KEY POINTS
  • Tyson Foods has switched from CVS' Caremark as its pharmacy benefit manager, in an effort to lower the amount it spends on providing drug benefits to its 140,000 employees
  • The food giant chose Rightway, a PBM startup which works on a fee basis and guarantees employers it can save them 15% on pharmacy benefit costs
  • Small PBMs like Rightway have mostly worked with small and medium-sized employers.
  • Tyson will become one of the first Fortune 100 companies to work with an upstart PBM, at a time when the large pharmacy benefit mangers are under pressure for their business models.

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Tyson Foods Inc., sign at Tyson headquarters in Springdale, Ark.

Tyson Foods will become one of the first Fortune 100 companies to stop using the nation's traditional large pharmacy benefits managers, as it looks to cut spending on high-cost drugs.   

After putting its benefits contract up for bid, Tyson dropped CVS Health's Caremark and chose PBM startup Rightway to manage drug benefits for its 140,000 employees starting this year, the companies said Wednesday. Rightway guarantees it can save employers 15% on pharmacy costs by using a transparent model where it passes drug discounts to employers and plan members, while also providing concierge care to help employees find lower-cost alternatives like generics and biosimilars.

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