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 · Oklahoma · Title 36 — Insurance

§36-6962. Compliance review.

1,466 words·~7 min read·/ok/title-36-insurance/36-6962·

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

A. The Attorney General shall review and approve retail pharmacy network access for all pharmacy benefits managers
(PBMs)to ensure compliance with Section 6961 of this title.
B. A PBM, or an agent of a PBM, shall not:
1. Cause or knowingly permit the use of advertisement, promotion, solicitation, representation, proposal or offer that is untrue, deceptive or misleading;
2. Charge a pharmacist or pharmacy a fee related to the adjudication of a claim including without limitation a fee for:
a. the submission of a claim,
b. enrollment or participation in a retail pharmacy
network, or
c. the development or management of claims processing
services or claims payment services related to
participation in a retail pharmacy network;
3. Reimburse a pharmacy or pharmacist in the state an amount less than the amount that the PBM reimburses a pharmacy owned by or under common ownership with a PBM for providing the same covered services. The reimbursement amount paid to the pharmacy shall be equal to the reimbursement amount calculated on a per-unit basis using the same generic product identifier or generic code number paid to the PBM-owned or PBM-affiliated pharmacy;
4. Deny a provider the opportunity to participate in any pharmacy network at preferred participation status if the provider
is willing to accept the terms and conditions that the PBM has established for other providers as a condition of preferred network participation status;
5. Deny, limit or terminate a provider’s contract based on employment status of any employee who has an active license to dispense, despite probation status, with the State Board of Pharmacy;
6. Retroactively deny or reduce reimbursement for a covered service claim after returning a paid claim response as part of the adjudication of the claim, unless:
a. the original claim was submitted fraudulently, or
b. to correct errors identified in an audit, so long as
the audit was conducted in compliance with Sections
356.2 and 356.3 of Title 59 of the Oklahoma Statutes;
7. Fail to make any payment due to a pharmacy or pharmacist for covered services properly rendered in the event a PBM terminates a provider from a pharmacy benefits manager network;
8. Conduct or practice spread pricing, as defined in Section 6960 of this title, in this state;
9. Charge a pharmacist or pharmacy a fee related to participation in a retail pharmacy network including but not limited to the following:
a. an application fee,
b. an enrollment or participation fee,
c. a credentialing or re-credentialing fee,
d. a change of ownership fee, or
e. a fee for the development or management of claims
processing services or claims payment services;
10. Discriminate, offer lower reimbursement, or impose any separate terms upon a provider on the basis that a provider participates in 340B drug pricing;
11. Require a provider to reverse, resubmit, or clarify a 340B drug pricing claim after the initial adjudication unless these actions are in the normal course of pharmacy business and not related to 340B drug pricing;
12. Require a billing modifier to indicate that the drug or claim is a 340B drug pricing claim, unless the drug or claim is being billed to the Oklahoma Medicaid Program;
13. Modify a patient copayment on the basis that the provider of the patient participates in 340B drug pricing;
14. Exclude a provider from a network on the basis that the provider participates in 340B drug pricing;
15. Establish or set network adequacy requirements based on 340B drug pricing participation by a provider;
16. Prohibit a 340B entity or a pharmacy under contract with a 340B entity from participating in the network of the PBM on the basis of participation in 340B drug pricing; or
17. Base the drug formulary or drug coverage decisions upon the 340B drug pricing status of a drug, including price or availability, or whether a dispensing pharmacy participates in 340B drug pricing.
C. The prohibitions under this section shall apply to contracts between pharmacy benefits managers and providers for participation in retail pharmacy networks.
1. A PBM contract shall:
a. not restrict, directly or indirectly, any pharmacy
that dispenses a prescription drug from informing, or
penalize such pharmacy for informing, an individual of
any differential between the individual’s out-of-
pocket cost or coverage with respect to acquisition of
the drug and the amount an individual would pay to
purchase the drug directly,
b. ensure that any entity that provides pharmacy benefits
