Republicans see Kansas governor’s order creating child advocate as ‘slap in the face’

by Sherman Smith, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Gov. Laura Kelly’s independent action to establish an Office of the Child Advocate a day ahead of the inaugural meeting of a child welfare oversight committee didn’t impress Republican members of the panel.

Sen. Richard Hilderbrand, a Galena Republican who serves as chairman of the committee, called the governor’s decision to bypass legislators through executive order a “slap in the face.”

“Don’t get me wrong, the Office of the Child Advocate is a needed position, a position that has been needed for a long time,” Hilderbrand said at the start of Tuesday’s meeting. “I just find it very, very troublesome that the governor decided on the eve of the first meeting of this committee, which one of our tasks was to look at this, they decide to issue an executive order forming it.”

The Democratic governor on Monday announced she was forming the office and relocating divisions of two state agencies under the authority of the Department of Administration. Her allies in the Legislature praised the move after years in which efforts to install a child advocate failed to gain interest or got tied up in political wrangling, as was the case in the 2021 session.

“Everybody is in agreement here that we needed this office,” said Rep. Jarrod Ousley, D-Merriam. “This office is going to be good for the kids. I applaud the governor’s efforts by taking the reins and establishing this office now and not wasting any more time letting it get caught up in politics.”

Ousley for five years has pursued legislation to establish a child advocate to field complaints about the Kansas foster care system and investigate them. He secured bipartisan support for a House bill this past session that would have had the advocate report directly to the Legislature, but House leadership killed the bill before it received a vote.

The Senate passed a competing plan that would have placed the office under Attorney General Derek Schmidt, a Republican trying to unseat Kelly as governor in next year’s elections.

Child advocates opposed the politically charged Senate plan but have long pushed for more accountability of the privatized foster care system administered by the Department for Children and Families.

Republicans complained that Kelly’s executive order allows the governor to choose a child advocate without legislative approval. They also questioned whether the decision to relocate positions through an executive order is constitutional. Those moves typically require the governor to propose a reorganization, which the Legislature has to approve.

By placing the new office within the governor’s administration, said Sen. Molly Baumgardner, R-Louisburg, the governor is merely shifting complaints from one department to another.

“We will learn about harms and dangers and failures of the system when our reporters call us and say, ‘Would you please comment on this?’”
Baumgardner said. “We’re not going to find out this from the office of child advocacy. We’re not going to find out from the secretary of DCF.”

Democrats praised the governor for establishing the office after years of legislative inaction.

“Can we take some joy in the fact that what has been established will help save lives of children?” said Sen. Cindy Holscher, D-Overland Park. “To me, that’s a very big deal. That’s a huge victory for the kids in our state. We’ve been waiting. The kids have been waiting. Advocates have been waiting for years for something like this to be established.”

Sen. Oletha Faust-Goudeau, D-Wichita, pointed to the recent death of a 17-year-old who died in police custody. The boy had been placed in a foster home by Saint Francis Ministries, the state’s largest foster care provider.

When the foster father called Saint Francis about the boy’s erratic behavior, Faust-Goudeau said, he was told it would be two hours before someone could help. Instead, he was taken into custody by police and died after an altercation at a juvenile detention facility.

“Had that foster dad been able to talk to someone directly right away, that young man may still be alive,” Faust-Goudeau said.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2021/10/05/republicans-see-kansas-governors-order-creating-child-advocate-as-slap-in-the-face/.

Kansas audited its $80 million CVS prescription plan, but it’s still shrouded in mystery

Taxpayers and state employees could be paying too much for medications. Experts say a 16-page audit commissioned by Kansas doesn’t dig in to find out.

by Celia Llopis-Jepsen, Kansas News Service and KCUR

Editor’s note: This article is about Kansas’ audit of drug spending related to its state employee health plan. You can read more about the state’s redactions of that audit at https://www.kcur.org/news/2021-10-01/kansas-hid-parts-of-a-100k-audit-of-drug-spending-experts-say-the-state-went-too-far.

Topeka — Kansas paid auditors $100,000 to dig into the more than $160 million it spent in 2018 and 2019 on prescription drugs for state employees, retirees and their families.

