Tap any paragraph to write a margin note. Your notes collect in the Desk below the text and file under cases with @. The side-by-side margin rail opens on a larger screen.

Code · California · Welfare and Institutions Code

§ 14124.40

394 words·~2 min read·/ca/welfare-and-institutions-code/14124-40

A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.

Findings and Declarations
(a)In 1992, the federal government established a program giving safety net health care providers access to discounted prescription drugs. The intent of the law was for safety net health care providers to use the discounted drugs to treat patients who are “medically uninsured, on marginal incomes and have no other sources to turn to for preventive and primary care services” and to “reach[] more eligible patients and provide[] more comprehensive services” to “low-income and most vulnerable patients.” (H.R. Rep. No. 102-384 (Part 2), at 12 (1992)(Conf. Rep.).) The program was not intended to be used by safety net health care providers to accumulate massive fortunes running into the hundreds of millions of dollars or more.
(b)Unfortunately, some safety net health care providers have manipulated the program to receive enormous markups on the discounted prescription drugs they receive and then stick taxpayers with the added cost. Instead of using this massive windfall to help patients, the worst offenders have used their fortunes to purchase luxury coastal condominiums, wasted hundreds of millions of dollars on failed political campaigns, put elected politicians on their payrolls, and acquired low-income multifamily housing complexes that are operated as slums. Abusing net revenues generated through the discount prescription drug program in this manner does not result in better health care for low-income patients. Instead, it cheats low-income patients out of the care they deserve and scams taxpayers who end up footing the bill.
(c)Governor Newsom has already ended this type of prescription drug scamming in the Medi-Cal program through Executive Order N-01-19, which requires the Department of Health Care Services to transition Medi-Cal pharmacy services away from arrangements that are susceptible to price scams. Known as the Medi-Cal Rx program, it achieves cost savings for prescription drug purchases made by the state, standardizes the pharmacy benefit statewide for all Medi-Cal patients, increases overall access, and eliminates the ability of prescription drug price manipulators to game the system through Medi-Cal. However, other vulnerabilities in taxpayer-funded drug programs that price manipulators still exploit have not yet been addressed.
(d)California needs to make the cost-savings achieved through the Medi-Cal Rx program permanent. Furthermore, additional reforms are necessary to protect taxpayer dollars and help the neediest patients by ensuring that prescription drug price manipulators are required to end other scams in order to continue operating in our state.
★   the supreme law of the land   ★
Don't Tread on Me
E Pluribus Unum — out of many, one

"If you don't know your rights, you don't have any."

Marginalia · a citizen's law index
A research desk, not legal advice. Always read the cited source before relying on a summary.
Questions or an issue? support@self-law.org
disclaimerMarginalia is a research index, not a law firm. Nothing on this site is legal, tax, or financial advice and no attorney–client relationship is formed by using it. Statutes, regulations, and case law change; summaries, search results, AI output, and member posts may be incomplete, out of date, or wrong. Any interpretation drawn from material on this site should be validated by a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before you act on it.