Patient Assistance Programs for Hospitals: How to Match Patients to 200+ Free Medication Programs (2026)
By Vincent Couey, OmniRx founder. Source-cited from FDA, openFDA FAERS, DailyMed, NIH National Library of Medicine, and CMS data. Updated .
Every hospital in the United States has patients who cannot afford their medications. The standard response is to absorb those costs as uncompensated care, write off the bad debt, and move on. But there is a better path: over 200 manufacturer-sponsored patient assistance programs (PAPs) exist right now, each offering brand-name medications at zero cost to qualifying patients. The problem has never been availability. The problem is operational: identifying eligible patients, matching them to the right programs, managing applications, and tracking renewals at scale.
For 340B covered entities, this challenge carries extra weight. PAP enrollment intersects with 340B compliance in ways that create both opportunity and risk. A well-run PAP program reduces uncompensated care, improves patient outcomes, and strengthens your 340B audit posture. A poorly run one creates duplicate discount violations and regulatory exposure.
This guide covers the operational side: how hospitals and FQHCs can build a PAP enrollment program that runs at institutional scale, which manufacturer programs offer the most value, and where PAP workflows intersect with your existing 340B compliance infrastructure. If you are looking for the patient-facing version of this topic, RxGrab's PAP guide for patients covers individual eligibility and application steps.
Why Hospitals Underutilize Patient Assistance Programs
The data is stark. An estimated
- No centralized screening. Most hospitals rely on individual social workers or financial counselors to identify PAP candidates. Without automated screening against program criteria, eligible patients slip through during every discharge, every clinic visit, every prescription fill.
- Application complexity at volume. A single PAP application takes 30 to 60 minutes. Multiply that across 8 to 12 manufacturers with different forms, different portals, and different renewal cycles, and the administrative burden becomes untenable for small pharmacy teams.
- 340B compliance anxiety. Pharmacy directors worry (correctly) that PAP medications and 340B purchases must be kept strictly separate. Without clear tracking, some hospitals avoid PAPs entirely rather than risk an HRSA audit finding.
The result: patients who qualify for free medications instead receive them through 340B at a discount the hospital absorbs, through charity care write-offs, or not at all. Each of these outcomes costs the institution money and harms the patient.
The 200+ Manufacturer PAP Landscape: What Hospitals Need to Know
Every major pharmaceutical manufacturer operates at least one patient assistance program. The scope varies significantly. Some programs cover a single blockbuster drug. Others blanket an entire portfolio. For hospital pharmacy teams, understanding the landscape starts with the highest-value programs, meaning the ones that cover the most expensive drugs your patients actually use.
| Manufacturer | Program Name | Key Drugs Covered | Income Limit | Insurance Accepted? | Hospital Enrollment? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pfizer | Pfizer RxPathways | Eliquis, Ibrance, Xeljanz, Paxlovid | 400% FPL | Uninsured/underinsured | Yes, provider portal |
| AbbVie | myAbbVie Assist | Humira, Skyrizi, Rinvoq, Venclexta | 400% FPL | Uninsured only | Yes, fax or portal |
| Novo Nordisk | NovoCare PAP | Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus, all insulins | 400% FPL | Uninsured/Medicare Part D | Yes, provider portal |
| Merck | Merck Patient Assistance | Keytruda, Januvia, Gardasil | 400% FPL | Uninsured only | Yes, fax or portal |
| Johnson & Johnson | J&J Patient Assistance | Xarelto, Stelara, Tremfya, Darzalex | 400% FPL | Uninsured/underinsured | Yes, provider portal |
| Eli Lilly | Lilly Cares | Insulin (all), Jardiance, Verzenio, Mounjaro | 400% FPL | Uninsured/Medicare gap | Yes, fax or portal |
| AstraZeneca | AZ&Me Rx Savings | Farxiga, Symbicort, Tagrisso, Lynparza | 400% FPL | Uninsured only | Yes, provider portal |
| Bristol-Myers Squibb | BMS Access Support | Eliquis, Opdivo, Revlimid, Pomalyst | 300% FPL | Uninsured/underinsured | Yes, fax or portal |
| Roche/Genentech | Genentech Patient Foundation | Herceptin, Avastin, Rituxan, Ocrevus | 500% FPL | Uninsured/underinsured | Yes, provider portal |
| Gilead | Gilead Advancing Access | Biktarvy, Descovy, Harvoni, Veklury | 500% FPL | Uninsured/underinsured | Yes, provider portal |
| Amgen | Amgen Safety Net | Enbrel, Repatha, Prolia, Blincyto | 400% FPL | Uninsured only | Yes, fax or portal |
| Sanofi | Sanofi Patient Connection | Dupixent, Lantus, Aubagio, Jevtana | 400% FPL | Uninsured/Medicare gap | Yes, provider portal |
Two patterns stand out in this table. First, income thresholds cluster around 400% of the federal poverty level ($62,400 for a single individual in 2026), which means a significant portion of hospital patients qualify, particularly at FQHCs and safety-net hospitals. Second, most programs now offer provider portals for institutional enrollment, a shift from the paper-fax era that makes hospital-scale PAP management feasible for the first time.
