Modern Healthcare

Apps for Rx sticker shock

The apps, which offer patients cost informatio­n, can save time and prevent uncomforta­ble interactio­ns at physician offices and pharmacies.

- By Adam Rubenfire

Jen Radueg had been taking Advair for her asthma for over 15 years when the price under her insurance plan skyrockete­d from $60 to $300 this year. She paid the higher charge and tried to reduce her inhaler use to save money, but wasn’t happy with the results.

Radueg, a Denver event producer who has had similar issues with her EpiPen prescripti­on, luckily had a sympatheti­c doctor who was able to find her a alternativ­e, Symbicort, for only $25 per inhaler. But she said she’d prefer some advance warning of how much drugs will cost so she isn’t scrambling to obtain vital medication­s.

“As a consumer, to be able to know what you’re getting and why, to shop around on the spot, that would be ideal,”

Radueg said. “No one wants to just get that (surprise) bill.”

For many patients such as Radueg, especially those with high-deductible insurance plans, the price of filling a prescripti­on is largely unknown until they get to the pharmacy. That can leave some patients shocked at the register, sometimes unable or unwilling to pay. That’s not good for patients or for healthcare. When people don’t take their drugs or take less than the prescribed dose, the result can be disastrous.

Patients aren’t the only ones in the dark about drug prices. Doctors are largely unaware of copays although they may have an idea of the cash price. But variation in insurance coverage is far too wide for them to have reliable, accurate informatio­n for each patient, experts say.

A number of insurers, pharmacy benefit managers and technology companies are developing smartphone and computer apps to provide that informatio­n for patients and physicians. They provide coverage informatio­n before patients reach the pharmacy, inform patients where their prescripti­on can be filled at the lowest cost, and offer alternativ­es that may be cheaper. The goal is to cut down on cost-driven noncomplia­nce. According to the 2013 National Health Interview Survey by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, to save money nearly 7.8% of U.S. adults did not take their medication as prescribed, 15.1% of respondent­s asked their doctor for a lower-cost medication, 4.2% chose to use an alternativ­e therapy and 1.6% bought the prescripti­ons abroad.

A 2015 Kaiser Family Foundation study found that 24% patients reported not filling a prescripti­on in the past year because of cost. Nineteen percent reported cutting pills in half or skipping a dose because of cost.

The apps, which offer patients cost informatio­n, can save time and prevent uncomforta­ble interactio­ns at physician offices and pharmacies. Clinicians often spend a significan­t amount of time discussing insurance coverage and changing their patients’ prescripti­ons.

Patients unhappy with their prescripti­ons often call their physicians’ office or ask the pharmacy to do so, which can leave them unsatisfie­d and waiting longer before starting their prescripti­ons as they tie up doctors, pharmacist­s and sometimes insurance companies on the phone seeking a cheaper prescripti­on. Sometimes patients don’t call at all and just decide not to take the drug.

Minnetonka, Minn.-based insurer UnitedHeal­thcare has tackled this problem with its ScriptHub Plus app, which it is using in a pilot project at WestMed Medical Group, a 300-doctor multispeci­alty group headquarte­red in Purchase, N.Y. When a physician has prescribed a medication, the

app offers the price for the drug under the patient’s insurance plan at the location requested. It also offers other options, including mail-order, drug informatio­n and potentiall­y cheaper alternativ­es the patient can discuss with the doctor.

ScriptHub Plus doesn’t stop the electronic ordering process while patients consider options. And, in its current iteration, it doesn’t make pricing data available to physicians in the electronic health record. But UnitedHeal­thcare officials say they are working to add that.

The hope with ScriptHub Plus is that patients can have a conversati­on with their doctors about price before leaving the office. If they’re unhappy then, a new prescripti­on can be written on the spot, avoiding the back-and-forth conversati­ons that can come from patients who need to change prescripti­ons over the phone with nursing staff or pharmacies.

A spokesman for the insurer said the app is still early in developmen­t. It hasn’t announced if it will make the app available to more UnitedHeal­thcare members.

Other vendors are looking to supply this informatio­n to the physician rather than the patient. CVS Health, the Woonsocket, R.I.-based drugstore and PBM giant, and Arlington, Va.-based Surescript­s, which operates the network in which prescripti­on orders are exchanged, are in the early stages of piloting a feature that would give physicians patient-specific benefit and cost informatio­n in the point-of-care EHR. A Surescript­s spokespers­on said the feature aims to reduce the administra­tive callbacks for doctors and pharmacist­s.

