In 2021, CSRO, alongside the State Access to Innovative Medicines Coalition (SAIM) and other stakeholders, sought to update Arkansas’ existing step therapy law to ensure patients could get the right medicine at the right time.
SB 99, which was eventually signed into law as Act 97, reformed the use of step therapy by requiring exception determinations within 24 or 72 hours, adding additional clinical circumstances under which prescribers could override a step therapy protocol, and requiring that step therapy protocols be based on sound clinical guidelines.
This was made possible by the dedication and work of the SB 99’s chief sponsors Senator Cecile Bledsoe and Representative DeAnn Vaught, who ensured SB 99 sped through the Arkansas legislature to become one of the strongest laws of its kind in the country.
In recognition of their work and dedication to issues impacting patient access in their communities, SAIM decided to award both Senator Bledsoe and Representative Vaught Legislator of the Year and Patient Access Champion Awards. On April 4, representatives of CSRO, the Arkansas Rheumatology Association, and other stakeholders (pictured above) met in Little Rock to formally present the awards.
SAIM and CSRO thank Senator Bledsoe and Representative Vaught for their work on SB 99 and look forward to working with them in the future.