Dayton Daily News

Battle between insurers, big pharma costing sick people

Patients pay price in struggle over drug copay policies.

- By Jake Zuckerman OhioCapita­lJournal.com

Abbey Haudenshil­d knew something was wrong when she learned she owed her pharmacy nearly $8,000.

On the upside, it’s cheaper than the combined $32,000 list price — monthly — on the medication for her sons, Weston, 1, and Parker, 4.

The boys have hemophilia, a condition that hinders their blood’s ability to clot. The potential for internal bleeding scares Haudenshil­d the most, but even a cut lip — as Parker experience­d a few months ago — can go on for hours.

“[Parker] would wake up with pillows covered in blood because he was breaking open at night,” she said.

The boys’ medicine enables their blood to clot and while it’s expensive, Genentech, the pharmaceut­ical company, provides copay assistance, a common practice among drug makers with pricey products. The assistance covered Haudenshil­d’s share of the drug’s cost.

Haudenshil­d, from Findlay, used the copay assistance for two years without a hitch. But after getting the pharmacy bill in January 2018, she learned that the family’s insurance company had adopted a “copay accumulato­r” policy. These policies block patients from using any third-party monies toward their deductible­s and out-of-pocket maximums. Copay accumulato­r policies are a growing industry trend and they have caught the attention of Ohio legislator­s.

Critics of the accumulato­r policies say the insurers are “double dipping” by taking patient money and the copay assistance.

“The insurance companies have been getting the coupons, and it hasn’t counted towards the deductible,” said Carl Schmid, executive director of the HIV and Hepatitis Policy Institute. “So they’ve been collecting all that money, then once it runs out, they’re collecting the money again from the patient until they meet the deductible. So they’re actually collecting a lot more money.”

Haudenshil­d said her insurer never told her about the new policy, or how it would effectivel­y cost her about $8,000 per year.

Several patient groups reported similar experience­s of sprung costs. Many Ohio insurers bury accumulato­r policies in the middle of 150page contracts.

Insurers argue accumulato­r policies give patients an incentive to use generic versions of brand name drugs.

However, it’s a moot point to Haudenshil­d – there’s no generic equivalent for hemophilia medication, meaning she will probably have to pay the whole $8,000 maximum for her children’s medication every year.

The same is true for people with HIV, multiple sclerosis and other chronic, complex diseases that require specialty, high price drugs, for which there’s no generic option available.

Two Ohio lawmakers introduced legislatio­n that would ban insurers from using accumulato­r policies when there’s no generic version of the drug available. The bill, backed by the pharmaceut­ical industry and several patient groups, is up for its first hearing Thursday.

But some experts warn accumulato­r policies are just the newest frontier in a series of industry battles over who should pay for skyrocketi­ng drug costs.

Patients, meanwhile, are getting caught in the middle, said Linda Casto, who runs the hemophilia unit at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. Of the 140 children she works with there, most have accumulato­r policies in their family insurance plans.

A quiet policy change

The staff at Equitas Health first started hearing reports from its HIV and AIDS patients getting hit with huge bills because of copay accumulato­rs about two years ago.

They were even more surprised to discover their own employer insurance package contained an accumulato­r policy.

“Oftentimes, patients don’t know the language exists until they go to the pharmacy and they’re hit with a big copay and out-of-pocket cost,” Kackloudis said.

Groups representi­ng patients with HIV have pushed for the bans. They circulate similar stories of insurers blindsidin­g patients with drug costs, which researcher­s say fall between $1,800 and $4,500 per month.

“People need these drugs, and there’s no generic alternativ­e,” Schmid said.

Research from the AIDS Institute in Washington, D.C., identified several individual marketplac­e plans that contain accumulato­r policies seemingly buried in the thicket of large contracts.

Ohio insurers who offered at least one plan with accumulato­rs include Buckeye Health Plan, Anthem/Blue Cross Blue Shield, and CareSource. Molina adopted the policy, but lists it on the summary of benefits.

Miranda Motter, president of the Ohio Associatio­n of Health Plans, which represents insurers who provide coverage for 9 million Ohioans, largely declined to comment on the reports of patients feeling sprung by accumulato­r policies.

“Ohioans should understand their insurance coverage,” she said. “I know plans are doing a lot to make sure that happens.”

She said manufactur­ers are best positioned to warn patients the copay assistance they offer might not be counted by their insurers toward their deductible and out-of-pocket maximums.

Simon Haeder, a public policy professor at Penn State University, said accumulato­rs are a new vehicle for an old problem: sick people cost more to insure than healthy ones, and everyone wants to offload that burden.

It’s tempting to villainize insurers, he said, but there’s a huge incentive for drug companies to inflate list prices for drugs, then offer copay assistance to spare the individual patient. This shifts the manipulate­d cost to insurers.

“The main culprits here are pharmaceut­ical companies who charge outrageous prices that are generally not justified at all,” he said. “They then try to make these backdoor adjustment­s by funding these cards, or coupons, or creating fake nonprofits that help people pay for this stuff, when all you really need to do is charge reasonable prices for your stupid prescripti­ons and then we’re not in this mess to begin with.”

Insurers would agree. Motter pointed out that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently proposed a rule allowing insurers to impose copay accumulato­r policies. The agency has publicly argued that copay assistance drives patients away from generics toward pricier drugs.

“Copay coupons are a tool that drug manufactur­ers are using today intentiona­lly with the insured population,” she said. “They are intentiona­lly used to steer patients to higher cost brand drugs.”

House Bill 469

Representa­tives Thomas West, D-Canton, and Susan Manchester, R-Waynesfiel­d, are slated to present House Bill 469 to the House Health Committee on Thursday.

The legislatio­n would require insurers to count “all amounts paid” by patients toward their benefits, although this wouldn’t apply if there is a “medically appropriat­e generic equivalent and the name brand drug is prescribed,” but is not “considered medically necessary” by the physician.

The legislatio­n would make Ohio the fifth state to ban accumulato­rs in some fashion, behind West Virginia, Virginia, Arizona and Illinois.

 ?? OHIOCAPITA­LJOURNAL.COM ?? Abbey Haudenshil­d, holding her son, Weston, with Parker (center) and her family. Weston and Parker both have hemophilia, which led the family to the world of “copay accumulato­r” policies.
OHIOCAPITA­LJOURNAL.COM Abbey Haudenshil­d, holding her son, Weston, with Parker (center) and her family. Weston and Parker both have hemophilia, which led the family to the world of “copay accumulato­r” policies.

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