Articles by admin

No Image

Seniors Face Higher Drug Costs As Coinsurance Becomes More Common

Fanatic Studio/Collection Mix: Sub/Getty Images

Fanatic Studio/Collection Mix: Sub/Getty Images

Medicare beneficiaries may get dinged with higher prescription drug bills this year because more than half of covered drugs in standalone plans require them to pay a percentage of the cost rather than a flat fee, an analysis from consulting group Avalere Health says.

Fifty-eight percent of covered drugs in Part D drug plans in 2016 are subject to this so-called coinsurance, the Avalere analysis found. That means patients are on the hook for a percentage of the costs, which can be much higher than a traditional copay, which is flat. If a drug costs $200, instead of making a $20 copayment, they may owe 20 percent of the cost, or $40.

The percentage of drugs requiring coinsurance has climbed steadily, increasing from 35 percent in 2014 to 45 percent last year. That percentage is approaching two-thirds of all covered drugs.

More coinsurance makes beneficiaries’ drug costs less predictable, said Caroline Pearson, a senior vice president at Avalere. It may also result in fewer affordable options if patients can’t achieve any savings by substituting drugs in the same therapeutic class, she said. The shift toward coinsurance also means that Medicare beneficiaries will have to rely to a greater extent on cost-estimating tools like the Medicare plan finder to figure out how much they may owe out of pocket.

Medicare Part D plans typically divide drugs into five tiers with different levels of cost sharing. In the past, coinsurance may have been limited to high-cost specialty drugs, but that’s changing. Last year, about two-thirds of people in drug plans faced coinsurance in more than one drug tier; this year the figure is 96 percent, according to Avalere.

Medicare Advantage managed care plans aren’t shifting to coinsurance to the same degree as the standalone drugs plans that accompany traditional Medicare coverage, the analysis found. In 2016, 26 percent of covered drugs in Medicare Advantage plans required coinsurance.

“On the Medicare Advantage side, the premium includes both medical and drug benefits, and the drug piece is smaller,” so the incentive to tightly manage drug costs may be lower in Medicare Advantage plans, Pearson said.

Please contact Kaiser Health News to send comments or ideas for future topics for the Insuring Your Health column.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Yale Notches Historic Upset Win Over Baylor, Sparking A Great Soundbite

Taurean Prince (left) of the Baylor Bears explained rebounding after his team lost to Brandon Sherrod (right) of the Yale Bulldogs Thursday night, in the first round of the 2016 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament.

Taurean Prince (left) of the Baylor Bears explained rebounding after his team lost to Brandon Sherrod (right) of the Yale Bulldogs Thursday night, in the first round of the 2016 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament. Jim Rogash/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Jim Rogash/Getty Images

Extending a long-awaited trip to the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, No. 12 seed Yale upset fifth-seed Baylor in the West region Thursday night. Yale notched its first-ever win at the Big Dance, 79-75, relying on strong defense and rebounding.

The historic win comes at the Yale Bulldogs’ first trip to the NCAAs since 1962, as Yale’s student newspaper reports. The paper adds, “The Ivy League’s automatic NCAA Tournament bid has now resulted in five wins over the past seven tournaments.”

Yale moves on to face Duke in the second round — but at the post-game news conference Thursday night, one reporter’s question about rebounding created a memorable moment, as Baylor star Taurean Prince delivered an answer that’s being praised for exemplifying both straightforward simplicity and deadpan sarcasm.

Taurean Prince had the BEST POSSIBLE ANSWER when asked how Yale out-rebounded Baylor. ?

A video posted by CBS Sports (@cbssports) on Mar 17, 2016 at 4:07pm PDT

After a reporter asked, “How does Yale outrebound Baylor?” Prince patiently explained:

“Um, you go up and grab the ball off the rim when it comes off. And then you grab it with two hands, and you come down with it, and that’s considered a rebound. So, they got more of those than we did.”

We’ll note that Prince, who scored 28 points in the game, did not mention the time-honored practice of using one’s body to establish position around the basket — the “boxing out” of one’s opponents, as he might have said. Yale outrebounded Baylor, 35-30.

Yale’s Bulldogs weren’t the only No. 12 seed to score an upset Thursday: The University of Arkansas Little Rock Trojans erased an imposing Purdue lead in the second half to shock the Boilermakers in double overtime, 85-83.

