Thursday, October 17, 2024

Biden Sides with Insurers, Shifting More Costs to Patients

By: Ranier Simons, ADAP Blog Guest Contributor

The high cost of healthcare is the product of a complex, fragmented financing system. The machinations of multiple public and private payors coupled with the advent of middlemen, such as pharmacy benefit managers, in the healthcare expenditure landscape often hinder the development of common sense solutions. This is especially true in the present discourse surrounding 340B Drug Pricing Program, Prescription Drug Affordability Boards (PDABs), and Alternative Funding Programs, which are all intertwined around 'controlling' prescription drug costs. At the center of the medical, fiscal maelstrom is the patient. Rising medical debt has a crushing impact on many aspects of patients’ lives and healthcare outcomes. Potential solutions come and go. Unfortunately, one remedy to alleviate patient costs recently failed. The Biden Administration fell short of instituting promised regulations surrounding patient protections against insurers abusing copay assistance programs.[1]

CMS Proposed Rule
Photo Source: Lifepoint Health

The 2026 Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters (NBPP) proposed rule was posted to the Federal Register on October 10th.[1] This rule addresses many things, including the operations of insurance plans. The executive summary states explicitly, “Our goal with these proposed requirements is providing quality, affordable coverage to consumers while minimizing administrative burden and ensuring program integrity. The changes proposed in this rule are also intended to help advance health equity, mitigate health disparities, and alleviate discrimination.”[1] However, the proposed rule lacks promised provisions that would have closed essential health benefits loopholes and shielded patients from adverse cost-sharing activities by insurers. In the NBPP, insurers won and patients lost.

This is a fight that many advocates felt had already been won, thanks to the combined efforts of the HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute, Diabetes Leadership Council and the Diabetes Patient Advocacy Coalition. In September of 2023, a federal court struck down a previous federal rule issued under the Trump Administration that allowed insurance companies to use copay accumulators and maximizers, which allowed them to take advantage of manufacturer copay assistance programs to the detriment of patients.[2] This ruling meant that insurers had to follow previous 2020 federal guidelines that prohibited the usage of copay accumulator practices except with regard to brand name drugs that have generic equivalents if allowed by state law.[3]

The court remanded authority back to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS), meaning the federal government needed to issue new regulations. The government previously in November 2023 stated in a brief that it would issue new rules directly addressing the prohibition of copay accumulator practices.[4] Yet, it has not, and the 2026 NBPP does not do that. As of January 2024, 19 states have passed legislation that bans or restricts accumulators in individual or small-group health plans.[5] That leaves patients in many states unprotected without federal regulation that explicitly bans copay accumulator practices. Without protection, patients are still victim to insurers using copay accumulators, maximizers, and even alternative funding programs.

The 2026 NBPP also does not include a provision to close an essential health benefits loophole insurers, and PBMs are taking advantage of it. Essential health benefits (EHB) are categories of services the Affordable Care Act (ACA) states insurance plans must cover.[6] One of those categories is prescription drugs. The ACA provides cost-sharing limits on EHBs. What is happening is that PBMs are investigating which drugs have high-cost thresholds or those for which manufacturer copay assistance programs are available. They subsequently identify those drugs as ‘non-essential health benefit’ drugs, removing their shield of protection. That designation enables them to siphon all of the manufacturer copay assistance funds to themselves without applying it to patients' deductibles and other cost-sharing. A 2025 NBPP rule closed this loophole for individual and small group markets but is still open for large group and self-funded plans. The 2026 NBPP does not bring the federal government’s promise to close the loophole to fruition.

Patient at Rx Counter unable to pay for her medications
Photo Source: Chronic Disease Coalition

Copay accumulators, maximizers, and alternative funding programs increase patients’ financial burden while lowering costs and increasing profits for insurance plan sponsors and other vendors. Copay accumulators accept manufacturer copay assistance funds up to the limits of patients’ insurance deductibles while not counting it towards patients’ out-of-pocket contributions towards their deductible.[5] Adam J. Fein, Ph.D. with the Drug Channels Institute, summarized, "Benefit designs have been shifting drug costs to patients, some of whom are now responsible for a much greater share of their prescription costs. These out-of-pocket expenses can be quite high, especially for more expensive specialty drugs when patients face coinsurance amounts and payment in the deductible coverage phase."[5] Thus, patients still have to meet their out-of-pocket contributions even after they have already been met by the copay assistance program. The insurance plan is effectively being paid twice, known as ‘double dipping.’