How to Build a Hospital PAP Enrollment Program: Step by Step
Treating PAP enrollment as an institutional program rather than an ad hoc service requires four layers of infrastructure: screening, application, tracking, and renewal. Here is how to build each one.
Step 1: Identify Your High-Value Drug Targets
Start with your pharmacy's top 20 drugs by total spend for uninsured and underinsured patients. Cross-reference each drug against manufacturer PAP availability. In practice, 60% to 80% of your highest-cost prescriptions will have a corresponding PAP. Prioritize drugs where the per-patient annual cost exceeds $5,000, as these generate the greatest offset per enrollment.
Pull your dispensing data from the last 12 months. For each high-cost drug, calculate: total units dispensed to uninsured/underinsured patients, total dollar value at acquisition cost, and the number of unique patients. This gives you a clear ROI forecast before you invest in program infrastructure.
Step 2: Build an Eligibility Screening Workflow
The fastest path to scale is integrating PAP eligibility screening into your existing financial counseling process. Every patient who qualifies for your sliding fee scale or charity care program is a potential PAP candidate. The screening should happen at three touchpoints:
- Registration/intake. Front-desk staff flag patients with no insurance or high-deductible plans. Income data collected for financial assistance applications doubles as PAP eligibility input.
- Prescription fill. Pharmacy staff screen at the point of dispensing. If a patient presents with a high-cost brand-name prescription and meets income thresholds, the PAP referral triggers automatically.
- Discharge planning. Care coordinators review the medication list before discharge. Patients leaving with new prescriptions for expensive chronic medications get PAP referrals as part of the discharge packet.
Manual screening breaks down above 20 to 30 referrals per month. At that volume, you need either dedicated enrollment staff or automated screening software. OmniRx's PAP Navigator module, for example, cross-references patient demographics against all 200+ manufacturer programs in real time and flags matches during the prescribing workflow. The output is a ranked list of programs each patient qualifies for, with pre-populated application forms.
Step 3: Centralize Application Processing
Designate a PAP coordinator (or team, depending on volume). This role owns the application lifecycle: completing forms, obtaining provider signatures, submitting to manufacturers, and tracking status. For FQHCs, this often falls to a pharmacy technician or financial counselor with dedicated hours for PAP work.
Key operational details:
- Batch applications by manufacturer. Each manufacturer portal has its own login, form format, and submission process. Processing all Pfizer applications on Monday, all Lilly applications on Tuesday, and so on reduces context-switching overhead by roughly 40%.
- Pre-populate forms from your EMR. Patient demographics, diagnosis codes, prescriber NPI, and medication details should auto-fill from existing data. Manual re-entry is the single largest time sink in PAP processing.
- Track every application in a centralized system. Spreadsheets work for under 50 active enrollments. Beyond that, use a dedicated PAP tracking tool or your pharmacy management system's PAP module.
Step 4: Automate Renewal Tracking
PAP approvals typically last 6 to 12 months. A 200-patient PAP program generates 200 to 400 renewal events per year. Miss a renewal, and the patient faces a gap in medication supply, which often means an ER visit or readmission that costs the hospital far more than the drug itself.
