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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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Prescription drug cost sharing: associations with medication and medical utilization and spending and health.

TL;DR: Pharmacy benefit design represents an important public health tool for improving patient treatment and adherence and increased cost sharing is highly correlated with reductions in pharmacy use, but the long-term consequences of benefit changes on health are still uncertain.
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The impact of comorbid chronic conditions on diabetes care.

John D. Piette, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2006 - 
TL;DR: The increasing prevalence of multimorbidity among older diabetic adults is at least in part an unintended consequence of success in improving diabetes treatment quality and may miss opportunities to improve patients’ functioning, quality of life, and mortality risk.
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Patients At-Risk for Cost-Related Medication Nonadherence: A Review of the Literature

TL;DR: Older patients with chronic diseases and mood disorders are at-risk for CRN even if enrolled in Medicare’s new drug benefit, and efforts to reduce cost-related medication nonadherence would benefit from greater study of factors besides the presence of prescription drug coverage.
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Problems Paying Out-of-Pocket Medication Costs Among Older Adults With Diabetes

TL;DR: Clinicians should actively identify patients with diabetes who are facing medication cost pressures and assist them by modifying their medication regimens, helping them understand the importance of each prescribed medication, providing information on sources of low-cost drugs, and linking patients with coverage programs.
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Effects of prescription drug user fees on drug and health services use and on health status in vulnerable populations: a systematic review of the evidence.

TL;DR: A systematic review of the effects of cost sharing on vulnerable populations (the poor and those with chronic illnesses) supports the view that cost sharing decreases the use of prescription drugs in these populations.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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