management services under a contract with any such
health plan or health insurance coverage does not,
with respect to such plan or coverage, restrict,
directly or indirectly, a pharmacy that dispenses a
prescription drug from informing, or penalize such
pharmacy for informing, a covered individual of any
differential between the individual’s out-of-pocket
cost under the plan or coverage with respect to
acquisition of the drug and the amount an individual
would pay for acquisition of the drug without using
any health plan or health insurance coverage, and
c. eliminate discriminatory contracting as it relates to:
(1)transferring the benefit of 340B drug pricing
savings from a 340B entity to another entity,
including without limitation pharmacy benefits
managers, private insurers, and managed care
organizations,
(2)offering a lower reimbursement rate for drugs
purchased under 340B drug pricing than for the
same drug not purchased under 340B drug pricing,
(3)refusal to cover drug purchases utilizing 340B
drug pricing,
(4)refusal to allow providers who utilize 340B drug
pricing to participate in networks, and
(5)charging more than fair market value or seeking
profit sharing in exchange for services involving
340B drug pricing.
2. A pharmacy benefits manager’s contract with a provider shall not prohibit, restrict, or limit disclosure of information or documents to the Attorney General, law enforcement or state and federal governmental officials investigating or examining a complaint or conducting a review of a pharmacy benefits manager’s
compliance with the requirements under the Patient’s Right to Pharmacy Choice Act, the Pharmacy Audit Integrity Act, and Sections 357 through 360 of Title 59 of the Oklahoma Statutes.
D. A pharmacy benefits manager shall:
1. Establish and maintain an electronic claim inquiry processing system using the National Council for Prescription Drug Programs’ current standards to communicate information to pharmacies submitting claim inquiries;
2. Fully disclose to insurers, self-funded employers, unions or other PBM clients the existence of the respective aggregate prescription drug discounts, rebates received from drug manufacturers and pharmacy audit recoupments;
3. Provide the Attorney General, insurers, self-funded employer plans and unions unrestricted audit rights of and access to the respective PBM pharmaceutical manufacturer and provider contracts, plan utilization data, plan pricing data, pharmacy utilization data and pharmacy pricing data;
4. Maintain, for no less than three
(3)years, documentation of all network development activities including but not limited to contract negotiations and any denials to providers to join networks. This documentation shall be made available to the Attorney General upon request;
5. Report to the Attorney General, on a quarterly basis for each health insurer payor, on the following information:
a. the aggregate amount of rebates received by the PBM,
b. the aggregate amount of rebates distributed to the
appropriate health insurer payor,
c. the aggregate amount of rebates passed on to the
enrollees of each health insurer payor at the point of
sale that reduced the applicable deductible,
copayment, coinsure or other cost sharing amount of
the enrollee,
d. the individual and aggregate amount paid by the health
insurer payor to the PBM for pharmacy services
itemized by pharmacy, drug product and service
provided, and
e. the individual and aggregate amount a PBM paid a
provider for pharmacy services itemized by pharmacy,
drug product and service provided;
6. Make drug formulary and coverage decisions based on the normal course of business of the PBM, not based upon the 340B drug pricing status of a drug, including price or availability, or whether a dispensing pharmacy participates in 340B drug pricing.
E. Nothing in the Patient’s Right to Pharmacy Choice Act shall prohibit the Attorney General from requesting and obtaining detailed data, including raw data, in response to the information provided by a PBM in the quarterly reports required by this section. The
Attorney General may alter the frequency of the reports required by this section at his or her sole discretion.
F. The Attorney General may promulgate rules to implement the provisions of the Patient’s Right to Pharmacy Choice Act, the Pharmacy Audit Integrity Act, and Sections 357 through 360 of Title 59 of the Oklahoma Statutes. Added by Laws 2019, c. 426, § 5, eff. Nov. 1, 2019. Amended by Laws 2022, c. 38, § 2, emerg. eff. April 21, 2022; Laws 2023, c. 293, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2023; Laws 2024, c. 306, § 2, emerg. eff. May 15, 2024; Laws 2025, c. 332, § 8, eff. Nov. 1, 2025.
★   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.