×
Wednesday, December 3, 2025

CVS agrees to pay $38M to settle insulin fraud claims - Healthcare Dive

Dive Brief:

  • CVS has agreed to pay almost $38 million to settle allegations that its pharmacies overcharged the government for insulin pens over a decade, putting to bed a Department of Justice lawsuit and several whistleblower cases over the claims.
  • From 2010 through 2020, CVS pharmacies refilled insulin products too early, dispensed more than patients needed and falsely underreported how much insulin its pharmacies dispensed to avoid detection, according to the DOJ.
  • Roughly $25 million of the settlement will be paid to the U.S. government, with the remainder split between various states. CVS, which did admit culpability as part of the deal, said in a statement to Healthcare Dive that it was glad to put the matter behind it.

Dive Insight:

Insulin pens are a commonly used tool for diabetic patients to control their blood sugar. About three-fifths of Americans with diabetes use the pens, which are normally dispensed in cartons of five, with each pen containing 300 mL of insulin.

When pharmacies dispense insulin pens to patients in government programs like Medicare or Medicaid, they’re required to report certain data, like the quantity dispensed and how many days the supply will last. Plans’ pharmacy benefit managers normally reject claims that exceed certain limits, are for premature refills or for full cartons, which can exceed days-of-supply limits.

But CVS knowingly skirted these limits in order to submit false claims, according to the government’s complaint....



Read Full Story: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMilAFBVV95cUxPamZFUWs4Q3AxNjhwNVhqcVFO...