Rupp Michael T
Pharmacy Administration, Midwestern University, College of Pharmacy-Glendale, Glendale, AZ 85308, USA.
J Manag Care Pharm. 2013 Sep;19(7):564-72. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2013.19.7.564.
For many years, community pharmacies provided mail delivery as a convenience for a small segment of special circumstance patients who requested it. Fueled by a movement among plan sponsors and prescription benefit managers to encourage or require its use, growth in mail service pharmacy began to accelerate in the 1980s and now accounts for nearly 25% of the market in the general population and a much higher percentage of seniors.
To assess the attitudes of Medicare-eligible Americans toward concerns that have been raised about mail service pharmacy and its mandated use in the prescription benefit plans of public and private insurance programs.
Existing published literature was reviewed, and interviews were conducted with Medicare-eligible persons aged 65 and older to identify potential areas of concern with mail order pharmacy services. A survey was constructed and mailed to a nationally representative random sample of 6,500 persons between the ages of 65 and 79 in July 2012.
By the cutoff date, 669 completed surveys had been received, and an additional 221 had been returned as undeliverable, resulting in an overall response rate of 10.7%. Nearly half of respondents listed chain pharmacy as their primary source of prescription medications (47.7%) followed by mail service (34.1%), independent pharmacy (13.1%), and other (5.1%). Responses of seniors residing in rural zip codes compared with those in nonrural zip codes demonstrated significantly higher agreement with several concerns, including lost or stolen medications, receiving the exact medication the physician prescribed, and the effects of exposure to heat, cold, or moisture. Two additional concerns approached statistical significance: the ability to speak with a pharmacist face-to-face and the ability to obtain medications quickly if needed. A total of 533 (83.7%) indicated they would oppose mandated mail order in their current benefit plan if it would cause the local community pharmacy they rely on for immediate medication needs to close. The mean risk of such an eventuality that respondents were willing to accept was 42.2%, indicating they would oppose mandatory mail order if there were greater than about a 4-in-10 chance it would cause the loss of their local pharmacy.
Seniors appear to be practical and pragmatic about the sources of their prescription medications. While most see a role for mail service pharmacy, they are also aware of its limitations. Many have needs they believe cannot be adequately met by mail service or have relationships with local pharmacies and pharmacists they believe are important for maintaining their health and well-being. As a result, seniors are relatively risk averse when it comes to the loss of their local community pharmacy, even if they routinely use mail order for most of their medications. Beyond their specific concerns, most seniors oppose any restrictions on their freedom to use the pharmacy of their choice on general principle.
多年来,社区药店为一小部分有特殊需求的患者提供邮寄服务,作为一项便民措施。在计划赞助商和处方福利管理人员鼓励或要求使用邮寄服务的推动下,邮寄服务药房在20世纪80年代开始加速发展,目前在普通人群市场中占近25%,在老年人中的占比更高。
评估符合医疗保险资格的美国人对有关邮寄服务药房及其在公共和私人保险计划的处方福利计划中强制使用所引发问题的态度。
查阅现有已发表的文献,并对65岁及以上符合医疗保险资格的人员进行访谈,以确定邮购药房服务潜在的问题领域。2012年7月,构建了一项调查并邮寄给全国范围内具有代表性的6500名年龄在65至79岁之间的随机样本。
截至截止日期,共收到669份完整的调查问卷,另有221份因无法投递而被退回,总体回复率为10.7%。近一半的受访者将连锁药店列为其处方药的主要来源(47.7%),其次是邮寄服务(34.1%)、独立药店(13.1%)和其他(5.1%)。与居住在非农村邮政编码地区的老年人相比,居住在农村邮政编码地区的老年人对几个问题的认同度明显更高,包括药品丢失或被盗、收到医生开的准确药品以及暴露于热、冷或潮湿环境的影响。另外两个问题接近统计学显著性:与药剂师面对面交谈的能力以及在需要时快速获得药品的能力。共有533人(83.7%)表示,如果当前的福利计划强制实行邮购会导致他们依赖的当地社区药店关闭,他们将反对。受访者愿意接受这种可能性的平均风险为42.2%,这表明如果邮购导致当地药店关闭的可能性大于十分之四,他们将反对强制邮购。
老年人在处方药来源方面似乎很实际且务实。虽然大多数人认可邮寄服务药房的作用,但他们也意识到其局限性。许多人认为邮寄服务无法充分满足他们的需求,或者与当地药店和药剂师有密切关系,他们认为这些对维持健康和幸福很重要。因此,老年人在当地社区药店关闭方面相对厌恶风险,即使他们日常大部分药品是通过邮购获得的。除了他们具体关心的问题外,大多数老年人基于一般原则反对任何限制他们选择药房自由的规定。