Title: Medicare Part D Outpatient Prescription Drug Benefit
1Medicare Part DOutpatient Prescription Drug
Benefit
- David E. Hickman, Pharm D
- Director, Outpatient Pharmacy Services Sutter
Health
2MMA Medicare Advantage Plans
- Types of Medicare Advantage Plans
- Medicare Manage Care Plans (HMO)
- Medicare Preferred Provider Organizations (PPO)
Plans - Medicare Private Fee-for-Service (PFFS) plans
- Medicare Specialty Plans (or Special Needs Plans)
3Medicare Part D Enrollment
- Must be entitled to Part A or enrolled in Part B
- Enrollment in Part D in voluntary, but penalties
apply for delay in enrolling - Beneficiary must choose a Prescription Drug Plan
(PDP) or Medicare Advantage Drug Plan (MA-PD) - Initial enrollment November 15, 2005 through May
15, 2006 - Enrollment for 2006 and beyond November 15
through December 31
4Design of the Basic Part D Benefit
Beneficiary Out-of-Pocket Spending Medicare Part
D Benefit
Catastrophic Coverage
5
5,1001
No Coverage (donut hole)
100 cost-sharing
2,250
25
Partial Coverage
250
Deductible
National average of 35 per month Part D premium
(420 total for year)
1Equivalent to 3,600 in out-of-pocket spending
3,600 250 (deductible) 500 (25
cost-sharing on 2,000) 2,850 (100
cost-sharing in the gap). Source Kaiser Family
Foundation, November 2003.
5Beneficiaries Cost
- Standard (or actuarially equivalent or enhanced)
- Deductible of 250
- Premium estimated to be 35 per month (420
annual) - Co-payments
- 3600 out of pocket maximum to catastrophic
coverage (TrOOP) - Even with coverage gap, the benefit covers an
average of 53 cents on the dollar - Low Income Subsidies
- Deductible and Premiums
- Dual eligibles and lt135 of poverty level none
- Co-payments
- Dual eligibles in nursing homes none
- Dual eligilbles community dwelling and lt100
poverty - 1 and 3 - lt135 proverty level - 2 and 5
- 135-150 poverty level (not above SSI resource
limit) - 50 deductible and 15 sliding scale
co-insurance - Eligible for full or partial subsidies no
doughnut hole
6Delivery of Part D Benefits Intended to Come From
Capitated, At-Risk Plans
- Prescription Drug Plan (PDP)
- Covers prescription drugs only
- Bears insurance risk for members drug spend,
within limits - Market does not currently exist
- Current PBMs would have to restructure to bear
risk - Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug (MA-PD)
Plan - Covers medical benefits prescription drugs
- Bears insurance risk for medical services and
drugs, within limits for drugs only - Market currently exists (Medicare Advantage)
- Plans can trade off between drug and medical
risk, unlike PDPs
7Private Plans will Deliver Drug Benefit
Offerings will Vary by Region
- Plans will bid to offer the prescription drug
benefit to beneficiaries in a certain region, or
multiple regions (possibly including nationally) - Each enrollee must have a choice of at least two
plans in their region - At least one plan choice must be a stand-alone
PDP, so beneficiary can remain in FFS Medicare
for medical benefits - 34 PDP service regions
- Each state is assigned to only one region
- California is its own region
- CMS hopes that this configuration will encourage
robust participation and competition among plans
834 PDP Regions in 2006
NOTE Each territory is its own PDP. SOURCE
CMS, http//www.cms.hhs.gov/medicarereform/mmaregi
ons/, December 6, 2004.
9Review of Formularies
- CMS will evaluate Part D plans proposed
formularies for potentially discriminatory
practices - Review includes
- Pharmacy and Therapeutics (PT) committee
structure and role - Formulary drug lists
- Use of drug benefit management tools Pharmacy and
Therapeutics Committee - USP Model Guidelines as a safe harbor for
classification system only - USP establishes 143 therapeutic categories and
classes of drugs - Formularies will need to include at least two
drugs in each category or class - USP also established Key Drug Types
- CMS will review cost-sharing tier placement to
assure that the formulary does not discourage
enrollment of certain beneficiaries - CMS will analyze the availability and tier
position for the most commonly prescribed drug
classes for the Medicare population in terms of
cost and utilization
10Review of Formularies
- CMS will analyze formularies to determine whether
appropriate access is afforded to drugs addressed
in widely accepted national treatment guidelines
for the following conditions
- Asthma
- Diabetes
- Chronic stable angina
- Atrial fibrillation
- Heart failure
- Thrombosis
- Lipid disorders
- Hypertension
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- Dementia
- Depression
- Bipolar disorder
- Schizophrenia
- Benign prostatic hyperplasia
- Osteoporosis
- Migraine
- Gastroesophageal reflux disease
- Epilepsy
- Parkinsons disease
- End stage renal disease
- Hepatitis
- Tuberculosis
- Community-acquired pneumonia
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Multiple sclerosis
- HIV
11 Review of Formularies
- CMS expects that best practice formularies will
contain a majority of drugs within the
following therapeutic classes - Antidepressants
- Antipsychotics
- Anticonvulsants
- Antiretrovirals
- Immunosuppressants
- Antineoplastics
- CMS will ensure that beneficiaries who are being
treated with these classes of medications have
uninterrupted access to all drugs in that class
via formulary inclusion, utilization management
tools, or exceptions processes
12Review of Formularies
- Excluded Drugs
- Drugs included under Medicare Part A or Part B
- Benzodiazepines
- Barbiturates