Build a renewal calendar with 60-day, 30-day, and 7-day alerts. Assign renewal responsibility to your PAP coordinator. Track renewal rates as a quality metric: mature programs maintain 90%+ renewal rates.
PAP and 340B: How the Two Programs Intersect
This is where compliance teams earn their keep. PAPs and the 340B Drug Pricing Program serve overlapping patient populations but operate through completely different mechanisms. Getting the interaction wrong creates audit risk.
The Core Rule
A hospital cannot apply 340B pricing to a prescription that is being fulfilled through a PAP. These are mutually exclusive channels. PAP medications are provided free by the manufacturer and never enter the 340B purchasing stream. If a patient is receiving Humira through myAbbVie Assist, the hospital should not also be purchasing Humira at 340B pricing for that patient.
Practical Segregation
In your pharmacy management system, PAP-enrolled patients should be flagged with a status that prevents 340B replenishment orders from triggering for their PAP-covered medications. The tracking must be drug-specific, not patient-level. A patient might receive one medication through a PAP and another through 340B, which is perfectly compliant as long as each drug flows through only one channel.
This segregation is exactly the type of compliance checkpoint that HRSA auditors examine closely. If your current system cannot enforce drug-level PAP/340B separation, that is a gap worth closing before your next audit cycle. OmniRx's split billing module handles this segregation automatically, flagging conflicts before they reach the dispensing stage.
Where PAPs Complement 340B
Despite the segregation requirements, PAPs and 340B are allies in the same fight: getting medications to patients who cannot afford them. A strong PAP program actually strengthens your 340B position in three ways:
- Covers gaps in 340B eligibility. 340B pricing applies only to outpatients of covered entities. PAPs have no such restriction. Inpatients, patients seen at non-registered sites, and patients who do not meet 340B's "patient definition" can still qualify for PAPs.
- Reduces financial strain on 340B savings. When PAPs absorb the cost of the most expensive brand-name medications, 340B savings can be redirected to other patient care programs, infrastructure, and staffing.
- Demonstrates community benefit. HRSA evaluates whether 340B entities are using savings to serve their patient populations. A documented PAP program is concrete evidence of that commitment.
Calculating the Financial Impact: Real Hospital Numbers
The ROI math for hospital PAP programs is straightforward but often underestimated. Here is a model based on published outcomes from safety-net hospitals and FQHCs:
| Metric | Small FQHC (5,000 patients) | Mid-Size Hospital (25,000 patients) | Large Health System (100,000+ patients) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estimated PAP-eligible patients | 400-600 | 1,500-3,000 | 8,000-15,000 |
| Realistic enrollment rate (Year 1) | 15-25% | 10-20% | 5-15% |
| Active PAP enrollments | 60-150 | 150-600 | 400-2,250 |
| Avg. annual drug value per enrollment | main8,800 | main8,800 | main8,800 |
| Total annual drug cost offset | $4.3M- | ||
| Program admin cost (staff + tools) | $85,000- | $500,000- | |
| ROI ratio | 14x-50x | 12x-49x | 10x-54x |
These numbers reflect drug acquisition cost offsets, not charges. The value to patients is even larger, measured in retail pricing. A single Keytruda patient enrolled in Merck's PAP represents
For patients navigating the cost side independently, RxGrab's free prescription programs guide covers savings options beyond manufacturer PAPs, including discount cards and state programs.
Technology Stack for Hospital PAP Management
The tools you use determine your ceiling. Here is what each tier of PAP program maturity looks like from a technology perspective:
Tier 1: Manual (0-50 enrollments)
Spreadsheet tracking, paper applications, manual fax submissions. This works for small clinics just starting out but caps at roughly 50 active enrollments before administrative burden causes missed renewals and dropped applications. Cost: staff time only.
Tier 2: Semi-Automated (50-300 enrollments)
PAP-specific tracking software with basic eligibility screening and renewal alerts. Applications are still submitted individually, but the system manages the pipeline. Tools in this category include NeedyMeds' institutional platform, RxAssist Pro, and standalone PAP management modules. Cost: main00 to $800/month.
