POST OUTLINE

1) Introduction 

  • Overview: Savings potential of a 340B program.
  • 340B savings generated by VytlOne ($300M in 2025 alone.

2) Tips for maintaining 340B Program Compliance

  • Why so many 340B eligible hospitals don’t have programs.
  • 340B compliance checklist and additional resources.
  • Definition of 340B Duplicate Discounts.

3) Patient eligibility, and who qualifies for 340B

4) Which drugs are eligible and worth claiming for 340B discounts

5) Why you should optimize (not maximize) your 340B savings

6) Dispensing 340B prescriptions through your in-house retail pharmacy

7) Managing a well-run bedside prescription delivery program

  • Benefits of a Meds To Beds program.
  • Why so many health systems don’t offer Meds To Beds, and why they should.
  • Case Study: VytlOne’s Meds To Beds results for one health system.
  • How a Meds To Beds program should work.
  • Additional resources for readmission reduction.

8) Creating an optimal 340B contract pharmacy network

  • The role of contract pharmacies in optimizing 340B savings and revenue.
  • Tips for evaluating prospective contract pharmacies in your 340B network.
  • VytlOne’s record in optimizing 340B health system contract pharmacy networks.
  • Additional resources for contract pharmacy network optimization.

9) Contracting with specialty pharmacies for 340B prescriptions

  • 340B earnings potential of specialty drugs.
  • What to know before contracting with outside specialty pharmacies for 340B prescriptions.

10) Why every 340B hospital should have its own specialty pharmacy

  • Significantly higher 340B savings potential.
  • Equally significant improvements in the scope and quality of care.
  • Results generated by the first 340B specialty pharmacy VytlOne built, launched — and manages.
  • Additional 340B specialty pharmacy resources.

11) Common 340B contract pharmacy pitfalls

12) Common TPA 340B data mismatches

  • Common causes of TPA 340B data mismatches.
  • Factors increasing the likelihood of TPA 340B data mismatches.
  • Additional resources for evaluating TPAs for 340B program support.

VytlOne can help
For more information, contact Howard Hall. C: 214.808.2700   | howard.hall@vytlone.com

 

FULL POST 

If your hospital is 340B-eligible, you may be missing-out on millions of dollars in prescription reimbursements. Savings and revenue which, for some hospitals served by VytlOne, actually make the difference between solvency and closure. Since 2019, VytlOne has supported the 340B programs of more than 100 health systems and health centers. Altogether, we’ve generated over $1 billion in savings and for our clients — $300 million in 2025 alone — and not one has ever been fined for a 340B violation.

That said, any list of Best Practices for running a 340B program starts with maintaining compliance.

Tips for maintaining 340B Program Compliance

The main reason eligible hospitals don’t avail themselves of their legal right to 340B program savings is lack of the personnel needed to ensure full compliance.

It goes without saying that the 340B program can be very complicated. Which is why most of the covered entities we serve employ full-time professionals to monitor their programs. Here’s a checklist of tips for ensuring compliance:

  • Develop written policies & procedures detailing all of your 340B-related decisions.
  • Make sure your hospital’s 340B policies are compatible with your existing policies and procedures.
  • Always stay current on any information provided on the HRSA 340B database.
  • Double-check your provider files — and National Drug Code (NDC) crosswalks & location maps for all of the pharmacies in your network — for accuracy.
  • Review & Update your 340B policies and procedures on a regular schedule.
  • Utilize custom-developed 340B software, to ensure that your billing-unit (and other mapping-function) information is always up-to-date. Our VytlView® 340B analytics platform gives the health systems we serve a single, manageable access point for all their 340B data.
  • Give your providers and support staffers complete information on 340B program regulations, and how those regulations work with your hospital’s existing policies & procedures.
  • Conduct regular inventory-management and tracking-procedure checks, to ensure compliance.
  • Make all necessary efforts to prevent duplicate discounts, or double-dipping. (More on that topic shortly).
  • Establish a Governance Committee to meet regularly and review your 340B program.
  • Conduct regularly-scheduled internal audits of your health system’s 340B program.

