Thorpe Kenneth E, Allen Lindsay, Joski Peter
Kenneth E. Thorpe (
Lindsay Allen is a doctoral student in the Department of Health Policy and Management in the Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2015 Oct;34(10):1695-703. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2015.0323.
The health insurance Marketplaces created under the Affordable Care Act have attracted nearly ten million enrollees, including many people who were previously insured by an employer-sponsored plan. The most popular Marketplace plan--the silver plan--has significantly higher cost sharing than does a typical employer-sponsored plan, which may cause patients to reduce the use of cost-saving services that are essential for managing chronic conditions. We estimated the impact of higher cost sharing on drug and medical spending among patients with chronic conditions. Using national data, we compared cost sharing and prescription and medical spending for patients covered by employer-sponsored plans to the spending for those in a typical silver plan in the Marketplaces. Our results show that out-of-pocket expenses for medications in a typical silver plan are twice as high as they are in the average employer-sponsored plan, resulting in fewer prescriptions filled and refilled and in higher spending on other medical services. Maintaining the use of cost-effective prescription medications might require lower cost sharing for patients with chronic conditions than is currently found in the Marketplaces.
根据《平价医疗法案》设立的医疗保险市场已吸引了近1000万参保者,其中包括许多此前由雇主提供保险计划的人。最受欢迎的市场计划——白银计划——的费用分摊比典型的雇主提供的保险计划要高得多,这可能会导致患者减少使用对慢性病管理至关重要的节省费用的服务。我们估计了较高的费用分摊对慢性病患者药品和医疗支出的影响。利用全国数据,我们将雇主提供保险计划覆盖的患者的费用分摊、处方和医疗支出与市场上典型白银计划覆盖患者的支出进行了比较。我们的结果表明,典型白银计划中药物的自付费用是平均雇主提供保险计划的两倍,导致开具和续开的处方减少,以及其他医疗服务支出增加。对于慢性病患者而言,维持使用具有成本效益的处方药可能需要比目前市场上更低的费用分摊。