That win brought its own historic citations. As the Arkansas Democrat Gazette reports, it is UALR’s “second NCAA Tournament victory and first in 30 years. It came after being down 14 points with four minutes left and by four points with 33 seconds left.”

The Trojans will now prepare to play the Iowa State Cyclones on Saturday.

For Yale, Thursday’s win brought welcome relief from the off-court controversy surrounding former captain Jack Montague, who attended the game — and who’s planning a lawsuit against the university over his expulsion that came after sexual assault allegations were made against him.

Yale’s win wasn’t as welcome for many basketball fans who filled out tournament brackets. After the game, CBS Sports said that fewer than 6 percent of brackets filed with the network remain perfect.

With March Madness now in full swing, millions of Americans will spend this weekend ignoring weather reports, tax deadlines and the U.S. election season to focus on college basketball. The NCAA lists the schedules for the men’s and women’s tournaments.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Today in Movie Culture: Superman's Lack of Fame, New Yoda Puppeteer Documentary and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Invisible Superman of the Day:

Henry Cavill is apparently still not very famous, even though he’s starring in one the biggest blockbusters of the year, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. Watch his humbling video (via Geek Tyrant):

Movie Science of the Day:

In honor of Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice coming out soon, here’s Nerdist’s Kyle Hill on why Batman‘s grappling gun would actually be quite deadly:

[embedded content]

DIY Build of the Day:

For those who still prefer the Tim Burton Batman movies, here’s instructions on how you can build your own replica of the utility belt worn by Michael Keaton:

[embedded content]

Fan Casting of the Day:

The latest casting imagining from BossLogic is Zac Efron as Shazam, so he can go up against his Baywatch buddy, Dwayne Johnson:

Star Wars of the Day:

Jamie Benning has a must-watch new Filmumentary on Yoda and puppetter Dave Barclay:

[embedded content]

Vintage Image of the Day:

Kurt Russell, who turns 65 years old today, in his first screen appearance, a 1962 episode of Dennis the Menace:

Alternate Cut of the Day:

Speaking of Russell, here’s what scenes from The Thing look like re-scored with tracks from John Carpenter‘s new album:

[embedded content]

Filmmaker in Focus:

Watch a mashup of Quentin Tarantino movies collectively reciting Samuel L. Jackson‘s Ezekiel 25:17 speech from Pulp Fiction (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

[embedded content]

Supercut of the Day:

The sound effects of Sam Raimi‘s Spider-Man trilogy get a nice headphones-recommended compilation from Art of the Film:

[embedded content]

Classic Trailer of the Day:

In honor of St. Patrick’s Day, here’s an old trailer for Walt Disney‘s Darby O’Gill and the Little People from its 1977 theatrical re-release:

[embedded content]

and

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Major Automakers Agree To Install Automatic Braking Systems

2:36

Download

Major automakers have agreed to install automatic braking systems on nearly all models by 2022. Federal regulators say the technology will prevent thousands of crashes. Through the use of sensors, the systems detect imminent crashes and apply the brakes even if drivers don’t react.

Transcript

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

The nation’s regulators and major car companies are introducing a plan to make automatic brakes standard on nearly all U.S. vehicles. Experts believe these braking systems eventually could reduce the number of car accidents by 20 percent. NPR’s Sonari Glinton reports this is another step in the path to self-driving cars.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: All right, everybody, check under your seats.

(CHEERING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: You get automatic breaks. You get automatic breaks. Everybody gets automatic brakes.

(CHEERING)

SONARI GLINTON, BYLINE: Coming to the stage, Rebecca Lindland from Kelley Blue Book.

REBECCA LINDLAND: Twenty percent of crashes are driver inattention and could be prevented by this technology, so we’re looking at a significant impact on crash avoidance which, first of all, is fantastic.

GLINTON: Nearly all the carmakers agreed with the government to make braking systems that keep you from hitting objects in your path, all by 2022. Automatic breaks are already in many high-end luxury vehicles, and Lindland says from a consumer perspective, it’s going to take a lot of adapting.

LINDLAND: They need to understand that this is going to be something that they need to adapt to where the car is doing things outside of your control which takes some getting used to (laughter) because all of a sudden you’re like, oh, my gosh, my car just stopped, and I didn’t do that.

