Compound drugs fleece Tricare, gouge budget

Dodgy companies peddling pricey compound pharmaceuticals have fleeced the Tricare program so severely this year, before tougher screening procedures took effect May 1, that they are largely to blame for a $2 billion defense health budget hole Congress is scrambling to fill.

In fiscal 2010, military outpatient pharmacy costs totaled $6.6 billion, with only $23 million spent on compound drugs. By fiscal 2014, outpatient pharmacy costs had risen to $7.7 billion but compound drugs costs soared to $515 million. In the first nine months of fiscal 2015, compound drug costs tripled again for Tricare, to $1.7 billion, or more than 20 percent of the $8.2 billion Tricare expects to spend on outpatient drugs the entire year.

“It’s really unheard of to see this kind of a spike, and it threatens our program,” said Jon Rychalski, deputy assistant secretary of defense for health resources management and policy, in a phone interview Wednesday.

“In April alone the compound pharmacy bill was about $500 million,” he added. “So we are very concerned with this year. And as we broke it down for the Congress, they have understood and they’re appalled.”

Compound pharmacies combine more than one medication or ingredient to create drugs not available commercially. Doctors elect to prescribe them when their patients might benefit from a different kind or strength of drug, whether creams, ointments, capsules or pills.

But compound drugs have been at the center of abusive marketing and pricing schemes. After the private sector health industry clamped down on these operations a few years back, they refocused on the military and Tricare beneficiaries, officials said.

Many retirees, it seems, got unsolicited calls asking if they had aches or pains and informing them of special drugs that would bring relief and that the Tricare retail pharmacy benefit would cover. In just two years Tricare’s average cost for a compound drug jumped from $192 to $2,595.

“There were unscrupulous people out there taking advantage of this, heavily marketing in many different ways,” Rychalski said.

Dr. Jonathan Woodson, assistant secretary of defense for health affairs, joined with the military surgeons general and director of the Defense Health Agency this month to send an extraordinary letter to the armed services and appropriations committees. It seeks swift approval of two earlier reprogramming requests and a new one to shift defense dollars between accounts and close a more than $2 billion funding gap “largely driven by the compound pharmaceutical costs and utilization.”

While new screening rules for compound drugs “have successfully curbed the inappropriate and potentially fraudulent activity in this area,” the letter says, two other factors add to the budget shortfall: medical inflation and more beneficiaries using Tricare than forecast. It warns of a “real risk of exhausting funds needed to pay private sector care costs in late July 2015” if reprogramming isn’t approved.

Rychalski, however, gave assurances Wednesday that beneficiaries will see no “disruption to care through the Tricare network or in the direct health care system.” A worst-case scenario, if Congress delays action on reprogramming until it returns from summer recess in September, is that Tricare could be forced by mid-August to delay doctor reimbursements.

“The situation we don’t want to find ourselves in is where a beneficiary receives care and a bill is presented (but) we’re short of funding to pay for it,” Rychalski said.

With its first two reprogramming requests, the department seeks to use more than $500 million in unspent health care dollars. That could be money available due to delays in staff hiring or unspent contract dollars. For the third reprogramming, almost $900 million, the target is budget savings from lower fuel costs, also to be diverted to Tricare to offset the cost of compound drugs as well as new, costly hepatitis C treatments.

Rychalski said if he sounds less alarmed than did the letter, give some credit to a hitch in Tricare claim processing software last week. It forced the contractor rewrite code and delay paying about 50,000 claims, which bought more time for a health program running out of cash.

He also noted that Tricare is a $16 billion program with a host of large contracts — for U.S. regions, overseas, Alaska, dental care and more. During the recent federal budget shutdown, budget officials saw how they could shift funds between accounts and dampen the effect on beneficiaries.

“We put money on each contract and monitor it. How fast that goes down can be a function of demand, cost, usage and when the invoices are submitted for payment. It’s an inexact science although we knew that in the late July to mid August time frame we would probably run into a serious issue,” Rychalski said. That led to the reprogramming requests.

All four defense committees, House and Senate authorizers and appropriators, “seem supportive,” he said. The House Appropriations Committee was first this week in clearing the largest reprogramming request.

