How White Bagging Impacts Patient Care
In the parlance of drug dispensing, “white bagging” is the term used when insurers require certain prescribed drugs to be dispensed from a specific specialty pharmacy and shipped directly to a practice, hospital, or clinic for patient administration. This is increasingly the case with infusion therapies for the treatment of cancer.
Many providers are taking a stand against insurer mandates for white-bagging, saying the practice can endanger patient care by potentially bypassing safety checks, introducing dosing errors, delaying treatment, and interrupting care planning processes. Yet, the practice is accelerating. In a spring 2021 survey of the Association of Community Cancer Centers (ACCC) membership, 87 percent of respondents said white bagging is an insurer mandate for some of their patients.
But providers are taking a stand. In Louisiana, for example, patient advocates have succeeded in obtaining the passage of legislation that bans the practice of white bagging. The majority of the respondents to this ACCC survey on white bagging—59 percent—say their cancer program or practice does not allow white bagging. Cited reasons include dangerous treatment delays, patient safety concerns, unpredictable drug deliveries, and drug waste.
The resources on this page have been developed by the Association of Community Cancer Centers and its Chapter Members from the Oncology State Societies at ACCC. Cancer care professionals can use them to learn more about the practice of white bagging, its deleterious effects on patient care, and how to take action against it.