- Drugs to treat weight loss or gain
- OTC drugs
- Fertility drug and cosmetic drugs
- Vitamins and minerals except prenatal vitamins
and fluoride - Drugs to relieve cold and cough symptoms
- Outpatient drugs for which the manufacturer seeks
to require associated tests purchased exclusively
from the manufacturer
13Auto-Enrollment of Dual Eligibles, Facilitated
Enrollment for Others
- CMS will auto-enroll full dual eligibles starting
November 15, 2005, and complete on or before
January 1, 2006 - Full dual eligibles may switch PDP or MA-PD at
any time - While provision grants duals flexibility since
they are being auto-enrolled, they may need to
pay the difference in premiums to maintain their
current plan - For full dual eligibles in an MA plan, CMS will
facilitate enrollment into MA-PDs with lowest
premium offered in same MA organization
14Summary of Important Dates
- October 1, 2005
- Marketing of approved pharmacy plans
- October 15, 2005
- Medicare Website activated www.medicare.gov
- Medicare 24 hours toll free number 1-800-Medicare
activated - Medicare and You 2006 handbook
- November 15, 2005
- Open enrollment begins
- January 1, 2006
- New pharmacy benefit takes effect
- May 15,2006
- Close of open enrollment
15Approved Prescription Drug Plans For California
- 19 Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug Plan
Organizations - Plan are available by county
- Sutter providers are contracted with PacifiCare
Secure Horizons and HealthNet Seniority Plus - Blue Cross is offering a Medicare PPO plan
- 18 Stand Alone Prescription Drug Plan
Organizations - Total of 45 PDP plans available
- 8 stand alone prescription drug plans eligible to
receive auto-enroll dual eligibles (includes HN
and PC)
16MA-PDs
- Secure Horizons
- Available in higher population Sutter Health
counties - Premiums for Part D 0.00 to 23.00 per month
(59-150) - Most plans with no deductible (except Santa Cruz)
- Tiered copays (8.50, 26.15, 50, 33)
- No coverage in coverage gap in our area
- 81 of top 100 drugs covered
- HealthNet Seniority Plus
- Available in more Sutter Health counties
- Premiums for Part D 0.00 to 14.66 per month
(39-65) - No deductible in any plan
- Ttiered copays - (5, 25, 55, 25)
- No coverage in coverage gap in our area larger
gap 2000 to 3600 - 96 of top 100 drugs covered
- Blue Cross Freedom Blue (I and II)
- Available in all counties
- Premiums for Part D are 7.00 or 32.00
- No deductible in any plan
- Tiered copays - (10, 30, 25, 25)
17Limited Info on Plans to Date
- Formulary Information sporadic available for
all plans by November 17 - PDP (most national plans)
- Most national plans
- Premiums - 5.41 - 66.08
- Deductibles 40/60 split on 250 deductible
- Tiered benefits - yes
- Coverage gap generics/brand with higher premium
- Formulary limited info today comparable to
MA-PDs
18Medicare Part D - Impact on Patients
- Identify current prescription drug coverage
- Dual eligibles will be auto-enrolled
- Current Medicare Advantage enrollees will be auto
enrolled in their current health plan MA-PD - MA patient will be dis-enrolled if they sign-up
for a PDP - Medigap, union members, employer retirees must
compare - Compare available plans in the following areas
- Formulary coverage of current medication
(especially high cost meds) - Understand premiums, deductibles and copays
- Understand pharmacy network and benefit
management tools (exceptions) - Patients can potentially have multiple changes to
their medication regimen - Transition period may result in unavailability of
medications (plans must have transition plan) - Healthy Medicare patients will need to enroll or
face possible penalties (up to 12 annually) down
the road - 65 of Medicare beneficiaries will pay less for
medications
19Medicare Part D - Impact on Physicians
- Physicians will need to become educated on new
Medicare Part D pharmacy plans to respond to
patient needs - Physicians will be exposed to formulary and
pharmacy benefit management for the Medicare
population - Physicians will be exposed to the process of
obtaining exceptions for medically necessary
medications - Physicians will need to adjust patients
medications or apply for exceptions - Medical groups and IPAs will need to decide on
their own strategy and resources
20Providers Can
- Provide names of plans in which they participate
- Provide objective info on specific plans
- Distribute PDP marketing materials INCLUDING
Enrollment Applications - Distribute MA-PD marketing materials EXCLUDING
Enrollment Applications - Provide info and assistance in applying for the
limited income subsidy - Refer patients to other sources of information
- Print out and share info with patients from the
CMS website - Use comparative marketing materials created by a
non-benefit/service providing third-party
21Provider Cannot
- Direct, urge, or attempt to persuade
- Collect enrollment applications
- Offer inducements to persuade beneficiaries to
enroll in a particular plan or organizations - Expect compensation for enrollment of a
beneficiary - Expect compensation directly or indirectly from
the Plan for beneficiary enrollment activities
22Resource Available for Providers and Patients
- Multiple pieces from SH CID pharmacy department,
Managed Care Department and internal (group)
marketing - Sutter Health and affiliate websites
- CMS Materials for display or distribution from
office - Toll Free Line for patients 1-800-Medicare
- CMS Website www.medicare.gov
- Personalized and local assistance
- Health Insurance Counseling and Advocacy Program
(HICAP) 800-434-0222