But experts who follow the pharmaceutical industry say the resulting 16-page report doesn’t tell Kansas whether the health plan — or rather, the taxpayers and public employees who fund it — got a bargain or got gouged.

Nor does it reveal what role CVS, which manages the health plan’s drug benefits and was the audit’s focus, plays in either keeping down or inflating costs.

The audit “was poorly structured and poorly performed,” New Jersey attorney Linda Cahn, CEO of Pharmacy Benefit Consultants said in an email. Her firm helps public and private health plans avoid contract loopholes that lead to overcharges on drugs. “It does not provide Kansas — or its taxpayers — with the information needed to evaluate just how much money the State wasted.”

Cahn spent more than a decade litigating pharmacy benefit issues and has reviewed hundreds of drug spending contracts like the one Kansas signed with CVS.

Both she and 3 Axis Advisors, a consulting group that investigates prescription drug costs, said the state health plan may have lost millions to ambiguous provisions in its CVS contract.

Antonio Ciaccia, president of 3 Axis Advisors, said even the largest of public and private employers often don’t know how to ask the right questions about the complex world of prescription drug deals.

What they end up with are audits that “leave everything on the cutting room floor that you actually need.”

“Some of the biggest companies in the world are getting taken advantage of,” said Ciaccia, a former lobbyist for pharmacies in Ohio, which sought an investigation in that state. “You have an incredibly opaque and complex system … There’s so many opportunities to exploit that complexity.”

By the time Ohio finished digging into the matter, it discovered more than $200 million in Medicaid spending had gone into a byzantine profit model run by the administrative middlemen.

It effectively fired the middlemen companies involved, sued one of them and got an $88 million settlement this summer.

And yet Ohio audited only a slice of what it should have, experts say, leaving unknown the full taxpayer-funded profits that middlemen took home. And that holds lessons for Kansas. Not just for its state health plan, but for its cities, counties, school districts and private employers.

Clear, thorough audits are intended to expose things like overcharges and to keep contractors honest.

In the complex business of managing prescription drugs, the stakes of those audits become even greater.

The opaqueness is compounded by how Kansas, CVS and the auditor handled inquiries from the Kansas News Service.

First, the Kansas Department of Administration redacted large swaths of the audit, saying it needed to protect trade secrets. (Lawyers who reviewed the botched redactions for the Kansas News Service disagree.)

Then the department declined an interview request, saying in an email, “the audit speaks for itself.”

CVS also declined an interview. “We would refer any questions you may have to our client, the state of Kansas,” a spokesman said by email.

And the auditor, PillarRx, said it can’t discuss its findings or even the thoroughness or quality of its work without permission from CVS — the company whose work it was paid to watchdog — and Kansas. A company vice president said her hands are tied “because of our confidentiality statements” with both parties.

PillarRx’s report found more than $1 million in overcharges that CVS paid back, but otherwise concludes that CVS largely handled the health plan’s money appropriately.

The audit conclusion is written by CVS, not the auditor. In it, the company promises to address co-pay issues related to four claims.

After that, “it is our view that we are in compliance with the contract and plan design, and there are no additional material financial discrepancies related to the findings.”

The conclusion left Ciaccia flabbergasted.

“I’ve never heard of the entity being audited having the privilege of writing their own conclusions to the audit,” he said.

Cahn said Kansas should demand to see any confidentiality agreements between PillarRx and CVS. Such agreements often limit what financial documents the auditors get to review in the first place, she said, and how much detail the auditors get to disclose to their clients. They can also grant the company under audit the right to review all drafts and preliminary findings before they reach the client. The state should demand to see all earlier drafts, she said.

“The State should also require PillarRx to provide it with all exchanges that PillarRx had with (CVS) Caremark,” Cahn said, “concerning its audit, and its draft audit reports.”

A quick primer on pharmacy middlemen

The Kansas audit homes in on the same obscure but important part of the drug supply chain that Ohio looked at — the administrators called pharmacy benefit managers.

These middlemen typically negotiate prices with pharmacies, determine what drugs a health plan should cover and process the actual claims. Health plans would struggle to get that done on their own.