GLINTON: Meanwhile, Geoff Wardle is a transportation designer and engineer at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. He says even though the technology is robust, we’re in this weird period before we get truly self-driving cars, and the carmakers have a lot of work to do to convince consumers.

GEOFF WARDLE: Because the moment that you and I start to think, well, wait a minute, I just don’t like this, then it’s going to push back the whole driverless car effort by a long time, I think. So we need to introduce these systems in a way that we, as human beings, have no reason to despise them.

GLINTON: The experts say every time you hear one of these stories about new features, that’s a sign that self-driving cars are getting closer, and the cars we all buy will get that much more expensive. Sonari Glinton, NPR News.

Copyright © 2016 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Medical Debt Rains Pain On Families, Even In the Sunshine State

Jonathan McHugh/Getty Images/Ikon Images
3:47

Download

Jonathan McHugh/Getty Images/Ikon Images

At 85 years old, Alpha Edwards did not expect to be out of savings or to have $3,000 of credit card debt.

“I don’t do anything that costs money,” Edwards says. “I can’t.”

The problem started four years ago, when Edwards moved to Miami Springs, Fla., with her little brown dog. Her husband had recently died, and Edwards wanted to be closer to her daughter.

Edwards regularly sees doctors for her chronic lung disease and her pacemaker. And not long after she moved, she needed a cardiac procedure.

That’s when the bills started rolling in — thousands of dollars in medical bills.

“I remember crying all day, every day,” she says.

Alpha Edwards, of Miami Springs, Fla., says she was able to handle her finances until thousands of dollars in medical bills started rolling in.

Alpha Edwards, of Miami Springs, Fla., says she was able to handle her finances until thousands of dollars in medical bills started rolling in. Sammy Mack/WLRN hide caption

toggle caption Sammy Mack/WLRN

Edwards learned that one of the specialists she was seeing didn’t take her insurance.

At first, while she still had a few thousand dollars in savings, she made some payments. But when the money ran out, she stopped.

Edwards is not alone. Health insurance is no guarantee against financial hardship, according to a national poll by NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

“People are financially overwhelmed in lives that are working OK — they have financing for everything else in their life, but they can’t deal with this large medical bill,” says Robert Blendon, a professor of health policy and political analysis at the Harvard Chan School.

Blendon says the poll found that among Floridians who have experienced serious financial problems in the past two years (problems like spending down savings, not being able to afford necessities, and racking up credit card debt), 76 percent had health insurance.

Consider the case of Wilson Gamboa — one of the Floridians polled.

Gamboa has a black Suzuki C50 motorcycle in his garage. But he hasn’t driven it in two years, since his health insurance premiums went up by $50 a month.

You can find the detailed results of the national poll here and results on how income affects health care here.

Results for Florida are here.

“It’s been awhile,” says Gamboa. “I start her up regularly — you know, just to make sure the wheels keep going and the engine stays lubed — but she’s sitting there now.”

Gamboa is a U.S. Army reservist and owner of a pressure-washing company in Miami. His business lost money last year — which means Gamboa is leaning on his wife’s nursing salary and her employer-sponsored health benefits. It bothers him that they haven’t been able to buy the property they were hoping to invest in.

He considers himself lucky.

“If my wife wasn’t working and had the job that she had, then we probably couldn’t even stay afloat,” he says. “We’re luckier than a lot of people. But we’re trying to live the American dream.”

For many people, these pressures are compounded when rising copayments, coinsurance and deductibles lead to missed payments or collection agencies.

Roughly 1 in 5 Americans have medical debt on their credit reports, according the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

“We also know that this estimate of the number of consumers with medical debt is probably an underestimate,” says the bureau’s Ken Brevoort, who has studied the problem. “And that residual expense wound up being reported on the credit records of these consumers, and they ultimately wound up paying a price for it.”

A secondary price: worse credit scores and a harder time financing things like a home.

In Miami Springs, Alpha Edwards gets by with help from her family. But she feels the financial strain every day.

“I lived in a three-bedroom, two-bath, two-car garage home,” Edwards says. “I went out to lunch every day during the week — and I was very social, had a lot of friends. And here I have no social life whatsoever, except with my children.”