Copay maximizers are more nefarious because they drain a disproportionate share of manufacturer assistance funding.[5] Here, the plans set a patient’s out-of-pocket obligation to match the maximum value of support the copay assistance program provides. Thus, even if a deductible is $5,000, a patient’s out-of-pocket obligation could be set to $20,000 if that was the maximum use case of a particular copay assistance program. Patients incur very low out-of-pocket costs, but funding that could be stretched to help more patients is drained into industry coffers.

Alternative funding programs are the newest development in violating patient protections. Here, plans eliminate coverage entirely for specialty or costly drugs, thus leaving patients with the plans effectively uninsured.[5] Then, the patients are made to apply for patient assistance programs, which pay the entire list price for the drug. Patients incur minimal costs. However, plan sponsors and other vendors are paid the entire list cost value, which reduces their plan expenses but is a significant and improper financial depletion of assistance funds.[5] Additionally, there are delays involved in patients applying for these programs, and some are denied. Delays and denials are unnecessary barriers to patient access to medication that should be essential health benefits.

Medical debt
Photo Source: First Federal Credit Control

Since the EHB loophole remains open for large group and self-funded plans, masses of patients are left unprotected. It is not enough for the federal government to acknowledge a problem. Effective remedy requires acknowledgment of a problem, specific delineation of a solution, followed by enforcement of the solution. It is likely this loophole will only exacerbate the growing problem with medical debt.

Carl Schmid, executive director of the HIV + Hepatitis Policy Institute, encapsulates the situation perfectly, stating, “Every day these rules are delayed is another day that insurers and PBMs are pocketing billions of dollars meant for patients who are struggling to afford their drugs. Coming from an administration that prides itself on supporting patients and lowering their prescription drug costs, this is a huge disappointment. While they have gone on record that they will issue these rules, the clock is ticking, and there isn’t much time left.”[7]

[1] National Archives and Records Administration. (2024, October 10). Proposed Rule: Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2026; and Basic Health Program. Retrieved from https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2024/10/10/2024-23103/patient-protection-and-affordable-care-act-hhs-notice-of-benefit-and-payment-parameters-for-2026-and

[2] United States District Court. (2023, September 29). Memorandum Opinion. Retrieved from https://hivhep.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/HIV-Hepatitis-Policy-Institute-v.-HHS-DDC-opinion.pdf

[3] HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute. (2023, October 2). Court Strikes Down HHS Rule that Allowed Insurers to Not Count Copay Assistance. Retrieved from https://hivhep.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/copay-accumulator-court-decision-press-release-10.2.23.pdf

[4] United States District Court. (2023, November 27). Defendant's Conditional Motion to Clarify Scope of Court's Order. Retrieved from https://hivhep.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/govt-clarification-request.pdf

[5] Fein, A. (2024, February 14). Copay Accumulator and Maximizer Update: Adoption Expands as Legal Barriers Grow. Retrieved from https://www.drugchannels.net/2024/02/copay-accumulator-and-maximizer-update.html

[6] HealthCare.Gov. (2024). Essential Health Benefits. Retrieved from https://www.healthcare.gov/glossary/essential-health-benefits/#:~:text=A%20set%20of%2010%20categories,offers%20when%20you%20compare%20plans

[7] HIV+Hepatitis Policy Institute. (2024, October 4). Biden-Harris Administration Sides with Insurers & Fails to Take Steps to Lower Patient Costs for Prescription Drugs. Retrieved from https://hivhep.org/press-releases/biden-harris-administration-sides-with-insurers-fails-to-take-steps-to-lower-patient-costs-for-prescription-drugs/

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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