From the Folks Who Gave Us Comparative Effectiveness: Copays That Compromise Health

  • by: |
  • 06/27/2008
The folks from the Drug Effectiveness Research Program, on retainer to Agency for Health Care Research and Quality and who set the de facto reimbursement guidelines for Medicaid preferred drug lists also recommend co-pays as a way to steer people into other drugs. Guess what?

Prescription use dropped about 17% after introduction of policy, Oregon study finds

Posted June 26, 2008

THURSDAY, June 26 (HealthDay News) -- Adding small co-payments to Medicaid prescription drug plans reduces the use of medications by patients with chronic diseases, says a U.S. study.

Daniel M. Hartung, of Oregon Health & Science University, and his colleagues analyzed the effect of small co-payments -- $2 for generic and $3 for brand-name -- for prescription drugs introduced for Oregon Medicaid enrollees in 2003. The co-pay fees weren't required for patients who were unable to pay.

The researchers examined pharmacy claims data on about 117,000 Medicare enrollees with depression, schizophrenia, respiratory disease, cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

The patients' overall use of prescription drugs decreased by about 17 percent after introduction of the co-pay policy.

"Subjects with chronic diseases were less likely to reduce the use of drugs used for that disease compared with drugs not for that disease," the study authors wrote.

Most state Medicaid programs now use co-payments to help control prescription drug costs, but few studies have examined how these co-payments affect medication use, the researchers noted.

"This study suggests that in response to cost-sharing, patients discriminate what therapies they reduce based on the diseases they have," they wrote.

The study was published in the June issue of Medical Care.

In Oregon, co-payments for some outpatient services were introduced at the same time as the drug co-payments. But there were no significant changes in the use of those outpatient services, the study found.

This comes on the heels of other studies showing that decreased drug use is associated with a spike in illness...

Where are those geniuses in Health Affairs who said Medicaid was the most efficient way to provide coverage for more people now? Along with the rest of the Left they are willing to sacrifice the quality of life of the people they "care" about to implement their program...

The same goes for those who see comparative effectiveness as a cost containment tool...

Read Article here
CMPI

Center for Medicine in the Public Interest is a nonprofit, non-partisan organization promoting innovative solutions that advance medical progress, reduce health disparities, extend life and make health care more affordable, preventive and patient-centered. CMPI also provides the public, policymakers and the media a reliable source of independent scientific analysis on issues ranging from personalized medicine, food and drug safety, health care reform and comparative effectiveness.

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