When doctors consider effectiveness, availability and costs,
patients benefit.
A small change in the way a doctor prescribes a medication
can make a big difference. Officials from the accountable care organization
Partners For Kids use this example all the time:
Abilify, a behavioral health drug, is usually priced per
pill, not by strength of dose. Two 5 mg pills cost nearly twice the amount of a
single 10 mg pill. Abilify is long-acting, so the single 10 mg pill is just as
effective as the two smaller doses taken at different times.
Physicians don’t always know the drug’s half-life or
pricing. An analysis by Partners For Kids found that if all its patients on
Abilify took just one dose per day, the potential savings would be more than
$300,000 per year.
That kind of overall savings is important for insurers, for
Medicaid and for the entire health care system, says Chet Kaczor, PharmD, MBA,
director of Pharmacy Services for Nationwide Children’s Hospital.
But if that’s too abstract, think about how the example
affects a single child and a single doctor, he says. A patient is more likely
to take every dose of a medication if there is only one dose per day. An
adherent patient is a healthier patient. A healthier patient needs fewer trips
to a provider, freeing the provider to see patients who may need care more
urgently….
Partners For Kids is one of the oldest and largest
accountable care organizations in the United States. With Nationwide Children’s
as its hospital member, the organization works to keep children covered by
Medicaid Managed Care Plans healthy in central and southeastern Ohio. Partners
For Kids incentivizes its 1,000-plus member providers to focus on the quality
and value of care instead of numbers of procedures or office visits.
Among its signature initiatives is its Pharmacy Program.
And one of the Pharmacy Program’s most important services is
helping physicians understand best practices in prescribing medications. That
includes giving guidance on insurance coverage, drug availability, drug costs
and overall effectiveness of therapies for some very common conditions –
asthma, allergies, ear infections, behavioral health issues, acne and others.
Some of the most recent guidance from the Partners For Kids
Pharmacy Program is on the acid suppressive medication esomeprazole (Nexium). A
prescription for a one-month supply of esomeprazole is $255. But if a provider
writes a prescription instead for the over-the-counter Nexium 24HR – the same
medication in every important way – the cost is $21 per month. Because of
differing regulations on over-the-counter and prescription medications, a
pharmacist can’t make the substitution for the less expensive option; the
provider must write the prescription the correct way…
“It’s not always easy for a prescriber to figure out the
right thing to do,” says Hosain Aghamoosa, PharmD, a clinical pharmacist for
Partners For Kids. “If you think about how much time a provider might have with
a patient, there may not be an extra few minutes to figure out which
medications an individual insurer covers or which might be more expensive for a
patient who is paying out of pocket. Physicians want to provide the best
possible care for their patients. But if a patient can’t afford a medication or
the insurance company doesn’t cover it, then a physician may actually be
delaying therapy.”…
Partners For Kids makes some general medication guidelines
publicly available on its website, PartnersForKids.org. Want to know if
fluoxetine (Prozac) or sertraline (Zoloft) is the appropriate first-line
medication for anxiety and depression? Or whether Ciprodex or Floxin Otic is
the best initial step for the treatment of bacterial acute otitis externa?
You can find the answers in the “Resources” section of the
website. (Spoiler alert: For anxiety and depression, the appropriate first
medication is fluoxetine. For acute otitis externa, the answer is complicated,
and a careful examination of the flow chart on the website will help.)…
The website also includes a regularly updated document
detailing many medication prices and coverages for Ohio’s five Medicaid Managed
Care Plans. These won’t exactly match prices and coverages for every insurer or
every state, but the document is a good guide for general trends, say Partners
For Kids pharmacists.
Primary care physicians may also find medication management
software and mobile applications, such as those produced by Micromedex
Solutions and Epocrates, helpful, Dr. Kaczor says.
And the Partners For Kids Pharmacy Program has one more
recommendation for prescribers: talk to your community pharmacists. Doctors are
used to fielding calls from pharmacists who need a specific question answered
about a prescription, or want to know if they can substitute one medication for
another.
Doctors should remember the relationship works both ways,
Dr. Kaczor says. Doctors can and should ask pharmacists about drug therapeutic
information, costs, coverages and availability.
http://pediatricsnationwide.org/2016/10/18/a-better-approach-to-prescribing-medication/
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