So the administrators handle the money flow. They pay the drugstores. And they collect the rebates that drugmakers offer as incentives to include specific medications in their coverage.

It’s lucrative work that sometimes pulls in more money than drugmakers and insurers earn.

Three of the nation’s wealthiest corporations control most of the market: Express Scripts, CVS Caremark and OptumRx.

CVS ranks No. 4 on the Fortune 500. UnitedHealth Group (which owns OptumRx) ranks No. 5. Cigna (which controls Express Scripts) ranks No. 13.

As Fortune magazine wrote, “The company climbed more than 50 spots on the Fortune 500 after completing its merger with pharmacy benefits manager Express Scripts.” It enjoyed “skyrocketing” revenues, and all that pharmacy benefit manager business kept Cigna healthy during the pandemic.

Independent and small-chain pharmacies generally stand at odds with the pharmacy benefit managers that control payments from health plans. That tension has magnified over the years as the corporations that do this administrative work merged with drug stores and insurance companies.

CVS Health, for example, not only owns its ubiquitous drugstore chain, but also functions as an insurance company (Aetna) and a pharmacy benefit manager.

It is the pharmacy benefit manager for the Kansas employee health plan. The plan covers about 80,000 public employees, retirees and dependents. It spends about $80 million on drugs annually.

A consultant told the Kansas Department of Administration that CVS’ latest contract would save the health plan tens of millions of dollars over a three-year period.

But pharmacy middlemen have faced increasing scrutiny over how they contribute to the incredibly high prices that Americans pay for prescriptions. Americans pay more than twice as much as people in other developed countries.

Employers, meanwhile, struggle to see where the money goes, because the middlemen they hire consider vital details of their financial arrangements with drugmakers and pharmacies to be proprietary and even trade secrets.

CVS ‘underperforming’ its contract

In 2015, auditors who work for the Kansas Legislature found state officials weren’t checking up on CVS Caremark.

The state effectively took CVS at its word that the company handles claims correctly, doesn’t steer employees toward pricey medications, and doesn’t increase costs by pocketing money from drugmakers.

The legislative auditors urged a change, and the state agreed. So then-Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration contracted with an external auditor, which subcontracted with another (PillarRx) to conduct regular checks.

The 2018-2019 audit is a 16-page report. The auditors also gave state officials a shorter, 10-page version of the 16-page report. The state redacted large swaths of the audit before giving the full report to the Kansas News Service. But it botched the redactions, so some of the obscured details were ultimately still readable.

A four-page written response from CVS to the auditors is also attached to the audit, which the state blacked out in full.

The audit reveals that the state employee plan didn’t always get the discounts and fees it had been promised.

On that point, the auditors said CVS was “underperforming” its contract with Kansas.

They concluded the company owed about $1.2 million, but that it had already identified much of the overcharges itself. CVS cut checks to Kansas that covered almost the full amount by the time the audit was completed. It agreed to pay back the rest after the audit.

Meanwhile, PillarRx found no evidence that CVS mishandled payments to pharmacies.

Nor did PillarRx find evidence that CVS took any money from drugmakers that should have gone toward keeping down the costs of the health plan.

Audits and researchers in other states have found middlemen using both strategies to fatten their profits.

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt’s office may be investigating similar questions. It has hired the law firm that helped Ohio and another state, Mississippi, land their recent settlements against a pharmacy benefit manager for allegedly overcharging Medicaid.

Concerns about the audit

The Kansas audit says it was designed to check whether CVS complied with its written promises to the state.

Experts say that’s not how to audit PBMs. Health plans should ask auditors to dig much deeper into where the money went.

“When the assessment of the issue is, ‘Did you achieve these contract requirements?’” pharmacist Ben Link said, “it’s kind of like having the answer key to the test before you take the test.”

Link previously worked for pharmacy benefit managers, where he helped them manage public health plans. He joined 3 Axis Advisors in 2019.

For example, the audit concludes that CVS handed over money from drugmakers as required by its contract. Yet a provision in the contract allowed the company to keep “administrative fees” equaling up to 4% of the manufacturer list prices for all the medications that Kansas employees and retirees picked up.

