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Group helps needy
gain access to medicines

The Hawaii program is expected
to help about 20,000 patients


Hawaii's low-income, under- or uninsured chronically ill residents are now a telephone call away from free or low-cost prescription medications donated to the poor by drug manufacturers, Gov. Linda Lingle announced yesterday.

Hawaii Prescription Care is a nonprofit organization that helps enroll those who qualify for the differing criteria the various drug companies establish for their donated drugs.

The Hawaii program was launched in March with a $3 million grant from the Harry & Jeanette Weinberg Foundation at no cost to taxpayers.

It's modeled after Maryland's MEDBANK program, which began in 2000 and in two years provided 20,487 patients with $17.2 million in free medicine.

"It's so exciting to launch a new program in a new state for reaching out to patients who can't afford their medication," said Robert McEwan, MEDBANK's founder and board president who came to the islands to help launch Hawaii's program. "It's a pervasive problem in the United States and it's one for which there is a remedy."

Hawaii's program is expected to help 20,000 patients get vital medication they might otherwise be unable to afford, said Sharon Hicks, the executive director.

Hicks said the program will assist patients in taking advantage of free or low-cost drug programs offered by 120 drug companies, each with its own qualification requirements.

The call center acts as a referral service to help patients with the paperwork needed to apply for the various programs, but is not responsible for determining if the patient qualifies, Hicks said.

The program typically requires four to six weeks for a prescription to be filled, but is computerized so refills are timely, she said.

It's not for immediate medications such as antibiotics, but for chronic ailments such as diabetes, mental illness and arthritis, which require long-term maintenance medications.

Officials said the program in part is to prevent discharged patients from landing back in the hospital because they couldn't afford their prescriptions.

Lingle has said it's not meant to solve the overall problem of soaring drug costs, but to immediately help those most in need.

The program will be overseen by the state Department of Health and will run in cooperation with 12 Hawaii Health Systems Corp. state hospitals and five Hawaii Primary Care Association primary care clinics.

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