Trends in Coverage of Tobacco Dependence Treatments - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 14
About This Presentation
Title:

Trends in Coverage of Tobacco Dependence Treatments

Description:

Professor of Health Policy. University of California, Berkeley. School of Public Health ... among firms offering employer health benefits ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:18
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: helenh4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Trends in Coverage of Tobacco Dependence Treatments


1
Trends in Coverage of Tobacco Dependence
Treatments
  • Helen Ann Halpin, PhD
  • Professor of Health Policy
  • University of California, Berkeley
  • School of Public Health
  • November 21, 2006

2
U.S. Health Plan Coverage of TDTs 1997-2003
  • 160 plans (74) with 60 million members.

Source McPhillips-Tangum, et al. Prev Chron
Disease July 2006 3(3).
University of California, Berkeley
3
Medicaid Coverage, 2000-05

Source MMWR Nov. 9 2001 MMWR Nov. 10, 2006,
CDC
4
CA Firms Covering TDTs, 2000-2005

among firms offering employer health benefits
Source manuscript under review - do not quote or
cite
5
Covered Workers by Firm Size, CA 2005

Source manuscript under review - do not quote or
cite
6
CA Workers Covered for TDT by Type of Employer
Plan

Manuscript under review - do not quote or cite
Source California Employer Health Benefit
Survey, 2000, 2005
7
Cochrane Review Pooled Effects of Coverage
  • Full Benefits (no direct cost to smoker) have
    the
  • greatest effects on abstinence rates.

Source Kaper, Sagena, Severens, Van Schayck. The
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews January
24, 2005
University of California, Berkeley
8
Effects of Different Benefit Designs
  • A common benefit design in commercial health
    plans and in 9 Medicaid programs is to cover both
    drugs and counseling and link the benefits, such
    that coverage of drugs is conditional on
    participation in counseling.
  • 1. What is the effect of adding telephone
    counseling to a pharmacotherapy benefit?
  • 2. What is the effect of making coverage of the
    pharmacotherapy benefit conditional on enrollment
    in counseling (linking benefits)?

Source Halpin, McMenamin, Rideout, Boyce-Smith.
2006. Inquiry 4354-65.
University of California, Berkeley
9
Use of Benefits by Design
Source Halpin, McMenamin, Rideout, Boyce-Smith.
2006. Inquiry 4354-65.
University of California, Berkeley
10
Adjusted Odds of Quitting
  • Controlling for made a quit attempt in
    lifetime, cigarettes smoked/day, age started
    smoking regularly, stage of readiness, ever used
    drugs in a quit attempt, gender, age, race,
    income, and visited doctor during study period.
  • Results did not change using an Intent-to-Treat
    model.

University of California, Berkeley
11
Effects of Linking Drug and Counseling Benefits
  • Linking access to drugs to enrollment in
    telephone counseling did not affect use of the
    drug benefit.
  • Smokers with linked benefits had significantly
    higher use of counseling services than those with
    unlinked benefits.
  • There were no significant differences between
    smokers with linked or unlinked benefits in quit
    attempts, drug use, quit rates or prevalent
    abstinence at 8 months.
  • Costs per quit are nearly 2X higher for the group
    with linked benefits with no added value.

Source Halpin, McMenamin, Rideout, Boyce-Smith.
2006. Inquiry 4354-65.
University of California, Berkeley
12
Coverage is not Enough
  • Only 36 of Medicaid enrollees in states with
    comprehensive coverage for pharmacotherapy and
    counseling are aware of their coverage.1
  • Only 60 of Medicaid MDs know that cessation
    treatments were covered in their state. 1
  • In WI, lt2 of adult Medicaid FFS patients who
    smoke had used covered pharmacotherapy for
    tobacco dependence treatment in the last year. 2

Sources 1. McMenamin, Halpin, Ibrahim, Orleans.
AJPM 20042699-104. 2. Burns, Fiore. WI Med J.
200110054-58.
University of California, Berkeley
13
Incentives and System Change in US Physician
Groups, 2001
  • National survey of medical groups/IPAs with gt20
    MDs (2001).
  • 70 offer some support for smoking cessation.
  • Medical groups, larger groups, primary care
    groups more likely to support cessation.
  • 17 require MDs to provide smoking interventions.
  • 39 offer cessation programs.
  • Significantly more likely to support cessation
    if
  • Income or public recognition for quality
  • Financial incentives for smoking cessation
  • Requirements to report HEDIS measures
  • Aware of Clinical Practice Guidelines

Source McMenamin, Schauffler, Shortell et al.
Med Care. 2003411396-1406.
University of California, Berkeley
14
Medicaid Adoption of System Strategies for TDT,
2005

Source manuscript under review - do not quote or
cite
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com