For Further Reading:

Optimize 340B Program Savings & Compliance With Data Mining

The Definitive 340B Compliance Checklist For 2025

Avoiding 340B Duplicate Discounts

Under 340B drug pricing regulations, eligible providers may not apply for 340B discounts and Medicaid drug rebates for the same drugs — which is commonly called Double Dipping. Needless to say, it’s important that you have compliance mechanisms to prevent the practice.

Understanding patient eligibility, and who qualifies for 340B

Patients prescribed 340B eligible medications must have already received health care services (other than medications) from your health system. What’s more, those patients must have received health care services from one or more health care professionals who A) are employed by your health system, or B) provide health care services to patients under your responsibility (for example: A provider serving your health system’s patients by referral).

For Further Reading:

Understanding The Six Categories Of 340B Covered Entities

Knowing which drugs are 340B eligible AND worth claiming for discounts

To qualify for 340B program discounts, a drug / prescription must:

  • Be on the 340B formulary.
  • Be filled at one of a covered entity’s registered 340B pharmacies.

For information on which drugs are 340B eligible, and which are not, Click Here.

Optimizing (but not maximizing) your 340B program

For the 340B-eligible health systems VytlOne serves, we maintain a policy of optimizing 340B savings that’s aggressive and conservative. In other words, we believe in aggressively pursuing 340B savings for every prescription that’s worth pursuing. However, the simple truth is that the market-price of many prescriptions is too low to justify the time-and-energy investment needed to generate what amount to only nominal savings.

A fully-optimized program results in net savings on every 340B-eligible prescription claimed. To learn more, visit the 340B Optimization page on our website.

Dispensing 340B prescriptions through your in-house retail pharmacy

Any retail pharmacy located on your health system’s primary campus (which is also reimbursable on your Medicare cost report) is eligible to purchase and dispense 340B-discounted drugs for its outpatients. VytlOne has built and funded on-campus pharmacies for dozens of 340B health systems. To learn more, click here.

You can also extend 340B eligibility to offsite, contract pharmacies if they meet HRSA’s requirements. (More on contract pharmacies later).

Managing a well-run bedside prescription delivery program

A well-managed bedside prescription delivery program is more than a tangible sign of your system’s mission of caring for the individuals you serve. It’s the first step in ensuring that your patients follow their medication protocols after they’ve left your care.

In general, health systems lack effective Meds To Beds programs because of the costs to staff and administer them. Which is unfortunate, since (in our experience) those costs are always more than offset by the additional revenue a good program generates. Just one example: In just 12 months at a single Mississippi health system, VytlOne filled over 18,000 discharge prescriptions. During that time, the health system’s pharmacy revenues increased 125%, and its readmissions were reduced by 79%.

Here’s how a good Meds To Beds Program works: First, it’s critical that your retail pharmacy staff is willing to partner with your case management teams and providers in developing and implementing a medication treatment plan for patients who transitioning from your health system back to their homes. It’s also important that the program places no additional time-and-effort burdens on your hospital’s providers, nurses and staff.

Next, when prescription medications are delivered bedside to discharging patients, there should be pharmacists available to discuss, with patients, their medication protocols — as well as any issues that could compromise their willingness (or ability) to maintain compliance with those protocols, after they are discharged.

After patients are discharged, your Meds To Beds program should turn-over the job of continued patient contact, for at least 30 days in most instances, to your health system’s Readmission Risk Reduction program.

For Further Reading

How Meds To Beds Can Drive Your 340B Hospital’s Savings

Reducing Hospital Readmissions, One Patient At A Time.

Creating an optimal 340B contract pharmacy network

Contract pharmacies play a critical role in optimizing your health system’s 340B savings and revenue. As a general rule, the more independent pharmacies you have serving as contract pharmacies, the more choices and convenience you offer your outpatients in filing their prescriptions.

Unfortunately, many contract pharmacies cost hospitals more in fees than they generate in 340B savings and revenue. At the same time, when pharmacies are located too far from patients, there is no real convenience offered to them when refilling their prescriptions.

