Michigan Medicaid Pharmacy Cost Containment - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Michigan Medicaid Pharmacy Cost Containment

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Title: Michigan Medicaid Pharmacy Cost Containment


1
Michigan Medicaid Pharmacy Cost Containment
  • Paul Reinhart, Director
  • Medical Services Administration
  • Michigan Department of
  • Community Health
  • October 8, 2004

2
Conclusions
  • Preferred drug list program has reduced the rate
    of growth in Medicaid pharmaceutical spending
  • Savings will grow as more states join the new
    multi-state initiative
  • No adverse beneficiary impact
  • Medicare pharmacy reform will have both positive
    and negative impact on states

3
Medicaid is the bleeding ulcer of state
government.State Rep. Marc ShulmanDetroit
News, April 19, 2004
4
Growth in Michigan Medicaid Vs. Growth in
Michigan Revenue
Medicaid
Revenue
5
Michigan Medicaid Caseload
1,401,800

Previous Record
1,071,900
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
August 2004
6
Pharmacy Expenditures
7
Michigan Medicaid Pharmacy Cost Containment
8
Medicaid Fee for Service FY03 Pharmaceutical
Spending
FFS Pharmacy 620 Million
All Other Spending 6.4 Billion
9
Medicaid Pharmacy Program Prior to PDL
Pre-PDL
Preferred Drugs Some Generics
Federal Rebate Yes
Supplemental Rebate No
Pharmacist Payments AWP, MAC, etc.
10
Medicaid Pharmacy Program After PDL
Pre-PDL Post PDL
Preferred Drugs Some Generics Larger List
Federal Rebate Yes Yes
Supplemental Rebate No Yes
Pharmacist Payments AWP, MAC, etc. Same
11
2002-2003 PDL
  • Limited to Michigan
  • Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee identified
    clinically necessary drugs in 40 drug classes
  • Contractor (First Health) negotiated supplemental
    rebates
  • Clinically necessary and drugs with supplemental
    rebates are not subjected to prior authorization

12
Annual Cost Per Script Increase
13
Estimated Pharmacy Cost Containment Savings
14
Preferred Drug List Impact on Beneficiaries
15
Prior Authorization Denials
  • 14,300,000 claims
  • 106,000 prior authorization requests
  • 39,000 approved by technician
  • 61,000 approved by pharmacist
  • 3,500 approved by state physician
  • 2,500 denied by state physician
  • 1 denial reversed after administrative appeal

16
Multi-State Preferred Drug List Program
17
Michigan Multi-State Pooling Agreement
  • Approved by the federal government on April 22,
    2004
  • States in the initial pool Michigan, Vermont,
    Nevada, Alaska, New Hampshire
  • Hawaii and Minnesota state plan amendments
    approved in September

18
Matrix Bid Theory More Lives, More Exclusivity
Lower Cost
? More Exclusivity
Lives 1 of 1 1 of 2 1 of 3 1 of 4
lt 3 m 1.00 1.10 1.20 1.30
3 6 m .90 1.00 1.10 1.20
6 9 m .80 .90 1.00 1.10
gt 9 m .70 .80 .90 1.00
?More Lives
19
Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003
20
Impact on Medicaid
  • January 1, 2006 federal government assumes
    responsibility for processing claims for dual
    eligibles
  • Dual eligibles account for over 2/3 of our
    fee-for-service pharmacy spending
  • Clawback requires states to pay federal
    government for dual eligibles
  • Could increase state costs

21
Clawback Will Increase Michigans Costs
22
Other MMA Impacts
  • New state administrative costs
  • Reduced state pharmacy bargaining power
  • State pharmacy assistance program savings
  • State pharmacy assistance coverage expansion
    opportunities

23
Conclusions
  • Preferred drug list program has reduced rate of
    growth in Medicaid pharmaceutical spending
  • Savings will grow as more states join the new
    multi-state initiative
  • No adverse beneficiary impact
  • Medicare pharmacy reform will have both positive
    and negative impact on states
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