Re: Cost Control Measures Limit Patient and Physician Choice in Psychotropic Medications
"Jan Drew" <jdrew1374@sbcglobal,net > wrote in message
news:5SjHh.7495$re4.3887@newssvr12.news.prodigy,net ...
> http :// www .docguide,com /news/content.nsf/news/852571020057CCF685257291006FF002
>
> Cost Control Measures Limit Patient and Physician Choice in Psychotropic
> Medications
> WALTHAM, MA -- March 1, 2007 -- A new study suggests that private health
> plans increasingly rely on escalating copayments to manage drug costs, as
> opposed to administrative controls.
>
> This makes treatment more expensive in many cases for patients, and may
> affect adherence to treatment, said lead author Dominic Hodgkin, PhD,
> associate professor at the Schneider Institute for Behavioral Health,
> Heller School for Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University. The
> study is in the current issue of Clinical Therapeutics.
>
> In the past decade, health insurers have increasingly turned to cost
> controls to manage prescription drug use, but little is known about how
> such policies affect the use of psychotropic drugs, said Hodgkin.
>
> Between 1996 and 2001, psychotropic drug use to treat psychiatric
> disorders climbed from 5.9% to 8.1% of the U.S. population. Newer, better
> tolerated drugs account for some of the growth; however, because they are
> often more expensive than more established treatments, psychotropic drug
> spending has skyrocketed, from an estimated $3.7 billion in 1991 to $18
> billion in 2001.
>
> "This growth has raised concern among public and private health care
> payers, who have responded with cost-containment policies that affect the
> choices of patients and physicians," explained Hodgkin. The study
> evaluated brand antidepressants, antipsychotics and drugs used to treat
> ADHD.
>
> Medicaid programs, by contrast, rely on administrative controls to manage
> psychotropic drug costs. These controls include prior authorization by a
> physician before a patient can switch to a non-preferred drug at the same
> copayment level. Further complicating the picture, patient non-compliance
> rates are high for psychotropic drugs such as antidepressants and
> treatments for schizophrenia.
>
This is not only true for psychotropic medications, but for most medicaitons
across the disease spectrum.
> The study evaluated a nationally representative survey of private health
> plans regarding mental health and substance abuse services. Most plans
> covered at least 2 antidepressants and at least 2 antipsychotic drugs at a
> medium copayment (averaging $21) that gave the physician some leeway in
> choosing the initial medication. However, in many plans patients who did
> not respond to one of those drugs faced a substantial hike in copayment
> (to an average of $38) in order to try a potentially more effective drug.
> Coverage of drugs for ADHD was more restrictive.
>
> The study was funded by grants from the National Institute on Alcohol
> Abuse and Alcoholism and the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
>
>
> SOURCE: Brandeis University
>
>