Title: Achieving Results in Medicaid Pharmacy Management
1- Achieving Results in Medicaid Pharmacy Management
NCSL Fall Meeting November 18, 2002 Anna
Fallieras
2CHCS Mission
To promote the delivery of high quality health
care services for low-income populations and
people with chronic illnesses and disabilities
Purchasing Institute
BCAP
Consumer Action
Strategic Grant-Making
3We All Know That Pharmacy Is Accounting For A
Growing Percentage Of State Medicaid Expenditures
- Pharmacy Costs Double digit increases in
pharmacy expenditures, due to price inflation,
utilization, and types of prescriptions used. - Enrollment Growth Rising Medicaid enrollment
due to past program expansions and increase in
numbers of uninsured, and changing mix of
Medicaid population have contributed to spend. - Management Until recently, insufficient
use/execution of pharmacy and clinical management
strategies.
4The Managed Care Solutions Forum
-
- Purpose To develop operational strategies to
improve States pharmacy management programs by
controlling pharmacy expenditures and assuring
quality through effective medical management
strategies. - Structure Discussion among multiple
stakeholders (states, plans, providers, consumer
reps, PBMs, pharmacies, manufacturers,
policymakers, policy experts). - Outcome Build consensus across stakeholder
groups on viable state-based pharmacy management
approaches.
5Characteristics Of Effective Solutions As Defined
By Forum
- Balanced Strategies are more politically
palatable if focus straddles both savings and
quality. - Multi-faceted Comprehensive, multi-faceted
approaches can leverage influence and expertise
across stakeholders to maximize impact. - Information-Based Trust can be established by
using evidence and transparency in the
decision-making process. -
- Clinically-Focused Inclusion of provider-driven
strategies to facilitate improvements in patient
care while resulting in total health care savings
were supported by all. -
6States Have Access To A Range Of Mechanisms That
Manage The Pharmacy Benefit
- As discussed, pharmacy management strategies fall
into several categories - Price (e.g., PDLs, Rebates, etc.)
- Drug Mix (e.g., generic substitution, step
therapy, etc.) - Utilization (e.g., quantity limitations, DUR,
etc.) - Clinical Management (e.g., profiling, pharmacy
case management, disease management, etc.) - Currently, there is significant focus on reducing
expenditures by using preferred drug lists with
supplemental rebates to bring down price and
change drug mix.
7Strategies Representing Only Price and Mix May
Not Yield Full Potential Of Available Options
- Use of prior authorization/preferred drug list
with supplemental rebates will certainly result
in immediate program savings. - Price/Mix Does result in immediate reduction in
cost of drug and a share shift to lower cost,
therapeutically equivalent drugs. - Utilization Does not address drug utilization,
which continues to grow each year. - Clinical Management Quality Does not address
quality health issues related to complex,
chronically ill populations resulting in
potential expenditures in other service areas,
e.g., inpatient, ER, physician visits, issues
related to beneficiary confusion, etc. -
8Strategies Representing Only Price and Mix May
Not Yield Full Potential Of Available Options
(cont.)
- Incorporating additional utilization and
clinical management strategies as part of a
comprehensive approach can result in additional
savings while protecting and improving patient
care. Examples include - Pharmacy Case Management Florida, Washington,
Arkansas - Profiling Texas, Washington
- Disease Management 13 States
9Pharmacy Case Management Model
Trigger
High number of brand name drugs
Review of drug regimen by pharmacist
Intervention
Avoid duplications and polypharmacy, promote cost
and clinically effective treatment
Clinical Goals
10Physician Profiling Model
Physician prescribing patterns
Trigger
Provider education
Intervention
Increase prescribing of clinically appropriate
drugs
Clinical Goals
11There Are Benefits To Including Clinical
Management Efforts In The Overall Approach
- Some cost-only approaches harmful to patients
(e.g., drug limits without safety net). -
- Programs with focus on Rx only may result in
increases in other expenses. - Beneficiary and provider advocates more likely
to support initiative with quality component. - Potentially more politically palatable.
-
-
12Challenges To Implementing Clinical Management
Programs
- Difficult to score potential savings.
- Up front investment sometimes high.
- Administrative challenges.
- Establishing infrastructure
- Allocating resources
- Overcoming negative perceptions.
- Difficult to evaluate success of program (e.g.,
constructing study, tracking patients).
13Upcoming CHCS Technical Assistance Products
- Issue brief comparing fiscal impact of state
pharmacy programs to health plan pharmacy
management efforts (December 2002) - Policy paper outlining recommendations of the
Forum and the Clinical Management Initiative
(February 2003) - CHCS Technical Assistance Series (Summer 2003)
- Purchasing Institute Sessions for New Medicaid
Directors (Summer 2003)