Hsu Jason C, Lu Christine Y, Wagner Anita K, Chan K Arnold, Lai Mei-Shu, Ross-Degnan Dennis
Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, MA, USA; National Center for Pharmaceutical Regulatory Science, College of Medicine, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan.
Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, MA, USA.
Health Policy. 2014 Jun;116(2-3):196-205. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2013.11.005. Epub 2013 Nov 20.
To control increasing pharmaceutical expenditures, Taiwan's National Health Insurance has implemented a series of drug reimbursement price reductions since 2000. This study examined changes in use and expenditures of oral antidiabetic medications following the price regulation in November 2006.
We obtained claims data between January 2006 and August 2007 from Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database. We categorized oral antidiabetic products as affected by the reimbursement reduction ("targeted") or not ("non-targeted"), by level of relative price reduction, and by manufacturer type (international vs. local manufacturers). We used an interrupted time series design and segmented regression models to estimate changes in monthly per capita prescribing rate, volume, and insurance reimbursement expenditures following the policy.
The majority (129/178; 72.5%) of oral antidiabetic products were targeted by this round of price reductions. There was a relative reduction of 9.5% [95%CI: -12.68, -6.32] in total expenditures at ten months post-policy compared to expected rates. For targeted products, there were 2.04% [95%CI: -4.15, 0.07] and 13.26% [95%CI: -16.64, -9.87] relative reductions in prescribing rate and expenditures, respectively, at ten months post-policy. Non-targeted products increased significantly (22% [95%CI: 10.49, 33.51] and 22.85% [95%CI: 11.69, 34.01] relative increases in prescribing rate and expenditures respectively). Larger reimbursement cuts led to greater reductions in prescribing rate, volume, and insurance reimbursement expenditures of targeted products. Prescribing rates of both targeted and non-targeted products by international manufacturers declined after the policy while rates of prescribing non-targeted products by local manufacturers increased.
While total government expenditures for oral antidiabetic medications were contained by the policy, our results indicate that prescribing shifted at the margin from targeted to non-targeted products and from international to local products. Further research is warranted to understand how changes in medication use due to price regulation policies affect medication adherence and patient health outcomes.
为控制不断增长的药品支出,台湾地区的全民健康保险自2000年起实施了一系列药品报销价格下调措施。本研究考察了2006年11月价格管制后口服抗糖尿病药物的使用和支出变化。
我们从台湾地区全民健康保险研究数据库获取了2006年1月至2007年8月的理赔数据。我们根据报销价格下调情况(“目标药物”或“非目标药物”)、相对价格下调幅度以及制造商类型(国际制造商与本地制造商)对口服抗糖尿病产品进行分类。我们采用中断时间序列设计和分段回归模型来估计政策实施后每月人均处方率、处方量和保险报销支出的变化。
本轮价格下调针对的口服抗糖尿病产品占多数(129/178;72.5%)。与预期水平相比,政策实施十个月后总支出相对减少了9.5%[95%置信区间:-12.68,-6.32]。对于目标药物,政策实施十个月后处方率和支出分别相对下降了2.04%[95%置信区间:-4.15,0.07]和13.26%[95%置信区间:-16.64,-9.87]。非目标药物的处方率(22%[95%置信区间:10.49,33.51])和支出(22.85%[95%置信区间:11.69,34.01])显著增加。更大幅度的报销削减导致目标药物的处方率、处方量和保险报销支出降幅更大。政策实施后,国际制造商生产的目标药物和非目标药物的处方率均下降,而本地制造商生产的非目标药物的处方率上升。
虽然该政策控制了政府用于口服抗糖尿病药物的总支出,但我们的研究结果表明,处方在一定程度上从目标药物转向了非目标药物,从国际制造商生产的药物转向了本地制造商生产的药物。有必要进一步开展研究,以了解价格管制政策导致的用药变化如何影响药物依从性和患者健康结局。