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CONTACT:Twila Brase, R.N., President
PHONE: 651-646-8935
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WOULD A MEDICARE DRUG PLAN FOLLOW OREGON'S NEW RATIONING PROCESS?
Oregon Health Plan demonstrates government process that could be used to
limit medication access in a Medicare Drug Benefit plan
(St. Paul, Minnesota) If Congress passes a Medicare drug benefit next year,
the Oregon Health Plan has provided federal officials with a process to limit
medication choices. This should worry current and future Medicare recipients,
says Citizens' Council on Health Care (CCHC), a Minnesota-based health care
policy organization.
"If a Medicare drug plan ever becomes law, we have no doubt that a federal
task force will be set up to tell seniors what pills they can have, what pills
they can't have, how many and for how long," says Twila Brase, president of CCHC.
To cut the cost of medication for its Medicaid population, Oregon's 11-member
Health Resources Commission has begun to evaluate the effectiveness of drugs in
various classes. Decisions to include or exclude drugs from the state's drug
formulary - a list of approved drugs - began with effectiveness and ended with
price. Although some medications showed no difference in effectiveness, the drug
with the lowest price was approved for the formulary, according to The
Oregonian. After August 1, 2002, claims for medications that are not on the list
will not be paid, unless the doctor asks for an exception. Such a request can be
made on the prescription.
"Rationing is often an incremental process," cautions Brase. "The exception
process should not be viewed as a permanent fixture. As costs increase,
exceptions can be eliminated. Furthermore, no doctor wants to have to explain to
a government official why they repeatedly request exceptions. The pressure to
conform will be enormous."
The evaluation process was an outgrowth of a 2001 Oregon state law, which
requires recipients to "receive the most effective prescription drug available
at the best possible price." Only drugs for cancer, mental illness and AIDS are
exempt from the evaluation process.
As evidence of CCHC's concerns, The Oregonian quoted Tricia Neuman, vice
president of the Kaiser Family Foundation and director of its Medicare Policy
Project, as saying, "Nationally, there is a lot to learn from what Oregon is
pursuing."
"Medicare is not be exempt from the rationing of health care services, and
will be less so as babyboomers reach Medicare age. But what makes this more
worrisome is that Medicare recipients may not be allowed to receive medications
that are not on the government list of drugs," warns Brase.
In 1997, as part of the Balanced Budget Act, Congress enacted a prohibition
on private payment by Medicare recipients for health care services. If the
services are covered by Medicare, but not approved for the patient, physicians
are not allowed to accept private payment from the patient, even if the patient
is willing to pay. The only doctors who can accept private payment are those who
have dropped out of Medicare participation for at least 2 years.
"Specific medications can be critical to the length and quality of life of an
individual. Senior citizens should not be so quick to rally around a
government-sponsored drug benefit. Determining medication access by committee
consensus does not paint a rosy picture for the future of Medicare recipients."
says Brase.
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CCHC is an independent non-profit free-market health care policy
organization located in St. Paul, Minnesota
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A free-market resource for designing the future of health care
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Citizens' Council on Health Care
1954 University Ave.W., Suite 8
St. Paul, MN 55104
651-646-8935 phone
651-646-0100 fax