Own Use Program

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Optimize your owned outpatient pharmacy with automated replenishment for new sources of revenue and reduced costs.

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Simplifies program management

​ Improves savings​

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Handles complicated splits

​ Captures 340B – if present – for patient/employee

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Accepts prequalified scripts​

or Verity qualifies employee BIN/PCN/Group​

Our team will back you up every step of the way

Unique personalized implementation with a dedicated manager from start to finish

97%​ of customers are highly satisfied with their designated account managers 

97% of  issues resolved on the same day (80% within 2h)

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FAQs

Drugs are purchased for its “own use” only where the hospital can be said to be the consumer, ​i.e., where dispensations are to inpatients and emergency facility patients:

  • Inpatient, emergency facility patient, or outpatient for use in treatment at the hospital ​
  • Inpatient, upon discharge, and outpatient, for off-premises personal use as a continuation of hospital treatment​
  • Hospital employee, student or physician staff member for personal use, or for the use of their dependent​

Robinson–Patman Act—also called the Anti-Price Discrimination Act—passed in 1936. A Response to the perceived unfairness of manufacturers that sold products at cheaper prices to chain stores, thereby creating a disadvantage to the chain’s single-store competitors in a given town​.

NonProfit Institutions Act (NPIA) became law in 1938​. Created a loophole for manufacturers to sell discounted products to non-profit entities such as hospitals, charitable institutions, and universities that met certain criteria​. The chief requirement was that they had to purchase the products for their own use​.

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