Edwards may be lonely, but she is far from alone in her financial struggles. Many Floridians are feeling that same pinch.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

New Trailers: 'Ben-Hur,' 'Now You See Me 2' and 'Central Intelligence'

In this roundup of new trailers, we have a double dose of Morgan Freeman for you. Unfortunately, he’s not in all three, as he’d probably fit in well in Central Intelligence.

Ben-Hur

We’ve seen this story before. More than a few times, actually. But Lew Wallace’s 1880 novel Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ is one worth retelling, or re-adapting, over and over. Each time with the latest in cinemtatic technology, be it widescreen spectacle or, now, plenty of CG effects. This one comes to us from director Timur Bekmambetov (Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter) and stars Jack Huston (Pride and Prejudice and Zombies) as the title nobleman turned slave turned chariot champion. Also Morgan Freeman with dreadlocks. See it in theaters starting August 12.

[embedded content]

Now You See Me 2

Morgan Freeman is also in the second trailer for this star-studded magician movie sequel, reprising his role from the 2013 original. Also back are Mark Ruffalo and a few of the “Four Horsemen,” illusionists played by Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson and Dave Franco, now joined by Lizzy Caplan substituting for Isla Fisher. Daniel Radcliffe is also an addition to the mix, playing a young tech prodigy and adversary for the showy con man quartet. And there’s a new director, Jon M. Chu (Jem and the Holograms). You can’t see it now, but it will be in theaters on June 10.

[embedded content]

Central Intelligence

Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart team up as an unlikely pair in this action comedy. Johnson plays a former overweight loser turned “Jason Bourne in jorts,” while Hart’s character was the most popular guy in high school but is now cowering through a CIA-involving plot he wants no part in. Hilarity ensues along with explosions. This one is directed by Rawson Marshall Thurber (We’re the Millers) and co-stars Amy Ryan and Aaron Paul, though neither appears in this first full trailer. The movie opens on June 17.

[embedded content]

and

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Academy's Apology For Asian Jokes At Oscars Falls Flat

In one segment of this year's Oscar telecast, host Chris Rock introduced three Asian children who emerged onstage as PricewaterhouseCoopers accountants, invoking a tired stereotype about Asians being good at math.

In one segment of this year’s Oscar telecast, host Chris Rock introduced three Asian children who emerged onstage as PricewaterhouseCoopers accountants, invoking a tired stereotype about Asians being good at math. Chris Pizzello/Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP hide caption

toggle caption Chris Pizzello/Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

Prompted by a letter signed by more than 20 academy members of Asian descent, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences apologized for offensive jokes about Asians during the awards ceremony.

“Thank you for taking the time to voice your concerns about our 88th Oscar show, which are valid. We appreciate your perspective and take your points very seriously. It certainly was never the Academy’s intent to offend anyone,” the letter read, in part.

For some, the apology was hollow.

Actor George Takei, who signed the initial letter to the academy, told The New York Times that the response from academy CEO Dawn Hudson was “patronizing” and infuriating. “It was a bland, corporate response,” he said. “The obliviousness was actually shocking. Doesn’t anyone over there have any sense?”

As NPR’s TV critic Eric Deggans reported after the awards show, there were disparaging remarks made and stereotypes perpetuated at the expense of Asians during the ceremony. He wrote:

“Sacha Baron Cohen offered a line about the animated yellow Minion characters from the Despicable Me franchise that recalled stereotypes about Asian sexual endowments, while [host Chris] Rock ushered three Asian children onstage saying they were the accountants handling Oscar votes, in an embarrassing nod to stereotypes about Asians being good at math.”

Already facing criticism for the fact that only white actors and actresses were nominated for the top award categories — for the second year in a row — the backlash against the jokes regarding Asians was swift on social media. Then on March 9, some academy members sent a letter addressed to Hudson and other officials. It was published this week by Variety:

“In light of criticism over #OscarsSoWhite, we were hopeful that the telecast would provide the Academy a way forward and the chance to present a spectacular example of inclusion and diversity.

“Instead, the Oscars show was marred by a tone-deaf approach to its portrayal of Asians.

“We’d like to know how such tasteless and offensive skits could have happened and what process you have in place to preclude such unconscious or outright bias and racism toward any group in future Oscars telecasts.

“We look forward to hearing from you about this matter and about the concrete steps to ensure that all people are portrayed with dignity and respect.

“We are proud that the Oscars reach several hundred million people around the world of whom 60% are Asians and potential moviegoers.”