So how much did CVS keep? Figuring that out requires detailed claim information.

But Link offered a rough estimate based on Kansas’ brand-name drug spending — a critical component of the calculation — that the fees could add up to $2.5 million for 2018 and 2019 combined.

That revenue from drugmakers comes on top of the money that Kansas already agreed to pay CVS for its services, such as the 90 cents it got for every prescription that got filled.

The National Academy for State Health Policy recommends writing tight contracts that put a stop to pharmacy benefit managers pocketing drugmaker money in any form, including money labeled with a wide variety of terms such as “administrative fees.”

Squeezing the balloon

Kansas contractually agreed to use auditors mutually approved by CVS.

The academy’s recommendations — drawn from the experiences of several states that have wrestled aggressively with the pharmacy benefit sector — also say states need to ditch deals that give the pharmacy benefit managers sway over who audits them.

“That’s dangerous,” law professor Erin Fuse Brown said. “The (pharmacy benefit) market is extremely consolidated. … So you could imagine that (pharmacy benefit managers) have their preferred auditors.”

Fuse Brown didn’t review the Kansas contract and audit. But she is director of the Center for Law, Health and Society at Georgia State University, and helped the academy write model contract terms for states to use.

Trying to rein in the profits that pharmacy middlemen take home is like squeezing a water balloon, she said. Press their profits in one area, and the revenues simply shift somewhere else.

“There are lots of different places where (they) can suck out a little bit of revenue here and there,” she said. “And that can add up to a great deal of cost.”

Based on PillarRx’s audit of CVS, Ciaccia and Link couldn’t tell whether CVS treats non-CVS pharmacies fairly.

“That would be almost impossible to derive based on the analysis,” Ciaccia said. “It would take a much more granular look.”

Organizations such as the ERISA Industry Committee and the National Conference of State Legislatures have turned to Ciaccia to help educate private employers and state policymakers on where the money goes.

Cahn, the industry consultant, questioned sample sizes. The number of drugmakers and pharmacies included in the review. The lack of investigation into CVS’ definition of terms such as “generic” and “specialty drug,” and how this relates to its guarantees.

She pointed to a section that says PillarRx “requested reports from CVS to substantiate their performance levels … to determine if CVS had performed at the minimum level required to avoid paying a penalty to the State.”

“This is ludicrous,” Cahn said. “This is like asking a Fox to report on whether it ate the chickens in the chicken coop.”

The National Academy for State Health Policy proposes strengthening contracts to ensure health plans can conduct aggressive audits and checks that go beyond measuring contract compliance.

“Let’s say the state negotiated a not-so-strong contract on its own behalf,” Fuse Brown said. “It’s paying too much … and passing a lot of those costs on to the state employees.”

“You wouldn’t necessarily pick up on that if you were just doing an audit of whether or not the PBM lived up to the contract terms,” she said.

Celia Llopis-Jepsen reports on consumer health for the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @celia_LJ or email her at celia (at) kcur (dot) org.
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.
See more at https://www.kcur.org/news/2021-10-01/kansas-audited-its-80-million-cvs-prescription-plan-but-its-still-shrouded-in-mystery
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Father Emil Kapaun laid to rest in his native Kansas, over 70 years after death

by Tom Shine, Kansas News Service, KMUW

Wichita – Services were held Wednesday in Wichita for Father Emil Kapaun, who died more than 70 years ago in a North Korean prisoner of war camp.

A funeral Mass for Father Emil Kapaun was held Wednesday, more than 70 years after he died in a North Korean prisoner of war camp.

Kapaun was awarded the Medal of Honor for his bravery on the battlefield during the Korean War. He also is being considered for sainthood by the Catholic Church.

Officials from the church and military were in attendance at Wednesday’s Mass at Hartman Arena in Park City. The service was followed by a procession in downtown Wichita, where Kapaun’s remains were taken by horse-drawn caisson to the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.

Members of the 1st Cavalry Division from Fort Hood, Texas, Kapaun’s former unit, carried the remains into the cathedral. The remains will be interred in a crypt installed earlier this month.

