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Journal ArticleDOI

Utilization of Essential Medications by Vulnerable Older People After a Drug Benefit Cap: Importance of Mental Disorders, Chronic Pain, and Practice Setting

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TLDR
To identify specific characteristics of patients, physicians, and treatment settings associated with decreased receipt of essential medications in a chronically ill, older population following a Medicaid three‐prescription monthly reimbursement limit (cap).
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To identify specific characteristics of patients, physicians, and treatment settings associated with decreased receipt of essential medications in a chronically ill, older population following a Medicaid three-prescription monthly reimbursement limit (cap). DESIGN: Quasi-experiment with bivariate and multivariate regression. SETTING: Patients in the New Hampshire Medicaid program and their regular prescribing physicians. PARTICIPANTS: Three hundred and forty-three chronically ill Medicaid enrollees with regular use of essential medications for heart disease, asthma/chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes mellitus, seizure, or coagulation disorders who received an average of three or more prescriptions per month during the baseline year. MEASUREMENTS: Postcap patient-level change in standard monthly dose of essential medications compared with the baseline period, presence of 11 comorbidities (defined by regular use of specific indicator drugs), practice setting, and location of regular prescribing physician. RESULTS: The mean percentage change in standard doses of essential medications following the cap was −34.4%. Larger changes were significantly associated with several baseline measures: greater numbers of precap medications, greater numbers of comorbidities, longer hospitalizations, and greater use of ambulatory services. The three comorbidities associated with the largest relative reduction in essential drug use were psychoses/bipolar disorders, anxiety/sleep problems, and chronic pain. Patients of physicians in group practices, clinics, or hospitals tended to have smaller dose reductions than those whose physicians were in solo or small-group practice. CONCLUSIONS: Patients most at risk of reduced access to essential medications because of a reimbursement cap include those with multiple chronic illnesses requiring drug therapy, especially illnesses with a mental health component. Physicians in clinics or large group practices may have maintained patient medication regimens more effectively.

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Cost-related Non-adherence to Medications among Patients with Diabetes and Chronic Pain: Factors beyond Finances Running title: Choosing medications under financial pressure

TL;DR: This is an uncopyedited electronic version of an article accepted for publication in Diabetes Care and the definitive publisherauthenticated version will be available in a future issue of Diabetes Care in print and online.
Posted Content

Reaching the Goal: Expanding Health Insurance Coverage in New England

TL;DR: New insurance initiatives in New England emphasize "shared responsibility," placing the onus for coverage on government, employers, and individuals alike, and several of the plans provide public subsidies to ensure affordability for low-income residents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of monthly prescription cap on medication persistence among patients with hypertension, hyperlipidemia, or diabetes.

TL;DR: There is inconclusive evidence that the monthly prescription restriction disrupts the continuation of medications for common chronic health conditions in patients, and more research is needed to identify which patients are most vulnerable to the effect of monthly prescription limits.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Psychotropic Drug Use and the Risk of Hip Fracture

TL;DR: The hypothesis that the sedative and autonomic effects of psychotropic drugs increase the risk of falling and fractures in elderly persons is supported and the need for studies of this association in other populations is suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimising drug treatment for elderly people: the prescribing cascade

TL;DR: This article will focus on an under-recognised, and largely preventable drug related problem that is termed the “prescribing cascade”, which is an important area to target both to improve the quality of medical care for elderly people and to reduce the costs of health care for this population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Medicaid drug-payment limits on admission to hospitals and nursing homes.

TL;DR: Limiting reimbursement for effective drugs puts frail, low-income, elderly patients at increased risk of institutionalization in nursing homes and may increase Medicaid costs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Limiting Medicaid Drug-Reimbursement Benefits on the Use of Psychotropic Agents and Acute Mental Health Services by Patients with Schizophrenia

TL;DR: Limits on coverage for the costs of prescription drugs can increase the use of acute mental health services among low-income patients with chronic mental illnesses and increase costs to the government, even aside from the increases caused in pain and suffering on the part of patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Payment Restrictions for Prescription Drugs under Medicaid

TL;DR: A large number of Medicaid programs have implemented patient-level payment limits for medications, but the effects of these restrictions on quality of care, costs, and patient satisfaction are unclear.
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