-by Hiliary Solet As a conservative who believes in limited government, I am always suspicious when I learn that the government is using its power to advantage certain industries even when they claim to do so in the name of helping the poor. As a native American, whose community is disproportionately disadvantaged, I am especially concerned when I learn that those industries so benefited are not passing along the benefit to the poor. It is crony capitalism at its worst. Not many Americans are aware of a little know government program called 340Bwhich was created in the 1990s to help not-for-profit clinics and hospitals to provide life-saving prescription drugs to uninsured and underinsured patients. The program requires those who manufacture drugs to sell them at a steep discount (up to 40%) to qualified entities. The clear intent of the law was that this discount be passed on to the poor to help them afford their prescriptions. But increasingly, large public hospitals and some chain drugstore who are their partners, have hijacked the program. They now claim the discount drug price for all their patients – including those who are fully insured and not even poor. The hospitals buy the drugs at a deep discount and resell them at full price to their patients making a significant profit. These sales often occur through chain drugstore with whom the hospitals have special arrangements. Most patients don’t even know this is happening and very few patients see any benefit from this discount. The hospitals simply keep the money. This government program generates hundreds of millions of dollars -- so much revenue that even some hedge funds have invested in businesses that show hospitals how to legally game the 340B program. The 340B Program is properly used by some not-for-profit clinics to genuinely help poor people. It can be important to many people in my native American community. But lack of Congressional oversight has led to abuse of the program and the program needs to be reformed and returned to its original purpose. As a physician, our US Senator Bill Cassidy, understands both the importance of this program to the poor but also sadly the way in which it is increasingly abused. During his years in the House of Representatives, Senator Cassidy was a leader in seeking more oversight and reform of the program. Now as a member of the Senate Health, Education and Labor Committee we need to encourage him to continue his reform efforts. We need to contact Senator Cassidy and encourage him to keep up this effort to bring about reform.