Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XVIII— - HEALTH INSURANCE FOR AGED AND DISABLED › Part Part B— - Supplementary Medical Insurance Benefits for Aged and Disabled › § 1395w–3b
The government must run a program where companies compete to supply certain outpatient drugs and biologicals to doctors. The agency in charge will group those drugs into categories and set up geographic areas for contracts. Starting in 2006, doctors can each year choose to get drugs through this competitive program instead of the other Part B system. If a doctor picks the program, the doctor must also pick a contractor each year for each drug category. The agency may relax some federal buying rules to help competition (but must protect confidential information). The agency can remove a drug or class from the bidding system if bidding won’t save money or would hurt access. Key terms and main rules: “Competitively biddable drugs and biologicals” are the drugs listed in section 1395u(o)(1)(C) furnished on or after January 1, 2006. “Program” means this competitive acquisition program. “Area” means the geographic region used for contracts. “Contractor” means a company that wins a contract. The agency will run competitions and may award at least 2 contractors (it cannot award fewer than 2). Contracts last 3 years but can be ended early with notice. Contractors must have reliable ways to buy and deliver drugs (including shipment at least 5 days each week), meet quality and solvency rules, buy directly from manufacturers or from distributors who bought direct, and follow rules to prevent fraud. Contractors must generally supply drugs only to the doctors who chose them and only after getting a prescription and required data, except limited home-delivery cases. Bids must cover delivery, dispensing (including shipping), and management fees, but not costs of giving the drug to the patient or waste. The agency will set a single payment amount per drug per area based on bids, and Medicare will pay 80 percent of that payment basis. Patients must meet the regular deductible in section 1395l(b); coinsurance and deductible are collected by the contractor. The agency will allow emergency resupply of doctor inventories in strict, limited situations. The agency’s decisions about payment amounts, contract awards, areas, phased rollout, drug-category choices, and bidding structure cannot be appealed in administrative or judicial review.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 1395w–3b
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73