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Five months after the Supreme Court of the United States handed down a loss to the pharmacy
benefit manager (PBM) lobbying group Pharmaceutical Care Management
Association (PCMA), PCMA filed a brief in the Eighth Circuit
arguing that the Court s ruling does not narrow the scope of
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) preemption for PBM
regulation.
On December 10, 2020, the Supreme Court, in
Rutledge v.
Pharmaceutical Care Management Association, ruled that an
Arkansas law prohibiting PBMs from reimbursing pharmacies for drugs
at rates below the drugs acquisition costs was not preempted
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Class pets, weed boom, school robots: News from around our 50 states
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May 5, 2021, 7:33 AM·51 min read
Alabama
Birmingham: Declaring the COVID-19 pandemic “absolutely” managed despite lagging vaccinations, Gov. Kay Ivey said Monday that she will end a health order meant to guard against the spread of an illness that has killed nearly 11,000 people statewide. Citing improved infection rates, fewer hospitalizations and more widespread immunizations, Ivey said the current order recommending that people follow health guidance and requiring some precautions for senior citizens and long-term care facilities will end May 31, barring a sharp rise in cases. The declared state of emergency will end July 6, she said in a statement. “For over a year now, Alabamians, like people around the globe, have made sacrifices and adjusted to a temporary ‘new normal.’ We have learned much since last year, and this is absolutely now a managed pandemic. Our infection rates and
COVID-19 hospitalizations jumped 59% for North Dakotans ages 16-49 in April
The Department of Health released a statement urging residents to get vaccinated and to continue pandemic mitigation strategies as Gov. Doug Burgum lifted the state s COVID-19 emergency declaration beginning on Friday. 12:28 pm, Apr. 30, 2021 ×
A coronavirus graphic.
Courtesy of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
BISMARCK The number of active COVID-19 cases is continuing to rise in North Dakota, and the COVID-19 hospitalization rate for North Dakotans aged 16 to 49 has increased by 59% since March, according to the North Dakota Department of Health.
This significant spike is the highest month-to-month increase in hospitalizations for residents 16-49 throughout the COVID-19 pandemic so far, the Department of Health says. Within the last week, 83 residents were hospitalized due to COVID-19, according to the health department.