), but they’ll always let you know if your complaint is outside of their jurisdiction. Per guidance from fellow indie pharmacists with extensive experience submitting MN DOC complaints, key topics that they do or might have jurisdiction over include:

  • Patient steering, manifestations of which include:

    • Claim rejections stating that refills aren’t covered and must be filled via mail order (yes, patients can technically opt out, but in reality it often requires an unreasonable amount of effort/understanding on their part)

    • Claim rejections stating that specialty medications must be filled by the PBM’s own specialty pharmacy.

    • Phone calls from the PBM/insurance plan to the patient to "go over their medications" and suddenly the patient is notified by the PBM’s mail order pharmacy that their “order is ready to ship.

    • Patients being given flex cards to purchase OTC products that are only usable at the big box stores

  • Inappropriate transfer requests (these are referred to MN Board of Pharmacy, but DOC wants to hear about these cases as well so that they know what is going on). Per feedback from other indie pharmacists, Amazon and Smith have been the worst offenders of these inappropriate requests.

  • Clawbacks/DIR fees. Per feedback from other indie pharmacists, it’s best to leave specific claims you are submitting a complaint about processed, as reversing these claims leads PBMs to say that there are “no such claims in our system.” Per recent developments, manifestations of this issue might also include:

    • GoodRx and other discount cards being embedded in claims processing | MN DOC does not yet know if they have jurisdiction, but are actively looking into this newfound issue and working with the MN Attorney General’s office (per the assumption that, if there is money being applied to a patient’s deductible, it is no longer a discount card and, instead, “actual” insurance that MN DOC might have jurisdiction over).

    • Medicare Part D claims | MN DOC’s response has traditionally been that CMS has jurisdiction over these complaints, but they are now actively reviewing the language in 62W and say they may not have to carve out these claims.

    • Performance Network clawbacks | Traditionally, these claims have been considered exempt from MN DOC’s jurisdiction through the rules making process, but they are revisiting this again because a real-time clawback is not retrospective, as the rules were originally written to exclude.

  • MAC/pricing appeals when PBMs use obsolete or unavailable NDC numbers to set the MAC price.  This happens less commonly these days due to changes in PBM practices, but is still relevant in some scenarios. Examples include:

    • Discovering that pricing on a prescription turns out differently when the claim is reversed and rebilled after sitting in the pharmacy’s will call bin for 10+ days

    • When the patient’s insurance plan forces them to use the brand-name version of a drug, but the brand-name version isn’t available and the generic version isn’t covered at the brand price. Pharmacies we know who have faced this situation have completed the PA process then reported the PBM’s contradictory response, which has traditionally been that the pharmacy “can dispense the brand and will be reimbursed according to their contracts.”

  • Audits. What was acceptable as evidence to fight audits has changed in 2024, so, if your pharmacy is being audited and losing, this is something to complain about, especially if updates your contracts didn’t include changes to the provider manual in the audit section. Complaints regarding audits that have already been submitted to MN DOC are actively pending, but the assumption is that the current language in 62W should protect pharmacies from this issue.

Of note, MN DOC does NOT have jurisdiction over complaints related to MA or MCO claims for Medicaid patients (which should be referred to MDH) or Medicare Part D claims (which should be referred to CMS).

After submitting your complaint, you should receive an email from either Victoria or Norman from MN DOC confirming they received your complaint and that it’s in progress. If you don’t hear anything right away, don’t be discouraged! For example, a fellow independent pharmacy owner thought they were ignoring one of their complaints for two years, but they later found out that MN DOC didn’t want to close the complaint because it became part of a lawsuit the AG brought against CVS. Since it was an ongoing investigation, they could not tell this Pharmacist anything at the time. 

Submitting a complaint to MN Board of Pharmacy (BOP) [if you practice in Minnesota]

Click here to be led to the MN Board of Pharmacy’s “Complaints” page. The board is required to investigate all jurisdictional complaints against the individuals and businesses that it regulates and violations of the Pharmacy Practice Act.

Submitting a complaint to MN Department of Health (MDH) [if you practice in Minnesota]

Unfortunately, there is currently no avenue to submit complaints about MA or MCO prescription claims; as of now, MDH only accepts complaints against a specific facility or professional, despite the fact that these claims are within their jurisdiction. We are actively investigating this issue and awaiting word from MDH about how healthcare providers can submit complaints regarding these kinds of claims.

Submitting a complain to CMS

Click here to be led to CMS’s online complaint form in order to help one of your patients submit a complaint. They’ll need information from their Medicare card in order to submit their complaint. If their complaint is regarding an urgent issue that requires a resolution within 10 days, Medicare requests that the patient give them a call at 1 (800) MEDICARE.

If you have a complaint specifically regarding Medicare Part D plans, email partd_monitoring@cms.hhs.gov.

Submitting a complaint to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

Links to ongoing FTC investigations can be found below. Please note that complaints to the FTC can be signed or submitted anonymously, if you’re concerned about retaliation, so there’s no reason not to share your story!

Solicitation for Public Comment to Understand Lack of Competition and Contracting Practices that May be Contributing to Drug Shortages | Share your thoughts on how drug wholesalers and shortages are affecting your business and/or the care you provide to patients (more specifically, “whether and to what extent lack of competition among GPOs and drug wholesalers impacts patients, hospitals, healthcare providers, pharmacies, generic manufacturers, and other suppliers”).

Other ways to share your story

  • Complete brief Google Survey for creators of PBM documentary | This brief survey was prepared by Dan and Mary Strause, creators of PatientProtector.us who, as part of a group of 40 pharmacy owners representing 400 stores across the central US, are currently putting the finishing touches on a documentary they’ve been working on with a Los Angeles-trained filmmaker. The film is being crafted to educate and motivate viewers to urge legislators to take prompt action against PBM abuse and is planning to be released on Election Day, Tuesday, November 5th, 2024. The goals of this survey are to:

    • Inform as many independent pharmacy colleagues as possible about the project by October 31, 2024

    • Refute PBM CEOs by gathering data from ideally 10,000 participants to demonstrate patient steering practices

    • Make this a collaborative effort, with the core crew preferring to remain anonymous due to fear of retribution, presenting the film as a project by PatientProtector.us and 10,000 pharmacies and patients

    • Establish the most effective grassroots distribution network ever, with plans to stream the documentary on Amazon Prime and YouTube, aiming for widespread reach

  • Email evidence of perjury to the House of Representatives’ Oversight Committee | On July 23rd, 2024, top executives from the three biggest PBMs—CVS Caremark, Express Scripts, and OptumRx—testified before the House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Accountability during the third of a series of hearings focused on their ongoing investigation into PBM abuse and their role in rising healthcare costs. On several occasions throughout their testimony, the execs appeared to perjure themselves. If you have evidence refuting their claims made while under oath (e.g., a refusal by a PBM to negotiate a contract with your pharmacy, which they claimed they are open to doing during their testimony), email the Oversight Committee directly at oversight.committee@mail.house.gov.

  • Submit a complaint to the Department of Justice (DOJ)/FTC/Department of Health & Human Services' (DHS) joint investigation into healthcare competition | Click here to share about your knowledge of anticompetitive practices in the healthcare field or complain about how lack of competition in healthcare has impacted your own life/health. Of note, this form is only to be used to submit complaints about healthcare competition; do NOT submit complaints about failure to pay claims or cover healthcare services, increases in individual insurers’ rates, billing disputes, or general unhappiness about the healthcare system.