Cummings Investigates Reports That Plans, PBMs Favor Addictive Opioids Over Expensive, Less-Addictive Drugs
Published by Inside Health Policy
House Oversight and Government Reform Committee ranking Democrat Elijah Cummings (MD) on Thursday (Oct. 19) began investigating reports that health plans and pharmacy benefit managers make it difficult for people to get less-addictive pain killers while making it easier for them to get cheaper, highly-addictive drugs.
According to a September investigation from the New York Times and Pro Publica, most prescription drug plans offered under the Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit cover common prescription opioids without limitation. Conversely, only one-third of these plan member had similar access to less addictive, but more expensive, opioids. The report also found that when plans do cover less addictive or no-addictive opioids, they often require patients to take extra steps, such as obtaining prior approval from insurance companies, and they place less-addictive drugs on higher cost-sharing tiers.
“This is not a hypothetical problem. The over-prescription of opioids leads to addiction and death,” Cummings wrote. He added, “Insurers and PBMs have developed initiatives to address the opioid epidemic, but this new report indicates that fundamental financial incentives may be driving insurers and PBMs to steer beneficiaries to the very drugs that are fueling the opioid crisis.”
Cummings requested that several companies provide lists of brand-name and generic medications for their plans, the cost-sharing tiers on which the medications are placed, and the classification of the drugs as non-narcotics or narcotic/opioids. Cummings requested the documents of UnitedHealth Group, Optum, Humana, CVS Health, Aetna, Anthem and Express Scripts, and asked them to respond by Nov. 2.
Click here to see the original article on the Inside Health Policy website.
Recent Posts
-
Pharmacy Community Stands Together to Protect Seniors and Prevent a Long-Term Care Crisis
The Senior Care Pharmacy Coalition (SCPC), representing the nation’s long-term care pharmacies, the American Society of Consultant Pharmacists (ASCP), representing pharmacists and pharmacies dedicated to managing medications for older adults and medically complex patients, and the National Community Pharmacists Association (NCPA), representing community pharmacists nationwide, stand united in support of immediate action—whether through legislation or […]
-
Rep. Beth Van Duyne: Congress can save seniors’ access to medications before it’s too late
Seniors in nursing homes across the country depend on round-the-clock care and medications, perhaps more than any other American patient population. In turn, the nursing homes and assisted living facilities that care for them depend on a small number of specialized long-term care (LTC) pharmacies to ensure their patients have access to the prescription meds they need.
-
Bill Aims to Offset Reimbursement Losses for Long-Term Care Pharmacies Catering to Nursing Homes
Starting in January, falling prices for costly drugs may strain long-term care pharmacies, but proposed legislation backed by advocacy groups aims to subsidize some of this loss. And nursing home advocacy groups are among those urging Congress to pass the Preserving Patient Access to Long-Term Care Pharmacies Act.
Stay in the Know
Get the latest news and updates on issues impacting the long-term pharmacy community.