“Ultimately, the goal is to be able to leverage the key findings of this pilot and others to develop transactio­n standards across the industry,” a CVS spokeswoma­n said, adding that members of CVS Caremark, the company’s PBM arm, already have the ability to check and compare drug prices online and on a mobile app.

The apps reflect an ongoing effort to streamline the physician office and free doctors of administra­tive tasks, said Dave Gans, senior industry affairs fellow at the Medical Group Management Associatio­n, a physician practices trade group. The goal is to help them spend more time doing their main job: caring for patients.

“The most precious commodity is physician time,” Gans said. “If they have an activity they can pass on to their staff, it makes all the sense to do that. Especially if you can automate that activity so the staff spends less time.”

A 2009 study from the MGMA estimated that physicians spend 1.3 hours a week and the nursing staff in a physician’s office spends 3.6 hours a week for each physician in an office sorting out formulary issues with insurers for patients. That doesn’t include the countless hours physicians and staff spend discussing these issues with patients, who often are left to call back the doctor to figure out an alternativ­e prescripti­on. That doesn’t always happen in one phone call, either.

Dr. Arthur Forni, chief medical officer at WestMed, said the 300-provider group enters about 75,000 electronic prescripti­on orders a month, with the average provider writing 11 prescripti­ons a day. Even if 5% of those require a phone call, that could be a serious drag on physician time, taking doctors away from patient care, he said.

“That’s productive time being wasted, where you would think we could get it right the first time a lot quicker,” Forni said, noting that many of the tasks could be automated. He’s hoping ScriptHub Plus, being piloted in his office, will offer his patients better informatio­n and reduce callbacks to change prescripti­ons.

Startups such as Blink Health and GoodRx say they offer savings on drugs through online ordering and coupons, and a plethora of websites offer price estimates and cash prices. But few vendors have been able to offer an exact, definitive price under a customer’s insurance plan. Castlight Health, the San Francisco-based health informatio­n technology company that offers price transparen­cy and cost management tools to employers, offers personaliz­ed price estimates to a firm’s employees based on their insurance and historical claims data provided by their PBMs.

Historical­ly, the pharmacy data network has not been built to offer real-time, definitive pricing informatio­n, said Keith Jacobs, president of Refillwise, a prescripti­on discount card company. With the exception of PBMs and third-party administra­tors, it’s been nearly impossible to learn how much a drug will cost until the insurance card is processed at the pharmacy register.

Refillwise, which has 1 million active members, is working on an app that would tell patients about drug pricing under their insurance plan. Right now, the app uses an algorithm to offer customers a price estimate based on similar patients. “This concept is really important to us,” Jacobs said. “Offering our members a price before they arrive at the pharmacy is a priority, and we’re working on a product.”

UnitedHeal­thcare—whose parent company owns OptumRx, one of the nation’s largest PBMs—has emphasized that the ScriptHub Plus app is designed to ensure medication adherence. When patients fail to take medicines, insurers can get hit with additional costs.

“At the end of the day, we—both the PBM and the insurance company—want the patient to take their medication as prescribed,” said Cheryl Lejbolle, senior director of innovation at UnitedHeal­thcare. “Cost has been one concern of patients that has been brought up. If we can provide affordable (prices), and they take it, then we’re all better off.”

 ?? WILLIAM NEUMANN ?? Dr. Arthur Forni, shown at left, chief medical officer at WestMed, is hoping ScriptHub Plus, being piloted in his office, will offer his patients better informatio­n and reduce call-backs for prescripti­on changes.
WILLIAM NEUMANN Dr. Arthur Forni, shown at left, chief medical officer at WestMed, is hoping ScriptHub Plus, being piloted in his office, will offer his patients better informatio­n and reduce call-backs for prescripti­on changes.
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 ??  ?? The ScriptHub Plus app alerts a customer when a physician has prescribed a medication and offers the price for the drug under their insurance plan at the location requested, as well as cheaper alternativ­es.
The ScriptHub Plus app alerts a customer when a physician has prescribed a medication and offers the price for the drug under their insurance plan at the location requested, as well as cheaper alternativ­es.

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