Current Trends in Pharmacy Benefit Designs: A Threat to Disease Management in Chronic Complex Diseases
To cite this article:
Gary Owens, Matthew F. Emons, Jennifer Christian-Herman, Grant Lawless.
Disease Management.
April 2007,
10(2): 74-82.
doi:10.1089/dis.2006.638.
Independence Blue Cross, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, at the time this paper was written.
Matthew F. Emons, M.D., M.B.A.
Cerner LifeSciences, Beverly Hills, California.
Jennifer Christian-Herman, Ph.D.
Health Net, Inc., Woodland Hills, California.
Grant Lawless, M.D.
Amgen, Inc., Thousand Oaks, California.
With a focus on those patients who are candidates for treatment with biologic agents, we review the impact that current pharmacy benefit trends have on patients with chronic complex diseases and how they affect opportunities for disease management in this unique patient population. Dramatic increases in health care costs have led to a variety of strategies to manage cost. Many of these strategies either limit access to care or increase the patient's responsibility for choosing and paying for care, especially for medications. These strategies have a disproportionate impact on patients with chronic complex diseases, particularly those who require the use of biologic medications. A fundamental prerequisite of disease management has been coverage of disease-modifying therapies. If current pharmacy benefit trends continue, unintended consequences will likely occur including lost opportunities for disease management. Current pharmacy benefit trends could adversely impact disease management, particularly for patients requiring the use of biologic agents. Health plans should consider innovative benefit designs that reflect an appropriate level of cost sharing across all key stake-holders, ensuring appropriate access to needed therapies. Additional research is needed to clarify the value of newer approaches to therapies or benefit design changes. (Disease Management 2007;10:74–82)
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The Association Between a Tiered Pharmacy Benefit Plan and Medication Usage, Health Status, and Disability Absence Days—One Employer’s Experience
Wayne N. Burton, Chin-Yu Chen, Alyssa B. Schultz, Dee W. Edington
Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine. Nov 2008, Vol. 50, No. 10: 1176-1184