Tier 3: Fully Integrated (300+ enrollments)
EMR-integrated screening that flags PAP-eligible patients during the prescribing workflow. Automated form pre-population from patient records. Direct API submission to manufacturer portals. Compliance-grade audit trails that separate PAP and 340B dispensing. OmniRx's PAP Navigator operates at this tier, connecting to 200+ manufacturer programs through a single interface with built-in 340B compliance guardrails. Cost: $499 to
Common Mistakes in Hospital PAP Programs
After working with dozens of 340B entities on PAP optimization, these are the failure patterns we see most often:
- Treating PAPs as a pharmacy-only initiative. Physicians, social workers, care coordinators, and front-desk staff all interact with PAP-eligible patients. If only the pharmacy team knows about PAPs, you capture 20% of eligible patients at best. Cross-departmental training is mandatory.
- Ignoring renewal cycles. A 200-patient PAP program with a 6-month approval cycle generates 400 renewal events per year. One missed renewal per week means 52 patients lose medication access annually. Automated renewal tracking is not optional at scale.
- Failing to separate PAP and 340B data. This is the compliance failure that triggers audit findings. Your pharmacy system must track, at the drug level, whether a patient's medication is sourced through PAP or 340B. Comingling creates duplicate discount risk.
- Not tracking denials and resubmissions. PAP denial rates run 15% to 25% on first submission, primarily due to incomplete applications. Programs that track denial reasons and systematically address them achieve 85%+ approval rates on resubmission. Programs that do not track denials accept a 15% to 25% permanent loss rate.
- Overlooking specialty and oncology drugs. The highest-value PAP enrollments are specialty medications costing $5,000 to
5,000 per month. Hospitals that focus only on primary care drugs (diabetes, cardiovascular) miss the biggest financial opportunity. Genentech's Patient Foundation alone covers oncology drugs worth 00,000+ annually per patient.
Measuring PAP Program Performance: The Metrics That Matter
Track these KPIs monthly. They tell you whether your PAP program is growing, stalling, or leaking value:
| KPI | Target (Mature Program) | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Screening rate (% of eligible patients screened) | 85%+ | Measures how well your referral pipeline captures candidates |
| Application submission rate | 70%+ of screened patients | Identifies dropout between screening and application |
| First-pass approval rate | 75%+ | Reflects application quality and eligibility accuracy |
| Resubmission success rate | 85%+ of denials | Measures your team's persistence and denial resolution process |
| Renewal rate | 90%+ | Prevents medication gaps for enrolled patients |
| Average days to approval | 14-21 days | Tracks manufacturer processing time and your submission speed |
| Annual drug cost offset | The bottom-line financial impact | |
| Cost per enrollment | Under | Administrative efficiency measure |
If your screening rate sits below 50%, the problem is referral pipeline awareness, not application processing. If your first-pass approval rate is below 60%, the problem is application quality. Each metric points to a specific operational fix.
PAP Enrollment for Specific Hospital Types
FQHCs (Federally Qualified Health Centers)
FQHCs have a structural advantage: their patient populations skew heavily toward PAP eligibility thresholds. With 91% of FQHC patients at or below 200% FPL (HRSA data, 2025), the screening question is less "does this patient qualify?" and more "which programs does this patient qualify for?" FQHCs should integrate PAP screening into their existing sliding fee scale determination process, since income verification is already happening.
The 340B intersection is particularly important for FQHCs. Many FQHC patients qualify for both 340B pricing and PAPs. The decision framework: use PAPs for expensive brand-name drugs where the 340B discount still leaves a meaningful patient copay. Use 340B for drugs where the discounted price is already near zero. This maximizes both patient savings and institutional 340B revenue generation.
Disproportionate Share Hospitals (DSH)
DSH hospitals serve high volumes of Medicaid and uninsured patients. PAP eligibility overlaps significantly with the Medicaid gap population, patients whose income exceeds Medicaid thresholds but falls well within PAP limits. DSH hospitals should target PAP enrollment specifically at this gap population, where neither Medicaid nor commercial insurance covers medication costs.