Hudson’s response did little to address these questions specifically. The rest of her letter read:

“We are committed to doing our best to ensure that material in future Oscar telecasts be more culturally sensitive. It pains us that any aspect of the show was considered offensive, and I apologize for any hurt the skits caused.

“Our Awards Committee and Academy leadership will be exercising more oversight to make sure that concerns like yours are fully addressed.”

The exchange came as the academy’s board met to discuss diversity and figure out how to implement reforms announced in January. The Times reports that “the board reaffirmed its January resolution to take away voting privileges for inactive members, although the organization’s various branches will have some limited flexibility to determine the criteria for establishing what constitutes activity.”

In its bid to double the number of women and people of color in its membership by 2020, the academy also decided to go forward with a plan to add three board seats earmarked for women and minorities.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

FIFA Says It Was Victim To Its Leaders, Asks For Millions In Restitution

A soccer ball covered with flags is painted on a wall in the township of Khayelitsha, South Africa. The image of South Africa's 2010 World Cup has been shattered by allegations that its bid over a decade ago was boosted by bribes of more than $10 million to secure FIFA votes — allegations FIFA addressed in Wednesday's request for restitution.

A soccer ball covered with flags is painted on a wall in the township of Khayelitsha, South Africa. The image of South Africa’s 2010 World Cup has been shattered by allegations that its bid over a decade ago was boosted by bribes of more than $10 million to secure FIFA votes — allegations FIFA addressed in Wednesday’s request for restitution. Schalk van Zuydam/AP hide caption

toggle caption Schalk van Zuydam/AP

FIFA is requesting tens of millions of dollars in restitution, arguing that it was a victim of its corrupt leadership.

FIFA’s Victim’s Statement, filed to authorities in New York on Wednesday, contends that the embattled international soccer federation is a “global force for good.” The organization is arguing that a group of disgraced leaders — rather than systemic corruption — is to blame for the onslaught of corruption and bribery allegations.

“Their actions have deeply tarnished the FIFA brand and impaired FIFA’s ability to use its resources for positive actions throughout the world, and to meet its global mission of supporting and enhancing the game of football,” the court document reads.

FIFA is asking for tens of millions in damages that defendants stand to pay after the conclusion of ongoing U.S.-based cases against more than 40 FIFA officials and other football organizations. A third of those defendants “have so far admitted to participating in longstanding bribery and kickback schemes,” The New York Times reports.

“These dollars were meant to build football fields, not mansions and pools; to buy football kits, not jewellery and cars; and to fund youth player and coach development, not to underwrite lavish lifestyles for football and sports marketing executives,” newly elected FIFA President Gianni Infantino said in a statement. “When FIFA recovers this money, it will be directed back to its original purpose: for the benefit and development of international football.”

Here’s a breakdown of what FIFA wants, according to court documents:

  • Tens of millions of dollars “at least” for reputational harm to FIFA.
  • At least $28 million for money the defendants took from FIFA “under false pretenses.”
  • $10 million allegedly stolen by three co-conspirators, “which they funneled as bribes for their personal use.”
  • Compensation for other bribes and kickbacks, and legal fees for the ongoing cases.

“They sold the power of their positions, including by taking bribes and kickbacks in return for selling the valuable marketing rights associated with football tournaments and competitions,” the court documents say. “Together, the Defendants misappropriated FIFA’s resources, its brand, and its commercial value to enlarge their own bank accounts.”

In this document, FIFA “recognized for the first time executives had in the past ‘sold’ votes in World Cup hosting contests,” the Associated Press reports.

The document says former FIFA Vice President Jack Warner, his son Daryan and former FIFA executive Charles Blazer “engineered a $10 million payoff in exchange for Executive Committee votes regarding where the 2010 FIFA World Cup would be hosted.”

But as the AP notes, “it did not mention the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournaments awarded to Russia and Qatar, a decision which has triggered a criminal investigation by Swiss authorities.”

With this request for restitution, FIFA is fighting a perception that it is corrupt beyond repair after a series of scandals. As The New York Times reports, it “approved a broad set of reforms last month.” However “it has yet to conclude an ambitious internal inquiry into the ‘endemic’ corruption that American authorities suggested would not end with the firing of any single individual.”

