Op-Ed: Oversight faps in federal drug program put Illinois’ independent practices at risk

Op-Ed: Oversight faps in federal drug program put Illinois’ independent practices at risk

Spread the love

Community-based care is part of the fabric of the healthcare system in Illinois. As an allergist and immunologist practicing in St. Charles, I take pride in offering relationship-driven, highly personalized care to patients whose conditions leave no room for delays or disruptions.

Many of the patients I treat live with chronic asthma that can turn life-threatening in minutes, severe food allergies that require constant vigilance, or immune deficiencies that make common infections harder to fight and more likely to require urgent care. Timely access to a physician who knows their history is vital.

Despite the fact that thousands of Illinoisans rely on community-based doctors, independent practices are rapidly disappearing across our state. Practices are closing left and right not due to low quality of care, but in part due to hospital consolidation driven by a federal drug discount program known as 340B.

Absent the necessary guardrails, the 340B Drug Pricing Program, which was created to help vulnerable patients access medications and care, creates strong financialincentives for large hospital systems to acquire smaller community practices, leaving vulnerable patients with fewer local and convenient care options.

The 340B program allows eligible hospitals and clinics in Illinois to purchase drugs at steep discounts, up to 50%, then bill insurers at full price. The difference between the discounted acquisition cost of the medicine and the reimbursement is often several times higher.

That difference was intended to help safety-net 340B hospitals and clinics provide charity care and improve access to medications for low-income, uninsured, and underinsured patients in Illinois.

But instead, large hospitals are pocketing the revenue, and there is no transparency into how they use it or oversight to ensure patients are truly benefiting from the program.

Meanwhile, those same large hospitals in Illinois are providing below-average charity care. In fact, Illinois 340B hospitals earn nearly three times more in 340B profits than they spend on charity care.

Now, the Illinois General Assembly is considering HB 2371, a bill that would lock in the flaws of the 340B program in need of a fix by Congress and make the playing field even more uneven for independent practices in Illinois.

Because independent practices are not eligible to participate in 340B, large hospitals gain a major advantage when they absorb community clinics. Acquiring a practice doesn’t just expand their footprint; it expands the number of patients whose prescriptions can now be routed through a 340B-eligible location.

That means more prescriptions purchased at discounted prices, more claims billed at full price, and more profit captured with no requirement to reinvest those dollars in patient care in the state.

340B also affects decisions about which therapies patients receive and where those treatments are delivered, especially for high-cost injections and biologics that many allergy and immunology patients rely on.

Because hospitals earn larger margins on more expensive 340B-eligible drugs, they arefinancially incentivized to use higher-cost medications and to administer them in their own facilities, even when lower-cost options such as local clinics or more affordable sites of care are available.

This drives up costs for patients and insurers while increasing revenue for large hospital systems.

For practices like mine who operate on razor thin margins, it makes it incredibly difficult to compete. Many practices either choose to be acquired or close their doors because of declining revenue.

That’s not the intent of the 340B program. I support how 340B is supposed to work in practice, by helping patients access medications they need to stay healthy. But the program is in desperate need of transparency and greater oversight.

HB 2371 is not the answer. It would cement the program’s flaws and make it harder for community-based physicians to remain viable and accessible to our local communities and easier for large systems to continue expanding under the guise of a safety-net program that no longer resembles its original mission.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Screenshot 2025-10-25 at 12.43.17 PM

Future of Will County’s Cannabis Fund Debated Amid Budget Shortfall

Will County Board Finance Committee Meeting | October 21, 2025 Article Summary: As Will County officials look for ways to close an $8.9 million budget gap, a debate has emerged over...
Peotone fire district graphic logo.1

Manhattan Fire District Earns Clean Audit, Hires Investment Manager

Manhattan Fire Protection District Meeting | September 15, 2025 Article Summary: The Manhattan Fire Protection District received a clean bill of financial health with an "unmodified opinion" on its latest audit....
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Manhattan Village Board for October 21, 2025

Manhattan Village Board Meeting | October 21, 2025 The Manhattan Village Board on Tuesday, October 21, 2025, approved the annexation and preliminary plans for the 41-home Butternut Ridge South subdivision....
Screenshot 2025-10-25 at 12.43.06 PM

Will County Health Department Pleads for $1 Million to Avert ‘Weakened Public Health System’

Will County Board Finance Committee Meeting | October 21, 2025 Article Summary: Leaders and board members from the Will County Health Department made an impassioned plea for $1 million in county...
Screenshot 2025-10-25 at 10.22.48 AM

Manhattan Village Board Approves Water and Sewer Rate Hikes to Fund Future Infrastructure

Manhattan Village Board Meeting | October 21, 2025 Article Summary: Manhattan residents will see their water and sewer rates increase over the next several years after the Village Board approved...
manhattan fire district graphic logo.3

Safety Upgrades Coming to Dangerous Route 50 and County Line Road Intersection

Manhattan Fire Protection District Meeting | September 15, 2025 Article Summary: Following a meeting between fire officials and state and county transportation leaders, safety improvements, including a four-way stop by the...
Screenshot 2025-10-25 at 10.22.40 AM

Manhattan Bans Retail Sale of Kratom, Citing Public Health and Addiction Risks

Manhattan Village Board Meeting | October 21, 2025 Article Summary: The Manhattan Village Board unanimously passed an ordinance prohibiting the sale, manufacture, and distribution of kratom, an herbal substance that...
manhattan fire district graphic logo.1

Manhattan Fire District Approves $8.75 Million Bond Sale for New Fire Station

Manhattan Fire Protection District Meeting | September 15, 2025 Article Summary: The Manhattan Fire Protection District Board of Trustees has formally approved the sale of approximately $8.75 million in General Obligation...
Screenshot 2025-10-25 at 10.22.19 AM

Manhattan Approves Annexation for 41-Home Butternut Ridge South Subdivision

Manhattan Village Board Meeting | October 21, 2025 Article Summary: The Manhattan Village Board has approved the annexation, rezoning, and preliminary plat for a 41-home subdivision on a 20-acre parcel...
Screenshot 2025-10-25 at 10.22.33 AM

Manhattan Residents Voice Fears Over Traffic Safety, Water Use Amid Regional Growth

Manhattan Village Board Meeting | October 21, 2025 Article Summary: Following recent tragedies, residents delivered emotional pleas to the Manhattan Village Board, demanding action on truck traffic and speeding on...

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 for October 16, 2025

Meeting-Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 for October 16, 2025

LW210 Board of Education Meeting | October 16, 2025 The Lincoln-Way District 210 Board of Education meeting on Thursday, October 16, 2025, was dominated by news that the district's support...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Manhattan School District 114 for October 8, 2025

Manhattan School District 114 Board Meeting | October 8, 2025 The Manhattan School District 114 board meeting on Wednesday, October 8, 2025, featured extensive public testimony from parents detailing significant...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Village of Manhattan for October 7, 2025

The Manhattan Village Board advanced over $1.38 million in water infrastructure projects at its meeting on Tuesday, October 7, 2025, awarding contracts for three major water main upgrades that will...
Screenshot 2025-10-17 at 11.24.23 AM

Lincoln-Way to Purchase New Buses, Add Smaller Vehicles to Address Driver Shortage

LW210 Board of Education Meeting | October 16, 2025 Article Summary: Lincoln-Way District 210 plans to update its transportation fleet by purchasing 28 new gasoline-powered school buses, three activity buses,...