Friday, July 30, 2021

MEDICAID PHARMACY CARVE-OUTS

 

MEDICAID PHARMACY CARVE-OUTS SYRTIS SOLUTIONS PROTPL

Wisconsin Pharmacy Benefit Carve-Out


In 2020, the Wisconsin Department of Health Services carved out prescription drugs from the Family Care Partnership Program and transitioned to a Fee-for-Service (FFS) delivery model. The carve-out ensured compliance with the 2020 Medicaid and CHIP Managed Care Final Rule and eliminated the need for Managed Care Organizations (MCOs) to implement their own drug utilization review program. In addition, Wisconsin believes that the carve-out will reduce Medicaid costs by lowering prescription drug prices. To date, Wisconsin, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Missouri have carved-out their Medicaid pharmacy benefit.

How States Manage Medicaid Drug Costs


Medicaid's drug spend has skyrocketed over time, and in 2017 it reached $64 billion. While states are not obligated to include pharmacy benefits in their Medicaid programs, the majority do because it is an important part of modern medicine and greatly improves the coordination of care. As a result of Medicaid expansion, surges in enrollment, and the pandemic-driven recession, the problem has only been exacerbated. When states are dealing with fiscal pressure, they usually look to different payment strategies, utilization controls, benefit delivery models, or reductions in program benefits to decrease costs.

Generally, states will employ one of two different methods to manage the costs of drugs. The most common approach is for a state to contract with a MCO and PBM to manage their pharmacy benefits. The alternative is to carve-out Rx benefits and manage drugs by means of a fee-for-service delivery model. Below, we will review the pros and cons of each model to understand their impact on Medicaid drug costs better.

ACA Drug Rebate Policy Changes


States who opt to carve-out Medicaid Rx benefits think they will receive lower drug prices by negotiating with pharmaceutical manufacturers directly. This approach has been successful in some situations; however, the passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) introduced drug rebate policy changes that totally altered state prescription drug plans.

Under the ACA, drug companies were mandated to raise the rebate percentage for states from 15.1 percent to 23.1 percent. Aside from the eight-point increase, MCO beneficiaries were also made eligible for these rebates. Prior to the ACA, these rebates were only for enrollees in fee-for-service Medicaid programs.

After the ACA was implemented, The Lewin Group, a premier national health care and human services consulting firm, examined the effect of these changes. Their report, Projected Impacts of Adopting a Pharmacy Carve-In Approach Within Medicaid Capitation Programs, revealed that the ACA eliminated the savings advantage that cave-outs previously had. Furthermore, their report studied carve-outs in fourteen states and concluded that those states could save $12 billion over a ten-year duration by carving-in Rx benefits.

Following the ACA's rebate and eligibility changes, most states contracted with MCOs to deliver care to Medicaid beneficiaries. By 2017, there were 39 states with Medicaid MCO contracts, and 35 had carved-in their Medicaid prescription drug benefits. As of July 2018, 40 states were contracted with risk-based managed care plans, and 5 had carved out prescription drugs.

Recent Carve-Outs


While most states have kept pharmacy benefits carved into their managed care contracts, there continues to be carve-out activity and other efforts to lower costs.



New York was planning to carve out pharmacy benefits starting April 1, 2021. Medicaid members enrolled in managed care plans, health and recovery plans, and HIV-special needs plans would begin to receive their prescription drugs through a Medicaid FFS pharmacy program as opposed to their MCO. However, the change has been postponed two years due to an amendment of the state budget after lobbying efforts. The transition to the new Medicaid FFS model will now go into effect on April 1, 2023.

In 2019, Ohio's legislature directed the state to select a Single Pharmacy Benefit Manager (SPBM) after growing criticism of how its pharmacy benefits were being administered. Following the order, the state released a RFP for a SPBM that would contract with Ohio directly to improve transparency and manage its prescription drug program. Ohio's newly designed program is anticipated to take effect at the beginning of 2022.

In 2019, Governor Gavin Newsom signed an executive order that California would move all pharmacy services for Medi-Cal to a FFS model. As a result, California expects to negotiate better drug prices from drug companies by consolidating purchasing power and leveraging the state's population size. According to the Legislative Analyst's Office, carving-out could result in hundreds of millions in savings annually. That being said, the move is controversial. There are concerns over its possible impact on MCOs, PBMs, pharmacies and the coordination of care since California's Medicaid Rx benefit is currently managed by ten separate PBMs responsible for 90% of the state's Medicaid beneficiaries.

In 2019, Michigan's Department of Health and Human Services issued a notice of proposed policy declaring that outpatient drug coverage would no longer be a benefit and the state would move to a FFS model. Michigan anticipated saving approximately $10 million on a yearly basis using drug rebates and doing away with associated administrative capitation costs. Critics opposing the decision alleged that it did not align with MHP's goal of delivering whole-person integrated care. They believed that out of pocket costs would increase and members would not have the appropriate overview of their prescriptions. After considering the carve-out, the state decided to implement a single Medicaid Preferred Drug List (PDL) instead.

Like Michigan, Washington state has also introduced a PDL to minimize costs. The Apple Health Preferred Drug List was rolled out in 2018, and all Medicaid MCO plans and fee-for-service plans were mandated to use the PDL.

Medicaid Payers and PBMs


Although states determine what delivery model they use to coordinate care, MCOs stand behind carving-in Medicaid Rx benefits. Whenever a program benefit, like prescription drugs, is carved out it makes the coordination of care challenging and awkward. MCOs believe that when pharmacy benefits are carved-in, program performance is strengthened, quality is improved, and costs are reduced.

In 2015, America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) commissioned a report from The Menges Group that evaluated the impact of carving-out prescription drug benefits from MCO benefit packages. According to The Menges Group, "the decision to carve out pharmacy benefits is likely to significantly increase costs for states and the Federal government". The evaluation also discovered that in "28 states using the carve-in model, the net cost per prescription was 14.6 percent lower than the average net cost per prescription in states not carving in pharmacy."

Critics of the managed care model argue that PBMs add to the high cost of drugs, as they operate like middlemen in getting pharmaceuticals from manufacturers to patients. PBMs obviously disagree with this criticism. Instead, they maintain that they are uniquely positioned to help manage the cost of Medicaid Rx benefits. PBMs work to negotiate rebates, manage formularies, provide mail-order options to patients, manage the distribution of drugs among pharmacies, and provide specialty drug services.

Over time pharmacy spend has become an increasing expenditure in state budgets. Because of fiscal pressure states are considering different delivery models, PDLs, and legislation to reduce drug costs. While most states deliver pharmacy benefits through managed care models, a handful have chosen to carve-out prescription drugs and shift to FFS models. In addition to lowering drug costs, states should also seek out cost avoidance opportunities and further efficiency in their Medicaid plans to reduce costs.


Friday, July 2, 2021

JUNE MEDICAID NEWS RECAP

 

MEDICAID NEWS JUNE 2021 SYRTIS SOLUTIONS


Syrtis Solutions sends out a monthly Medicaid news summary to help you stay up-to-date. The monthly recap highlights developments, research, and legislation that relates to Medicaid program integrity, cost avoidance, coordination of benefits, third party liability, improper payments, fraud, waste, and abuse. Here is a summary of last month's significant Medicaid developments.