Saving patients or pumping premiums? Bill seeks to boost copay help in Ohio [Springfield News-Sun, Ohio]
Patient copays for prescription drugs go toward meeting those patients' annual insurance deductibles. But if patients get help with copays via coupons from drug manufacturers or charitable donations, some insurers and pharmacy benefit managers don't apply that assistance toward deductibles. That's called using a "copay accumulator."
For people whose conditions require very expensive drugs, that can add thousands of dollars to the cost of just one prescription, and greatly delay meeting their annual deductible.
House Bill 135 would require insurers and benefit managers to apply all copay assistance -- whether discount coupons from drugmakers or cash from donations -- toward patients' deductibles.
"It is a bill for patients," said state Rep.
She has heard from many patients who couldn't get the medication they needed due to copay accumulators or who faced huge payments for each prescription.
The bill exempts cases in which there is a generic equivalent but a doctor prescribes a name-brand drug. It doesn't require insurers to cover a drug that isn't already on its coverage list and says withdrawing coverage of a drug isn't a violation unless it breaks other laws.
Manchester and state Rep.
"I haven't seen a committee schedule yet, so it's hard to say," Manchester said Thursday.
Even though she already knew to look for plans that didn't have copay accumulators, many insurance agents didn't seem to know what they were, Bisdorf said. It wasn't easy to find plans that credited copay assistance toward deductibles, she said.
The Bisdorfs sold their business in 2021, but she now works with a group of MS patients in the
"There's over 20 disease-modifying therapies for MS and the average cost for them is
Opposing views
When the bill came through the House, opponents only offered written testimony, Manchester said.
"We have not had an opponent hearing yet in the
Three groups submitted testimony against the bill in a March committee hearing, while the bill was still in the House: the
He said the PCMA doesn't oppose "means-tested patient assistance programs" or cash from a church or relative applying toward a patient's deductible, just copay coupons from drug manufacturers.
"These coupons increase the share of prescriptions that are filled by a branded drug by over 60%," pumping up drugmakers' profits, according to
"In providing copay coupons, the drug manufacturer's goal is to have an individual meet their deductible as quickly as possible," O'Reilly's testimony said. "Once an individual meets their deductible, the drug manufacturer charges the individual's insurance for the full price of the drug."
All the opponents said Medicare and Medicaid ban the use of copay coupons.
In the bill's most recent hearing, state Sen.
That idea also came up in House hearings, Manchester said.
"We felt that that wasn't an appropriate piece to put in the legislation," she said. As she told Huffman when the bill was first heard, if a one-year copay coupon guarantee is added to the bill, so should a requirement that insurance companies keep patients' doctors on their list of covered providers and keep medications on their list of covered drugs for the same period, Manchester said.
Patients' pleas
That mean an out-of-pocket expense of about
Her son's first prescription under the new plan cost
"That is when we had to start to depend on copay assistance," she said.
Clites switched to a new plan last year only to find it had a copay accumulator under a different name. For the first time, the copay assistance her son received didn't go toward his out-of-pocket maximum, and dealing with the huge resulting bill slowed down his essential medication delivery, Clites said.
The use of copay accumulators started about 2017,
Fifteen states prohibit not counting copay assistance toward deductibles, and another 20 are working on it, Thompson said. Those states show no evidence that banning copay accumulators hikes insurance premiums, he said.
"Of those Ohioans receiving copay assistance, 70% are working Ohioans who make less than
Nine of the 10 federal healthcare marketplace plans available in
"99.6% of all medications which receive third-party copay assistance have no generic options," the letter said.
Copay coupons are mostly used for patients with rare diseases or chronic conditions that need specific, very expensive drugs for a long time, said
Multiple sclerosis patients often need to switch between costly medications to deal with the unpredictable disease, said
"In 2022 alone, I have charged more than
One of her medications costs
"Thankfully, with copay assistance I only had to pay
"If things continue the way they are I likely won't be able to continue seeking all the care I need."
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