At VytlOne, we’ve helped dozens of health systems replace pharmacies generating low 340B match rates, with nearby pharmacies that have much higher match rates. In the process, we’ve helped those health systems generate significantly better 340B savings from their contract pharmacy relationships.

For Further Reading:

Your Hospital’s 340B Contract Pharmacy Network Is Not What It Should Be.

Contracting with specialty pharmacies for 340B prescriptions

Specialty pharmacies offer 340B-eligible entities the potential for generating significantly increased savings. Which, in turn, significantly increases the entities’ ability to pass-along those savings to patients in need. 340B-covered entities can acquire many specialty drugs for as little as 1¢. That happens when an eligible drug has reached its 100% Medicaid rebate cap.

For instance, Humira, the top-selling drug in the U.S., hit the rebate cap in 2016. Since that time, 340B hospitals have been able to buy Humira, and many other specialty drugs — including Epclusa, Harvoni, Imbruvica, Iressa, Gilenya, Revlimid and Stelara — at significantly-reduced prices.

That said, insurance companies determine which specialty pharmacies can dispense 340B-eligible specialty drugs, so you need to know a specialty pharmacy’s insurance relationships before contracting with it for your own 340B program.

Better still, building your own 340B specialty pharmacy

As we’ve noted in multiple posts on this forum, there are so many benefits to 340B health systems having their own on-campus specialty pharmacies.

In addition its significantly higher 340B earnings potential, an onsite specialty pharmacy offers your health system a seamlessly efficient approach to caring for the “sickest of the sick” patients you serve. These pharmacies are uniquely equipped to dispense medications tailored to specific medical conditions, such as cancer, chronic diseases, and rare disorders. With specialized expertise, pharmacists at your onsite specialty pharmacy can collaborate closely with your health system’s providers — ensuring that those patients receive personalized treatment plans and appropriate drug therapies.

The first specialty pharmacy VytlOne’s team helped build, fund and open — for a large regional Southeastern 340B hospital — began generating a monthly net income of $1 million within six months of launch. More importantly, that pharmacy began positively impacting the health system’s quality and scope of patient care months before it opened; an impact that has increased profoundly since then.

For Further Reading:

The Case for Onsite Specialty Pharmacies in 340B Hospitals

What Is The Process For Building A Specialty Pharmacy?

How Can Your 340B Hospital Pay For Its Own Specialty Pharmacy?

Best Practices To Ensure Your Specialty Pharmacy’s Success

Avoiding common 340B contract pharmacy pitfalls

In our experience, there are three key pharmacy-contract pitfalls you should avoid:

  • Processors who charge on a per-claim basis, working in tandem with high-volume pharmacies. Situations like that can generate prohibitively-high transaction fees for your 340B program.
  • Contract pharmacies with highly restrictive replenishment policies. Many pharmacies unilaterally pick and choose which medications in your program that they’ll approve for 340B discounts.
  • Poorly-located pharmacies offering very few of your patients convenient access.

For Further Reading:

Is Your 340B Vendor A Partner Or A Parasite?

Being aware of common TPA 340B data mismatches

One of the most frequent causes of TPA 340B data mismatches is inconsistency in Date Of Birth from one entry to the next. Another routine cause for misqualifications is mismatching of patients’ names. For example, a patient registered as “Jim” in a hospital’s pharmacy system may be registered as “James” at the hospital.

Not surprisingly, the likelihood of flawed data submissions increases with the complexity of an entity’s 340B Program (particularly if the health system’s program includes multiple EHRs, child sites, clinics, TPAs and Pharmacies). All of which can lead to missed 340B savings opportunities — sometimes substantial savings opportunities.

The more TPA relationships a covered entity has, the higher the likelihood for human error from the entity’s staff. Every TPA’s software system has a different interface, and when 340B administrators have to work in multiple systems, with multiple interfaces, that can easily lead to data entry mistakes.

For Further Reading:

How, and Why, TPAs Misqualify 340B-Eligible Prescriptions

Which TPAs Are The Best In Optimizing 340B Savings And Revenue?

For even more 340B best practices, tips and guidance ­—

— contact Howard Hall. C: 214.808.2700 | howard.hall@proxsysrx.com