Sen Bisakha, Blackburn Justin, Morrisey Michael, Becker David, Kilgore Meredith, Caldwell Cathy, Menachemi Nir
University of Alabama at Birmingham-Department of Health Care.
University of Alabama at Birmingham-Health Care Organization & Policy.
Medicare Medicaid Res Rev. 2014 May 20;4(2). doi: 10.5600/mmrr2014-004-02-a03. eCollection 2014.
The primary aim is to explore whether prescription drug expenditures by enrollees changed in Alabama's CHIP program, ALL Kids, after copayment increases in fiscal year 2004. The subsidiary aim is to explore whether non-pharmaceutical expenditures also changed.
Data on ALL Kids enrollees between 1999-2007, obtained from claims files and the state's administrative database.
We used data on children who were enrolled between one and three years both before and after the changes to the copayment schedule, and estimate regression models with individual-level fixed effects to control for time-invariant heterogeneity at the child level. This allows an accurate estimate of how program expenditures change for the same individual following copayment changes. Primary outcomes of interest are expenditures for prescription drugs by class and brand-name and generic versions. We estimate models for the likelihood of any use of prescription drugs and expenditure level conditional on use.
Following the copayment increase, the probability of any expenditure decline by 5.8%, brand name drugs by 6.9%, generic drugs by 7.4%. Conditional on any use, program expenditures decline by 7.9% for all drugs, by 9.6% for brand name drugs, and 6.2% for generic drugs. The largest declines are for antihistamine drugs; the least declines are for Central Nervous System agents. Declines are smaller and statistically weaker for children with chronic health conditions. Concurrent declines are also seen for non-pharmaceutical medical expenditures.
Copayment increases appear to reduce program expenditures on prescription drugs per enrollee and may be a useful tool for controlling program costs.
主要目的是探究在2004财年阿拉巴马州儿童健康保险计划(ALL Kids)提高共付额之后,参保人的处方药支出是否发生了变化。次要目的是探究非药品支出是否也发生了变化。
1999 - 2007年ALL Kids参保人的数据,从理赔档案和该州的行政数据库中获取。
我们使用了在共付额计划变更前后参保一至三年儿童的数据,并估计具有个体固定效应的回归模型,以控制儿童层面的时间不变异质性。这使得能够准确估计同一参保人在共付额变更后计划支出如何变化。主要关注的结果是按类别以及品牌药和仿制药计算的处方药支出。我们估计了任何使用处方药的可能性以及基于使用情况的支出水平的模型。
共付额提高后,任何支出的概率下降了5.8%,品牌药下降了6.9%,仿制药下降了7.4%。在任何使用情况下,所有药物的计划支出下降了7.9%,品牌药下降了9.6%,仿制药下降了6.2%。降幅最大的是抗组胺药;降幅最小的是中枢神经系统药物。患有慢性健康状况的儿童降幅较小且在统计学上较弱。非药品医疗支出也同时出现下降。
提高共付额似乎会降低每个参保人的处方药计划支出,可能是控制计划成本的一个有用工具。