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TAYLOR MELANSON Providing Prescription Drug Coverage to the Elderly: America’s Experiment with Medicare Part D By Mark Duggan, Patrick Healy, and Fiona Scott Morton

Taylor Melanson

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Providing Prescription Drug Coverage to the Elderly: America’s Experiment with Medicare Part D By Mark Duggan, Patrick Healy, and Fiona Scott Morton. Taylor Melanson. History of Medicare Part D. Medicare did not cover drugs (1966-2006) % of healthcare costs accounted for by drugs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Taylor  Melanson

TAYLOR MELANSON

Providing Prescription Drug Coverage to the Elderly: America’s Experiment with Medicare Part D

By Mark Duggan, Patrick Healy, and Fiona Scott Morton

Page 2: Taylor  Melanson

History of Medicare Part D

Medicare did not cover drugs (1966-2006)% of healthcare costs accounted for by drugs

4.5% – 1982 5.6% – 1994 10.1 – 2005

Prior to Part D, 30% of 44 million beneficiaries lacked coverage for drugs (Neuman et al., 2007)

Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 Took effect in 2006 -> Established Part D 2007 – covered 24 million people, cost $39 billion

Page 3: Taylor  Melanson

Why Study Part D?

Impact on health and economic well-beingIncrease in government spending“Attempt to use market mechanisms in the

delivery of a large-scale entitlement program” (70) Competition Price negotiation Preference matching

Page 4: Taylor  Melanson

Coverage Plans

Stand-alone plansBasic plans

Government defined standard “actuarially equivalent”

Many options 4% of plans cover more than half of enrollees

Page 5: Taylor  Melanson

Standard Cost Sharing Scheme

Monthly premiumDeductible = $275Low cost coverageDonut holeCatastrophic coverageOnly 17% of plans

Page 6: Taylor  Melanson

Coverage of Medications

Basic Plan coverage - $1676 + catastrophic coverage

Formularies Tier system Prior authorization Step therapy Off formulary drugs

Page 7: Taylor  Melanson

Choice of Plan

Out-of-pocket costFormulary status of current drugs

Maintenance vs acute need drugsReputationIncentive to enroll early

Incentivizes alternative plans2008 - 10% of eligible people did not enroll

Page 8: Taylor  Melanson

Influence on Drug Prices

Formulary placementIncentives for patients and pharmaciesAverage price of drugs declinedTreatments without substitutes

CMS required coverageProtected Classes

Page 9: Taylor  Melanson

Incentives for Sponsors

Firms make bid to CMSBase beneficiary premium

Incentives to make bid accurateRisk factor adjustment

Offsets approximately ¼ of variance in drug spending Plans have better data than government

Catastrophic coverageRisk absorption

Page 10: Taylor  Melanson

Issues

Enrollees without financial incentivesCatastrophic coverageFormulary manipulationInefficient treatment patternsImpact on budget

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Conclusions

Successes Drug prices Drug utilization Costs

Failures Suboptimal choices Treatments without substitutes Administrative costs Unsuccessful incentives