But at the same time, as the Times reports, U.S. authorities have signaled that they view FIFA as a victim of its leadership:

“Enabling FIFA’s request is the United States government itself, which has characterized the organization as a victim of its leaders’ crimes. A basic premise of the Justice Department’s case is that soccer officials robbed FIFA and its confederations of their honest services. That prompted FIFA, in estimating the financial damage done by defendants in the United States case, to include not only bribe money routed away from soccer, but also salaries and bonuses paid to people who were supposed to be supporting the sport.”

According to the Times, “Authorities are not expected to rule on FIFA’s request until after the defendants have been sentenced, possibly years away.”

You can read FIFA’s full victim statement here:

[embedded content]

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Medicare To Experiment With Tying Drug Costs to Effectiveness

Medicare wants to experiment with tying the prices it pays for medication to effectiveness.

Medicare wants to experiment with tying the prices it pays for medication to effectiveness. iStockphoto hide caption

toggle caption iStockphoto

Aetna and Cigna inked deals last month with drug maker Novartis that offer the insurers rebates tied to how well a pricey new heart failure drug works to cut hospitalizations and deaths. If the $4,500-a-year drug meets targets, the rebate goes down. Doesn’t work so well? The insurers get a bigger payment.

In another approach, pharmacy benefit firm Express Scripts this year began paying drug makers a special negotiated rate for some cancer drugs. The goal is to reward the use of medicines that are most effective for certain cancers.

Dubbed “value-based pricing,” these are the kind of private-sector efforts the Obama administration hopes to borrow to rein in drug prices for Medicare.

The results could lead to a profound shift in how the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services spends $20 billion a year for drugs under Part B, which are those given through doctors’ offices and hospital outpatient centers. Many cancer treatments are provided that way, as are some treatments for rheumatoid arthritis, macular degeneration and other medical conditions.

Under a proposed rule, different methods would be tried in selected geographic areas over a five-year test period. Some of these experiments would begin this year, with others added in 2017. The proposal faces two months of public comment.

“The goal is to test whether alternative approaches will lead to better value,” said Patrick Conway, chief medical officer for CMS, in announcing the proposal March 8.

“There is no perfect payment system, they all have upsides and downsides,” said Dan Mendelson of consulting firm Avalere Health, who lauded Medicare for considering new ways to pay even as he cautioned that it must be done carefully. “What we don’t want to do is create a world where doctors only prescribe the cheapest stuff even if not in the interest of the patient.”

Here are four concepts the government is investigating:

Cut add-on fees for doctors and outpatient centers.

Many drugs covered under Medicare Part B are first purchased by a physician office or outpatient center, then dispensed to patients. Once billed, Medicare pays the health care provider the average sales price plus 6 percent for costs associated with the purchase and storage of the medications. For example, a doctor or clinic would receive an add-on fee of $6 when a $100 drug is purchased, or $300 for a $5,000 treatment.

In the private sector, that practice – called “buy and bill” – is being reduced.

Instead, specialty pharmacies, often connected with pharmacy benefit management companies, purchase the drugs and deliver them to doctors’ offices. The management companies, paid by insurers for their services, negotiate prices with drug makers.

But the buy-and-bill approach still dominates Medicare Part B.

Oncology specialists and other proponents say add-on fees are an important revenue source needed to keep such centers open. But critics fear they encourage use of higher-cost drugs when equally effective products could be had for less. They also say the fees reward larger practices and centers that buy drugs at advantageous prices.

To counter that possibility, CMS would change the current reimbursement formula, cutting the add-on portion to 2.5 percent of the average sales price.

Recent industry surveys show that larger practices have resisted moving away from buy and bill. Smaller ones with less bargaining clout favor that. Drug makers and some physician specialty groups oppose this part of Medicare’s proposal, but patient advocacy groups express mild support mixed with caution.

Level payments.

In the private sector, insurers sometimes set caps on payments for services patients generally can shop around for, such as a hip or knee replacement or colonoscopies. The California Public Employees Retirement System insurance plans, for example, saw that the cost of joint replacements varied widely among hospitals, then set a cap of $30,000 for a joint replacement. If patients chose hospitals that charged more, they had to pay the difference. The move was credited with saving millions in its first two years. Most of it came from the more-expensive hospitals lowering prices.

Medicare plans to apply this model to its payments to doctors and outpatient centers for some categories of medicines. For example, it might select one price for all injectable treatments for knee pain caused by osteoarthritis. The same rate would be paid, even when centers use higher-cost products.