Critical Access Hospitals (CAH)
Rural critical access hospitals face unique constraints: smaller pharmacy teams, fewer financial counseling resources, and limited technology budgets. For CAHs, the most practical approach is a focused PAP program targeting the 5 to 10 highest-cost drugs in their formulary, managed by a single dedicated staff member (often a pharmacy technician). Technology at the Tier 1 or Tier 2 level is sufficient for the typical CAH enrollment volume of 20 to 80 active patients.
For supplemental health and wellness strategies that complement pharmaceutical interventions, Health Britannica's Foundation Stack guide covers evidence-based supplement protocols that complement prescription therapy. Patients on medications like statins, metformin, and blood pressure drugs often benefit from targeted supplementation (CoQ10, B12, magnesium) to address nutrient depletions. For hospital staff looking to deepen their understanding of PAP workflows and pharmaceutical access, EduBracket's healthcare administration courses cover patient access operations and pharmacy benefit management in detail.
Getting Started: Your 30-Day PAP Launch Plan
You do not need six months of planning to start capturing PAP value. Here is a compressed launch timeline that gets enrollments flowing within 30 days:
- Week 1: Data pull. Extract your top 20 drugs by uninsured/underinsured spend. Cross-reference against the manufacturer PAP table above. Identify your top 5 targets by total dollar opportunity.
- Week 1-2: Credential with manufacturers. Register for provider portals with each target manufacturer. Most portals approve institutional access within 3 to 5 business days. Download application templates.
- Week 2: Build your screening form. Create a one-page intake form that captures the data points common to all PAP applications: patient demographics, income, insurance status, current medications, prescriber information. This form feeds every manufacturer application.
- Week 2-3: Train staff. Brief pharmacy staff, financial counselors, and discharge planners on PAP eligibility criteria and the referral process. The message is simple: any uninsured patient on a brand-name medication costing more than main00/month should be referred for PAP screening.
- Week 3-4: Process first applications. Start with your 5 to 10 most obvious candidates (patients already flagged for financial assistance who take high-cost brand drugs). Submit applications. Track results.
- Week 4+: Measure and expand. Review approval rates, time-to-approval, and cost offsets. Use the data to justify expanding to additional drugs and manufacturers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can 340B hospitals use patient assistance programs alongside 340B pricing?
Yes, but careful coordination is required. PAPs and 340B pricing serve different patient segments. PAPs provide free brand-name drugs directly from manufacturers, while 340B pricing lets covered entities purchase drugs at a discount for eligible outpatients. The key compliance rule: a hospital cannot use 340B pricing on a prescription that is already being fulfilled through a PAP. Most compliance teams track PAP-enrolled patients in a separate queue to prevent duplicate discounts and potential HRSA audit findings.
How long does it take to set up a hospital-wide PAP enrollment program?
A basic PAP referral workflow can launch in 4 to 6 weeks. This includes credentialing staff with manufacturer portals, building intake screening forms, and establishing a tracking system. A fully mature program with automated eligibility screening, EMR integration, and dedicated enrollment specialists typically takes 3 to 6 months to reach steady state. FQHCs with existing sliding fee scale infrastructure often move faster because income verification processes are already in place.
What is the average ROI for a hospital PAP enrollment program?
Hospitals with active PAP programs report to $8 in recovered uncompensated care costs for every
Do PAP medications count toward 340B program compliance metrics?
No. PAP-dispensed medications are provided free by manufacturers and do not flow through the 340B purchasing channel. They should be tracked separately in your pharmacy management system. However, a strong PAP program complements 340B by covering patients who fall outside 340B eligibility (inpatients, non-registered patients) and by reducing the financial burden on patients whose 340B copays still create access barriers.
Which EMR systems integrate with manufacturer PAP portals?
Most major EMR platforms (Epic, Cerner/Oracle Health, MEDITECH, athenahealth) support PAP workflow integration through either native modules or third-party add-ons. Epic's Medication Assistance module can flag eligible patients during prescribing. Cerner supports PAP tracking through custom PowerPlans. For smaller systems, standalone PAP management tools like OmniRx's PAP Navigator provide EMR-agnostic screening that connects to 200+ manufacturer portals without requiring deep EMR customization.
The Bottom Line
Every hospital should have a structured PAP enrollment program. With 200+ manufacturer programs available, the ROI is to $8 for every