Kapaun’s remains returned to Kansas on Saturday from Honolulu, where he was buried as an unknown soldier shortly after the Korean War ended.

Among those accompanying Kapaun’s remains was his niece, Air Force Maj. Christina Roberts.

His remains were taken to his hometown of Pilsen for viewing and a vigil over the weekend. They were returned to Wichita for a funeral vigil Tuesday night at Hartman Arena.

This is the second Mass held to honor Kapaun since he died.

A memorial Mass was held for him in July 1953 at the Cathedral. But his casket, draped by an American flag, was empty.

Wichita Bishop Carl Kemme said Wednesday’s events served two purposes.

“Not only to kind of shine a spotlight on his heroic witness but also to give him the funeral rites and burial that he certainly deserves,” Kemme said.

The Catholic Diocese of Wichita broadcast the funeral Mass through EWTN, Catholic TV and the diocese’s YouTube channel.

Several Wichita downtown streets were closed.

Call to service

Kapaun was born in 1916 in Pilsen, a small farming community in Marion County, about 70 miles northeast of Wichita. He was ordained into the priesthood in 1940 at what is now Newman University. A mural honoring Kapaun adorns the school’s chapel.

He served as a priest in the parish he grew up in, St. John Nepomucene.

He also was assigned as an auxiliary chaplain at the Army airbase in Herington, where he found he enjoyed working with enlisted men.

He joined the U.S. Army Chaplain Corps during World War II, serving in Burma and India in the closing days of the conflict.

After the war, he earned his master’s degree in education from American University before becoming the parish priest in Timken, a small town in Rush County.

Bishop Mark Carroll allowed him to enlist in the Chaplain Corps in 1948.

Kapaun was stationed in Japan with the 1st Cavalry Division, which was among the first troops to land in Korea when the Korean War broke out in June 1950.

The Korean War

Kapaun was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Unsan on Nov. 1-2, 1950. According to his medal citation, “Chaplain Kapaun calmly walked through withering enemy fire in order to provide comfort and medical aid to his comrades and rescue friendly wounded from no man’s land.”

His nephew, Ray Kapaun, accepted the medal from President Barack Obama in 2013.

When American forces pulled back from Unsan, Kapaun stayed behind to care for the wounded soldiers, even though he knew he would be taken as a prisoner.

After his capture and imprisonment, he stole food to help feed his fellow POWs. He tended to the sick and washed the clothes of prisoners too weak to do so. He also provided spiritual comfort during a brutally cold winter that saw nearly half the prisoners die.

Kemme says Kapaun served all of the prisoners, regardless of their faith.

“He didn’t ask them whether they were Catholic,” Kemme said. “He didn’t ask them any questions.

“He just saw a human being, and he did whatever he could, in those dire circumstances, to help them in their dignity, to help them be strong in the midst of such a challenging experience.

“That human love is stronger than death.”

Possible sainthood

Kapaun’s actions in the POW camp led the Vatican to name him a Servant of God in 1993, the first step in the long process to sainthood.

Vatican officials are expected to name Kapaun as venerable, the next step in the journey to sainthood. That step has been delayed because the pandemic halted most activities at the Vatican over the past year.

He would become just the fourth American-born saint if he is canonized.

Kapaun died in May 1951 after falling ill at the POW camp. He was 35.

Kapaun was buried in a shallow grave, and the location of his remains remained a mystery for nearly 70 years.

Shortly after the Korean War ended in 1953, nearly 900 sets of unidentified remains were returned from North Korea. They were buried at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, known as the “Punchbowl.”

The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, part of the U.S. Department of Defense, maintains a laboratory at the Punchbowl where it helps identify remains. In 2019, it began working through the unidentified remains from Korea.

Earlier this year, defense officials said Kapaun’s remains were identified using dental records and DNA provided by Eugene Kapaun, Father Kapaun’s brother and Ray Kapaun’s father.

The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.
See more at https://www.kcur.org/2021-09-29/father-emil-kapaun-will-finally-be-laid-to-rest-in-his-native-kansas
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