This page includes draft policy information that is still in development. You are welcome to use these materials, but please keep in mind that they may be incomplete or subject to change.
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Resource Topic Title
The 340B program requires drug manufacturers to sell outpatient drugs at discounted prices to eligible hospitals and clinics that serve large numbers of low-income or uninsured patients. The program does not specify how participating hospitals must use the savings.
Party Pro / Cons and Concerns
Important Note: Remember, there are nuances that differentiate in each state. This material provides general information that can be adapted to truly align to your own state.
Democrat Party Pros
Democrat Party Pros
Democrat Party Cons/Concerns
Democrat Party Cons/Concerns
Republican Party Pros
Republican Party Pros
Republican Party Cons/Concerns
Republican Party Cons/Concerns
From the Patient Perspective
The 340B program can be valuable when it helps hospitals keep services available and support access to specialists needed for rare diseases. But many families worry that the discounts aren’t always passed on to patients and don’t reliably lower out-of-pocket costs for high-priced rare disease treatments. Patients also fear that uneven oversight means some hospitals benefit financially without improving access to the complex care, diagnostics, or medications that rare disease patients depend on, leaving them unsure whether the program truly helps them.
Talking Points
- Require 340B savings to support patient services, diagnostics, and specialty care.
- Improve transparency around how savings are used without reducing program participation.
- Protect access to infusion centers and specialty drugs when federal rules shift.
- Maintain contract pharmacy access for rare disease therapies with proper safeguards.
- Ensure continuity of care during any federal or state changes to the program.
Policy Guidelines
- Ensure timely and equitable access across all states.
States should regularly update their screening panels to match federal recommendations and emerging evidence, ensuring every baby—regardless of geography—has access to the same lifesaving tests. - Provide sustainable funding for state labs and follow-up systems.
Modern, well-resourced labs are essential. Funding should support equipment upgrades, staffing, rapid result turnaround, and quality improvement. - Strengthen follow-up care and care coordination.
Screening is only meaningful if followed by timely confirmatory testing, specialist access, genetic counseling, and treatment. Policies should ensure families can navigate this quickly and affordably. - Support integration of advanced technology (e.g., genomic sequencing where appropriate).
Policies should encourage responsible, evidence-based adoption of new technologies that improve detection of rare conditions, while ensuring ethical standards and feasibility. - Protect patient privacy and data security.
Guidelines should clearly define storage, use, and disposal of dried blood spots and genetic data, balancing public health benefits with parental consent and privacy safeguards. - Invest in workforce development.
Support training for lab personnel, genetic counselors, and rare-disease specialists to handle increased testing volume and follow-up demands. - Promote transparency and accountability.
States should publicly report screening metrics (turnaround time, follow-up rates, outcomes) and engage families in evaluating program effectiveness. - Center patient and family voices in policymaking.
Parents, patients, and rare disease advocates should have formal roles in advisory councils, implementation planning, and review processes. - Encourage federal–state collaboration.
Policies should support coordinated funding, research, and consistent standards across states, reducing gaps and delays in adding new conditions. - Ensure equitable coverage of treatment and diagnostic follow-up.
Screening without access to treatment is insufficient; policies must ensure Medicaid and private insurance cover needed follow-up testing, medications, and long-term care.
Additional Resources
Organizations and leaders who have policy experience in this area