Baik Seo Hyon, Rollman Bruce L, Reynolds Charles F, Lave Judith R, Smith Kenneth J, Zhang Yuting
Department of Health Policy and Management, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA.
J Ment Health Policy Econ. 2012 Sep;15(3):105-18.
Medication use among Medicare beneficiaries has increased and adherence has improved since the implementation of the Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit in 2006. However, the structure of the benefit, particularly, the coverage gap, is still problematic. It is critical to understand how beneficiaries with coexisting conditions respond to the coverage gap and whether their response differs by type of medications.
The paper aims to evaluate the effects of Medicare Part D's coverage gap on drug regimens among beneficiaries with coexisting depression and heart failure (HF).
Drug utilization patterns and medication adherence of a 5% random sample of Medicare Part D beneficiaries with depression and HF in 2007 were observed. Drug utilization patterns were measured on the basis of reported drug claims and medication adherence was defined as the proportion of days of medication possession in a given period. We compared pre-post drug use patterns and medication adherence across three groups: no coverage, generic coverage, and full coverage due to low-income subsidies (LIS) and used propensity score weighting to adjust for difference across groups.
Beneficiaries with some drug coverage in the gap were more likely to enter the gap: 82% for LIS, 79% for generic-only and 58% for no coverage. Beneficiaries without drug coverage reduced their use of antidepressants by 5.0% (95% CI 1.7%-8.2%), and HF drugs by 9.4% (95% CI 7.2%-11.5%) after they entered the coverage gap. Those with generic coverage cut their brand-name drugs more than generic drugs but did not shift to generic drugs. However, adherence to antidepressants did not change; adherence to HF drugs reduced slightly, 2.5% (95% CI 1.2%-3.7%) in the no-coverage group and 2.6% (95% CI 1.3%-3.9%) in the generic-coverage group.
The coverage gap was associated with a modest reduction in number of prescriptions filled for depression and HF but it was not associated with a significant effect on adherence.
We found that beneficiaries with coexisting depression and HF were less likely to reduce their drug use than beneficiaries in general. In addition, the gap was not associated with a large reduction in adherence. It suggests that concerns about the coverage gap's harmful effects on medication adherence, or comorbidities might be overstated.
Further studies on how people make medication use decisions in the face of changes in benefits and how the coverage affects non-drug medical outcomes are warranted.
自2006年医疗保险D部分处方药福利实施以来,医疗保险受益人的用药情况有所增加,依从性也有所改善。然而,该福利的结构,特别是保险缺口,仍然存在问题。了解患有多种疾病的受益人如何应对保险缺口,以及他们的反应是否因药物类型而异至关重要。
本文旨在评估医疗保险D部分的保险缺口对同时患有抑郁症和心力衰竭(HF)的受益人的药物治疗方案的影响。
观察了2007年5%的患有抑郁症和HF的医疗保险D部分受益人的随机样本的药物使用模式和用药依从性。药物使用模式根据报告的药物报销情况进行衡量,用药依从性定义为给定时期内药物持有天数的比例。我们比较了三组(无保险、通用名药物保险和因低收入补贴(LIS)而获得的全额保险)前后的药物使用模式和用药依从性,并使用倾向得分加权来调整组间差异。
在保险缺口中有一定药物保险的受益人更有可能进入缺口:LIS组为82%,仅通用名药物组为79%,无保险组为58%。进入保险缺口后,没有药物保险的受益人将抗抑郁药的使用减少了5.0%(95%可信区间1.7%-8.2%),HF药物的使用减少了9.4%(95%可信区间7.2%-11.5%)。有通用名药物保险的人减少品牌药的使用多于通用名药物,但没有转向使用通用名药物。然而,抗抑郁药的依从性没有变化;HF药物的依从性略有下降,无保险组下降2.5%(95%可信区间1.2%-3.7%),通用名药物保险组下降2.6%(95%可信区间1.3%-3.9%)。
保险缺口与抑郁症和HF的处方填充数量适度减少有关,但与依从性没有显著影响。
我们发现,同时患有抑郁症和HF的受益人比一般受益人减少药物使用的可能性更小。此外,保险缺口与依从性的大幅下降无关。这表明,对保险缺口对用药依从性或合并症的有害影响可能被夸大了。
有必要进一步研究人们在面对福利变化时如何做出用药决策,以及保险如何影响非药物医疗结果。