Advocates Gather to Discuss Pressing Healthcare Issues
The ADAP Advocacy Association held its second Fireside Chat retreat this year, assembling in Chicago to discuss a broad range of issues. The Fireside Chats are somewhat coveted for the nature of the space they provide, with representation of a variety of industry partners, advocacy and service organizations, and patient advocates who don’t necessarily hold any particular affiliations. CEO, Brandon M. Macsata, refers to the gathering as “a group therapy session” whereby the richness of the advocacy work is most frequently the result of conversations at the Fireside Chat, but not necessarily rooted in seeking specific solutions confined to the four walls of the meeting room. The meeting format frees attendees from needing to be the “problem solvers” and allows for a free flow of ideas and perspectives collaboratively that might not otherwise arise. Topics for this event included combatting counterfeit medications, reforming the 340B Discount Drug Program, and dissecting COVID-19’s impact on public health programs.
While many of the participants were familiar with the notion of counterfeit medications, few were necessarily familiar with the details of safeguards taken to ensure patients are indeed receiving the medications they expect to receive or how large recent instances of counterfeit HIV medications were possible. Shabbir Imber Safdar from the Partnership for Safe Medicines started the conversation by sharing the status of implementation of the Drug Quality and Security Act, and how packaging was sold and resold with fake product in containers as part of one of the counterfeit schemes in Florida. Participants asked about various aspects of enforcement and implementation, drivers of fake medicines and medication supplies, to learn that enforcement largely falls outside of criminal codes and to civil litigation on fraud, pushed by medication manufacturers – a cost not well appreciated when put under the lens of medication costs. Advocates also considered more overt impacts of counterfeit medications in the opioid crisis and how they might need to approach community education on the issue of counterfeits in order to further medical mistrust.
The 340B discussion proved to be particularly lively. While having to segregate the pointed and necessary reminder that much of public health program funding is largely dependent on 340B revenues because Congress refuses to adequately fund public health programs, within minutes, participants began asking where patients fell in the funding scheme. Issues of charity care as a measure of success of the program (and the fact that hospital charity care has fallen dramatically since the passage of the Affordable Care Act), the ever-expanding role of contract pharmacies, and how federal grantees are being “caught in the middle” were frequently mentioned. As advocates asked questions, one participant rightly and repeatedly reminded the audience “there are no requirements as to how those dollars are spent.” One participant asked pointedly, as the usual “sides” of the 340B debate began to settle in, “will you come to the table with those perspectives you disagree with to find solutions?”
The final discussion of the Fireside Chat returned to COVID-19’s impact on public health programs. Once again, yours truly facilitated the discussion, though this time it was less on policy issues and more on the state of patient advocacy and provider services as a response. With concentration on sustainability and succession planning, participants reflected how the crisis phase of the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted not just the weaknesses in public health programs, but also re-emphasized the need for HIV advocacy to consider appropriate succession planning and mentorship, as much as our service organization partners need to find room in their budgets to hire enough staff to not burn out their existing staff. Reminding the audience, I reflected, “Because eventually Bill Arnold dies.” The statement hit home for the room’s audience, referring to the empty seat draped in the fishing vest with the AIDS red ribbon on the lapel once worn by the Lion of HIV/AIDS advocacy. We have to plan better and we have to be willing to make these investments now, not later. I implored funders in the room to consider how they might incentivize funded organizations to begin succession planning and mentor investments.
After two years of most, if not all, in-person patient advocacy events being suspended, it was refreshing to convene with such a diverse group of public health stakeholders in Chicago. The ADAP Advocacy Association’s Fireside Chat retreats have filled a void in the patient advocacy space by the very nature of their uniqueness, and CANN remains committed to seeing them succeed. Chicago, like the one earlier this year in Wilmington, did just that.