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Journal ArticleDOI

Medicaid prescription drug policies and medication access and continuity: findings from ten states.

TLDR
It is indicated that more effective Medicaid prescription drug management and financing practices are needed to promote medication continuity and improve treatment outcomes.
Abstract
Objectives: The aims of this study were to compare medication access problems among psychiatric patients in ten state Medicaid programs, assess adverse events associated with medication access problems, and determine whether prescription drug utilization management is associated with access problems and adverse events. Methods: Psychiatrists from the American Medical Association’s Masterfile were randomly selected (N=4,866). Sixty-two percent responded; 32% treated Medicaid patients and were randomly assigned a start day and time to report on two Medicaid patients (N=1,625 patients). Results: A medication access problem in the past year was reported for a mean±SE of 48.3%±2.0% of the patients, with a 37.6% absolute difference between states with the lowest and highest rates (p<.001). The most common access problems were not being able to access clinically indicated medication refills or new prescriptions because Medicaid would not cover or approve them (34.0%±1.9%), prescribing a medication not clinically preferred because clinically indicated or preferred medications were not covered or approved (29.4%±1.8%), and discontinuing medications as a result of prescription drug coverage or management issues (25.8%±1.6%). With patient case mix adjusted to control for sociodemographic and clinical confounders, patients with medication access problems had 3.6 times greater likelihood of adverse events (p<.001), including emergency visits, hospitalizations, homelessness, suicidal ideation or behavior, or incarceration. Also, all prescription drug management features were significantly associated with increased medication access problems and adverse events (p<.001). States with more access problems had significantly higher adverse event rates (p<.001). Conclusions: These associations indicate that more effective Medicaid prescription drug management and financing practices are needed to promote medication continuity and improve treatment outcomes. (Psychiatric Services 60:601– 610, 2009)

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Barriers to Prescription Medication Adherence Among Homeless and Vulnerably Housed Adults in Three Canadian Cities

TL;DR: Homeless and vulnerably housed individuals face significant barriers to medication adherence and health care providers serving this population should be particularly attentive to nonadherence among younger patients and those with harmful or hazardous drinking patterns.
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Estimating the Impact of Adherence to and Persistence with Atypical Antipsychotic Therapy on Health Care Costs and Risk of Hospitalization

TL;DR: To estimate the impact of adherence to and persistence with atypical antipsychotics on health care costs and risk of hospitalization by controlling potential sources of endogeneity.
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Rural-Urban Differences in Access to Preventive Health Care Among Publicly Insured Minnesotans

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated rural-urban differences in system-, provider-, and individual-level barriers and access to preventive care among adults and children enrolled in a public insurance program in Minnesota and found that rural enrollees were more likely to report no past year preventive care compared to urban enrollees.
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Aftercare, emergency department visits, and readmission in adolescents.

TL;DR: It is found that aftercare in the month post-discharge increased the likelihood of readmission but not ED visit, which may indicate a relative lack of psychiatric services for youth.
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Reconceptualizing Medication Adherence: Six Phases of Dynamic Adherence

TL;DR: Changes in the concept of adherence are described, a more comprehensive definition of adherence is presented that recognizes the role of patient‐provider transactions, and dynamic adherence, a six‐phase model, is introduced, which incorporates therole of transactional processes and other factors that influence patients’ adherence decisions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of a Prior-Authorization Requirement on the Use of Nonsteroidal Antiinflammatory Drugs by Medicaid Patients

TL;DR: Regular users of nongeneric NSAIDs, those most affected by the policy change, had similar reductions in NSAID expenditures and use, with no increase in expenditures for other medical care.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns and Quality of Treatment for Patients With Schizophrenia in Routine Psychiatric Practice

TL;DR: Unmet need for psychosocial treatment services among individuals with schizophrenia is suggested, raising questions about whether currently available antipsychotic medications are being used optimally or whether they offer limited effectiveness for patients with complex clinical problems who are treated in routine psychiatric practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Medicaid prior-authorization programs and the use of cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors.

TL;DR: The use of coxibs and spending on NSAIDs varies widely by state and declined substantially after the implementation of prior-authorization programs, which had important implications for the development of rational drug-reimbursement policies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing Clinical and Functional Outcomes in the Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) Schizophrenia Trial

TL;DR: The rationale for the measurement approach adopted for the CATIE schizophrenia trial is described, a brief overview of the selected measures is provided, and the process of training assessment raters for a large and geographically dispersed study group is described.
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