Thursday, September 5, 2019

CMS Declines To Enforce New Co-Pay Rules It Put In Place

By: Marcus J. Hopkins, Policy Consultant

One of the arguably good changes brought forth by the Affordable Care Act (ACA; AKA – Obamacare) was the ability to use Ryan White (RW) Part B funds to purchase and pay private insurance premiums and co-pays for AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP) clients. This, in addition to shifting some clients off of RW and onto state Medicaid programs in those states that expanded Medicaid, allowed state RW programs to shift some expenditures and costs off of their budgets by no longer paying directly for medications and, in some states, treatment costs.

One of the negative consequences of the ACA’s implementation has been the creation and proliferation of so-called “Co-Pay Accumulator Programs” – management tools used by Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) and other health plans that excludes co-pay assistance coupon and program payments from counting toward patients’ deductibles (Schweitz, 2019). This concept essentially allows insurers and PBMs to accept the payments received from the utilization of these co-pay coupons and Patient Assistance Programs (PAPs), not count those payments toward patients’ deductibles, and later demand and collect additional deductible payments after the co-pay assistance runs out for patients.

This practice has been widely criticized in a time when pharmaceutical prices have been (rightly) deemed out of control, too high, and unconscionable. Patients rely upon these manufacturer coupons, PAP assistance, and other discount programs to reduce the high cost of drug co-pays to as little as $5 or no cost from potentially hundreds of dollars per medication fill.

Medical Files
Photo Source: AIMED ALLIANCE

The current administration has repeatedly promised that it would lower the cost of prescriptions, though it has done little to deliver on said promise. One of the few positive steps it had taken was the announcement in its 2020 Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters rule that “…co-pay assistance from drug companies must count towards a patient’s deductible and out-of-pocket maximum in most cases.”

That decree lasted about as long as any other policy decree from this administration.

On August 26th, 2019, the Center for Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight (CCIIO) released an FAQ (found here) stating that this rule, set to go into effect on January 1st, 2020, will now not be enforced, nor will states be required to enforce the pro-patient rule, because enforcing it might conflict with rules set forth by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that allows High Deductible Health Plans (HDHPs) to not count co-pay assistance toward deductibles.

CCIIO
Photo Source: CMS

So, essentially, the health insurance companies win.  Again.  And again.  And again.

ADAP funds may be used to pay for clients’ co-pays, premiums, or both, depending upon the state, and for those clients who live in states where ADAP only pays for premiums, they may rely upon co-pay coupons to afford their medication co-pays.

To put this in personal terms, my Biktarvy (Gilead) co-pay is $250/month. Because I live in WV, the state covers that co-pay amount. However, if I lived in another state where that wasn’t the case, I could potentially use Gilead’s Advancing Access® Medication Co-Pay Card, which pays $3,600 annually toward co-pay costs. That amount would pay for 14 months of my $250 co-pay, essentially delivering a medication for free for an entire year…unless the PBM that services the insurance plan’s prescription program uses a Co-Pay Accumulator Program, so that none of those medication co-pays count toward my deductible.

For anyone who thinks that this move by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is an accident, don’t kid yourself: this isn’t a glitch; it’s a feature. This administration’s CMS has consistently moved in ways that raise prices and complicate healthcare access for patients, from authorizing (likely unconstitutional) work requirements for Medicaid programs in Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, New Hampshire, Ohio, Utah, and Wisconsin, to changing the way the Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) – the measurement used to calculate eligibility for assistance programs – is calculated. CMS Administrator, Seema Verma, has consistently ranked high on the Cruella de Vil Scale of Human Empathy, frequently siding against the interests of patients in her administration of federal healthcare programs.

Caught in the middle of this battle between private insurance profits and purported (but undelivered and undeliverable) savings for federal programs is the patient, who has seen their access to medications consistently slip further and further out of grasp. It is time, once again, for Americans to decide which is more important: the value of money or the value of human life. Sadly, I’m not at all confident that we will make the right decision.

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Disclaimer: Guest blogs do not necessarily reflect the views of the ADAP Advocacy Association, but rather they provide a neutral platform whereby the author serves to promote open, honest discussion about public health-related issues and updates.

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