West Virginians say medications have helped them lose weight, but coverage can be a problem
"I still have an appetite; I just get full quicker," Plante, of
But had it been up to his insurance, Plante might not have gotten the drug or lost the weight. Although Plante was classified as morbidly obese, his insurance plan through the federal health insurance marketplace wouldn't cover the drug because he isn't diabetic. Instead, he pays nearly
"The cost of these things is prohibitive for a lot of people to get on them if your insurance doesn't cover it," he said. "And, at my age, with the weight, it wasn't really a question of if I was going to have a stroke or get diabetes, it was a question of when.
"This has helped me reverse those trends," Plante said. "And, I think that's worthwhile. It should be something that insurance covers."
Some
A proposal by the Biden administration would expand access to the weight loss drugs to hundreds of thousands of
The rule change is subject to approval by President-elect
Medicaid covers 250,000 West Virginians, while more than 450,000 West Virginians are eligible for Medicare. Currently, Medicare part D, the program's outpatient drug benefit, pays for the drugs only when they're used for a medically accepted FDA-approved indication other than obesity, like diabetes or cardiovascular disease risk reduction, according to KFF.
State Medicaid programs are required to pay for the drugs when they're indicated for co-morbidities like diabetes or cardiovascular disease risk. Only 13 states — not including
Coverage 'a very big problem'
Dr.
"[Coverage] has been a very big problem, especially in
"So we feel a little bit bitter about waiting for my patient to become diabetic until we use it," he said. "The aim is to prevent that. [It] should maybe be used for pre-diabetes."
Mustafa said the medications are "very successful" at helping people lose weight. There's evidence that they help people's hearts and prevent strokes too, he said.
"The data has been astonishing, especially the success of this weight loss," Mustafa said. "There has been no other medication since the '50s, that when we started using some medication that's been more successful in weight loss, and doing it in a sound, metabolic way. So we're very excited."
Mustafa said that data shows that these medications are safer than other weight loss medications.
"The history of obesity medication has been very, I'm not going to say tragic, but I will say very dim and disappointing," he said. "Because quite a few medications came and left where we discovered some side effects."
Mustafa said his patients are treated with a "multidisciplinary" and "holistic" approach because patients who stop using the medications run the risk of gaining the weight back.
"People have to take their medicine but at the same time, change their lifestyle together," he said. "…they have to talk to the dietician, they have to engage in physical activity. Also, they have to sometimes talk to psychologists about stress eating or emotional eating or boredom eating. So they come hand in hand.
An 'amazing tool' for weight loss
Since
"I have so much more energy and a lot more confidence," Swisher said. "We like to go camping. We have a big camper, and I like to go hiking when we're camping, and I finally have the energy to do that. I can keep up with others. I'm not sore afterwards.
"I'm able to show those around me a confident me, and in turn, it helps them, especially my 12 year old, be confident in her own skin as well," she said.
Swisher was always "the chubbier one" between her and her sister, but her weight struggles took off in 2010, when she stopped smoking.
"As soon as I quit smoking, even though really nothing changed, I wasn't eating anymore that I know of, the weight just came on, and I couldn't get rid of it," Swisher said. "But I told myself I'd rather be overweight, because it has to be healthier than smoking."
Because of polycystic ovary syndrome, a chronic hormonal condition, it was nearly impossible for Swisher to lose weight on her own, she said.
While taking the drug has been successful for Swisher, she'll soon run into a problem that many face when trying to get access to the drug. Her insurance plan — through the
"[I'm] extremely nervous," Swisher said. "I notice as I get closer to that two-week mark, that my weight starts to creep back up, and it's not because I'm eating more. It's not because I'm eating bad. It's not because I'm not moving as much. It's that those hormones start to kick back in, that the GLP-1 drugs are putting at bay, or however they work."
As a PEIA member, Swisher wouldn't benefit from the Biden administration's proposal, but she said she supports expanding access to the drug.
"I think that it is an amazing tool that we have at our fingertips that helps push back other health issues, and so I think it would be an amazing opportunity for so many Americans, especially so many West Virginians who don't have access to healthy foods that, thankfully I do," Swisher said.
Sigmond said she's struggled with weight for 20 years, and tried everything to lose it.
"I'm somebody that has done everything that they were supposed to do, that can tell you exactly how many calories I'm taking, how many calories I'm supposedly burning," Sigmond said. "And, it's all I can do to keep from gaining and I can't lose without help. And even if I don't lose any more than what I already have, I feel better. So [weight loss drugs are] not going to solve every problem, but it definitely is helpful."
Last year, when her doctor first prescribed her the drug, it would have cost Sigmond more than her monthly mortgage payments, she said, despite having insurance coverage, something she couldn't afford.
But after exhausting other weight loss plans, she was able to get the drugs reasonably covered and start taking them this summer. Now, she's hearing that requirements for covering the drugs may change and the plan may only cover it for people with diabetes. Sigmond wouldn't be covered even though she is prediabetic.
"When this was the cost of my mortgage payment to get a dose, I couldn't do that," she said. "And if it goes back there again, I still won't be able to do it. But as long as I can get it and my insurance is covering it reasonably, it is something that I think should be available, because there's so many other health problems that the weight causes."
Costs to
According to the
The proposed change is expected to cost the federal government
It's unclear how much it would cost
According to the
But the qualifications for SB 743 would have been different from that of the Biden administration's proposal.
Under Biden's proposal, Medicaid would cover the cost of the drugs to treat obesity, regardless of whether the patient has a co-morbidity like type two diabetes or hypertension.
"The proposed rule is currently just that — a proposal," Wetzel wrote. "Its potential implications for
Justice supportive of the Biden proposal, says he takes Ozempic
Gov.
The governor said he doesn't know how to expand access to the drugs "from the standpoint of the cost" and said sustainability must be part of the puzzle.
"For all I know about these drugs, they are beneficial in many different ways," Justice said. "And the net net of the whole thing at the end of the rainbow — it'll save us money. It'll save us money. But we've got so much that we've got to do to overhaul this colossal mess in D.C. It's unbelievable. That's just all there is to it.
"I would be a proponent of trying to do everything we can to be able to expand these drugs that you're talking about to everybody," Justice said. "Because at the end of the day it will save us tremendous amounts of money."
A representative of
Mustafa agreed with Justice's assessment that covering the drugs would save government money in the long run.
"I feel that losing weight, we're going to provide cutting costs for hospitalization, like for heart disease, for strokes, for many other obesity related diseases," he said. "Also it's going to cut costs on the various costs, maybe amputations, renal failure, dialysis. Also it's going to cut costs on sleep apnea and using devices.
"So, I feel there's definitely a saving cost down the road by decreasing incidence of obesity or reducing the BMI," he said.
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