Coalition of State Rheumatology Organizations
(CSRO) physicians are voicing concern for patients who will fall victim
of a dangerous new prescription policy. New requirements from BlueCross
BlueShield (BCBS) of Tennessee, which
may be a bellwether for other insurers, are reversing the trend
providers have achieved in keeping prices down for physician
administered medications.
Normally provider administered drugs are obtained via a “buy and
bill” system where a provider purchases medication and bills the
insurance company under a patient’s medical benefit. The new BCBS policy
moves the acquisition of these administered medication away from the
physician to the patient’s pharmacy benefit, handled by pharmacy benefit
managers (PBMs.)
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) dashboard
purports that prices of Part D medications, those managed by a PBM, rise
at much faster rates than physician “buy and bill” Part B medications.
“Now PBMs and insurers are integrated, they finally have the chance
to move payments away from the medical side and put it on the pharmacy
side, where more money is made with rebates and hidden fees,” said Dr. Madelaine Feldman, president of the CSRO.
“This policy is about one thing, profits,” Dr. Feldman, continued.
“PBMs construct formularies encouraging pharmaceutical manufacturers to
raise prices of drugs. The higher the price, the more money PBMs make,
resulting in PBMs choosing higher priced drugs for the preferred tier.”
Another consequence of this new policy will be that physicians will no longer be able to infuse patients in their office. Dr. Robert Levin of the Alliance for Transparent and Affordable Prescriptions
(ATAP) added, “We make decisions based on the needs of our patients,
including how and where care is given. Needlessly driving up prices and
making treatments more complicated to obtain is moving health care in
the wrong direction. Patients deserve better.”
“Patients will be increasingly forced into expensive sites for care
such as hospitals or where there is no direct supervision by physicians,
nurse practitioners, or physician assistants,” said Dr. Aaron Broadwell, rheumatologist from Shreveport, Louisiana.
The CSRO is comprised of 43 state and regional professional
rheumatology societies formed to advocate for excellence in
rheumatologic disease care and ensure access to the highest quality care
for the management of rheumatologic and musculoskeletal diseases.
https://www.biospace.com/article/releases/drug-prices-to-skyrocket-with-new-health-insurance-company-policy-according-to-coalition-of-state-rheumatology-organizations/
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