The question is how to set that price. While asking for comments, Medicare suggested a variety of options, including the average price for drugs in a category, the price of the most clinically effective drug or a rate developed some other way.

Medicare’s proposal would apply to some prescription medications, but not procedures. And unlike most private-sector models, Medicare patients who get drugs above a benchmark cost could not be billed for the difference. The goal is not to encourage patients to change drugs. Instead, Medicare said it will test whether grouping similar drugs into a single payment rate will give physicians incentives to use “products that provide the most value for the patient.”

Tie payments to effectiveness.

Under Medicare’s proposal, drug makers would agree to offer rebates that link the final price of their products results in patients. Just what those results would be – improved health, fewer hospitalizations or some other measure – would be spelled out up front. There are more than 300 such “risk-sharing” agreements currently in place in the private sector, according to a University of Washington School of Pharmacy database.

In a related test, Medicare would adopt an approach similar to that used by Express Scripts, varying the amount of payment based on a patient’s condition. Drugs are often approved for more than one condition – say, two different types of cancers – but may be more effective at treating one than the other. Under the proposal, Medicare would pay a physician less when a drug is less effective on that cancer.

Skeptics say the process can be complex, and savings might be eaten up by administrative costs or disagreements over whether drugs have met effectiveness targets. Moreover, these private sector efforts are so new that detailed results are not yet available.

Meanwhile, a report out Tuesday from the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review looked at similar efforts internationally. It found that such “indication-specific” pricing holds some promise, but cautioned that administrative complexity and other challenges are significant.

Cut patients’ out-of-pocket costs.

To get people to take essential medications such as statins after a heart attack, some insurers, including Aetna, have reduced or eliminated patient copayments. Other insurers have experimented with similar incentives for other conditions, such as asthma or diabetes. They generally found that reduced payments make patients more likely to continue taking their medications.

In Medicare Part B, patients are responsible for 20 percent of the cost of their drugs unless they have a supplemental insurance policy that covers such copayments. Medicare proposes to cut or eliminate those payments for certain drugs considered most effective or valuable.

Lower copayments might affect what doctors prescribe and could encourage patients to stay on needed treatments. Medicare itself would make up the difference, picking up the tab for the reduced or eliminated patient payment.

Medicare is soliciting suggestions in its public comment phase as to which drugs might be the best candidates for the test.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Today in Movie Culture: 'Deadpool' VFX Breakdown, Celebrating Serious Adam Sandler and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

VFX Reel of the Day:

Just how much CGI is in the big highway action sequence in Deadpool? Atomic Fiction shows off their work in this new video (via Devour):

[embedded content]

GIFof the Day:

With news today related to both the Indiana Jones and Star Wars franchises, here’s a perfect mashup of the two:

When worlds collide…https://t.co/O3tYdis1fc pic.twitter.com/JEGuafExEj

— One. Perfect. Shot. (@OnePerfectShot) March 15, 2016

Photoshop Meme of the Day:

The below poster parody of Indiana Jones is also relevant. It’s part of a current Photoshop meme and contest where one letter in a movie title is swapped for another. See more at Design Taxi.

Actor in the Spotlight:

Adam Sandler is not always a goofball. Here’s a great supercut highlighting his dramatic performances (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

[embedded content]

Vintage Image of the Day:

Rita Hayworth in an iconic dress in an iconic promotional photo for the classic film Gilda, which opened on this day 70 years ago:

Movie Takedown of the Day:

Honest Trailers is so glad they never have to do an Honest Trailer for another Hunger Games movie. But here’s one last one for The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2:

[embedded content]

Fan Build of the Day:

The basket isn’t made to look like Carl’s house, but this Up-inspired hot air balloon is still pretty awesome (via BuzzFeed):

DIY Build of the Day:

Learn how to make your own 3D-printed Ghostbusters ghost trap prop replica (via /Film):

[embedded content]

Supercut of the Day:

Yes, the devil is in the details, evidenced in this new video by Sharon L. Thomas compiling close-up shots in Rosemary’s Baby (via One Perfect Shot):

[embedded content]

Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 60th anniversary of the release of Forbidden Planet. Watch the original trailer for the sci-fi classic below.

[embedded content]

and

Let’s block ads! (Why?)