“My sense is Congress is going to come through with the reprogramming approvals and we’ll be OK. … But there is the very real possibility, if something got held up and nothing was approved, that eventually we would run out of money to pay claims.”

Congress should also know that $400 million of the shortfall reflects rising health costs unrelated to drugs, a harbinger perhaps that a long period of modest medical inflation is ending. If so, Rychalski warned, the House and Senate appropriations committees have added more risk to military health programs by voting to whack the health budget for fiscal 2016 by $1.4 billion and $786 million respectively, off the department’s budget request.

“We are seeing what we believe are generally increasing health care costs, and we think that’s going to endure,” he said. So the deep cuts by appropriators “are really too great for us to be able to fully fund the defense health program. … Based upon our current-year experience and trends we’re seeing, these reductions are really not sustainable.”

VA budget relief: The House has voted to shift more than $3 billion from the Department of Veterans Affairs’ Choice Card fund to pay other community-based health care costs for veterans who can’t get timely care in VA facilities, a move sought by VA Secretary Bob McDonald.

But Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Florida, chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, made clear his committee’s support of the move was to protect veterans, not please VA leaders who he said mismanaged their budget.

To comment, write Military Update, P.O. Box 231111, Centreville, VA, 20120 or email milupdate@aol.com or twitter: @Military_Update.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

Floodwater from the Snohomish River partially covers a flood water sign along Lincoln Avenue on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025 in Snohomish, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Images from the flooding in Snohomish County.

Our photographers have spent this week documenting the flooding in… Continue reading

A rendering of possible configuration for a new multi-purpose stadium in downtown Everett. (DLR Group)
Everett council resolution lays out priorities for proposed stadium

The resolution directs city staff to, among other things, protect the rights of future workers if they push for unionization.

LifeWise Bibles available for students in their classroom set up at New Hope Assembly on Monday, April 14, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Parents back Everett district after LifeWise lawsuit threat

Dozens gathered at a board meeting Tuesday to voice their concerns over the Bible education program that pulls students out of public school during the day.

Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin delivers her budget address during a city council meeting on Oct. 22, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Everett mayor talks priorities for third term in office

Cassie Franklin will focus largely on public safety, housing and human services, and community engagement over the next four years, she told The Daily Herald in an interview.

A view of downtown Everett facing north on Oct. 14, 2025. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Everett expands Downtown Improvement District

The district, which collects rates to provide services for downtown businesses, will now include more properties along Pacific and Everett Avenues.

Darryl Dyck file photo
Mohammed Asif, an Indian national, conspired with others to bill Medicare for COVID-19 and other respiratory tests that hadn’t been ordered or performed, according to a U.S. Department of Justice press release.
Man sentenced to 2 years in prison for $1 million health care fraud scheme

Mohammed Asif, 35, owned an Everett-based testing laboratory and billed Medicare for COVID-19 tests that patients never received.

Snohomish County Fire District No. 4 and Snohomish Regional Fire and Rescue responded to a two-vehicle head-on collision on U.S. 2 on Feb. 21, 2024, in Snohomish. (Snohomish County Fire District #4)
Family of Monroe woman killed in U.S. 2 crash sues WSDOT for $50 million

The wrongful death lawsuit filed in Snohomish County Superior Court on Nov. 24 alleges the agency’s negligence led to Tu Lam’s death.

Judy Tuohy, the executive director of the Schack Art Center, in 2024. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Director of Everett’s Schack Art Center announces retirement

Judy Tuohy, also a city council member, will step down from the executive director role next year after 32 years in the position.

Human trafficking probe nets arrest of Calif. man, rescue of 17-year-old girl

The investigation by multiple agencies culminated with the arrest of a California man in Snohomish County.

Stanwood man allegedly stole a WSP vehicle to get home for Christmas

The 24-year-old is facing robbery and eluding charges in connection with the Christmas day incident.

Information panels on display as a part of the national exhibit being showcased at Edmonds College on Nov. 19, 2025 in Lynnwood, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Edmonds College hosts new climate change and community resilience exhibit

Through Jan. 21, visit the school library in Lynnwood to learn about how climate change is affecting weather patterns and landscapes and how communities are adapting.

Back to rain and snow in Snohomish County in time for the new year

The last few days of blue skies will give way to rain in the lowlands, with 5-8 inches of snow also expected in the Cascades

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.