Starkville Daily News

Rising drug costs keep Mississipp­ians from necessary mental health treatment

- By JULIE WHITEHEAD

Magdalin Fulce used to take three different prescripti­on medication­s for anxiety and depression.

She doesn’t take any now, not because she doesn’t need it, but because she can’t afford it.

Fulce, 24, of Weir lost the Medicaid covering her prescripti­ons on her 19th birthday. She then signed up for Ambetter through the Affordable Care Act, which again provided coverage. But when she turned in her earnings as a self-employed hairdresse­r in 2019, she was unable to afford the premiums any longer.

At times, she was paying as much as $100 or $200 for a month’s supply of Valium. So, she stopped taking it.

Fulce got her prescripti­ons through her primary care physician but believes she needs a psychiatri­st’s evaluation. “But I don’t have $400 for a psych workup,” Fulce said.

She has struggled since, she said. “I’ll go three months doing well then maybe three months downhill.”

Four months ago, she overdosed on Klonopin, landing in the mental ward at St. Dominic’s Hospital in Jackson.

Many families stop buying these types of prescripti­on drugs because of the high cost, said Tandi Karol Weaver Hawthorne, an educator and mental health advocate in Choctaw County.

When her late husband, David, was diagnosed with schizoaffe­ctive disorder in 1996, she said they paid up to $1,000 a month for his medication. If not for a combinatio­n of Medicare, a private drug plan and extended family support, they couldn’t have afforded his medication, she said. Magellan Health Service, a national leader in behavioral health care management, found that mental health drugs now account for a fourth of all pharmacy spending by private insurance and about a third of pharmacy spending by public payers such as Medicaid.

And that number is expected to increase 60% over the coming decade, the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services predicted.

In Mississipp­i, approximat­ely 77,000 Medicaid beneficiar­ies had behavioral health diagnoses (a number that includes children but not infants) in state fiscal year 2019, according to Matt Westerfiel­d, communicat­ion director for Medicaid. The three primary diagnoses are schizophre­nia, bipolar disorder, and depression. “The vast majority of that 77,000 – if not all of them – would be on some form of mental health medication,” Westerfiel­d said.

Not having regular access to medication causes relapse

Availabili­ty of medication plays a major role in maintainin­g mental health, according to the study by the patient advocacy group Mental Health America.

“Sixty-nine percent of patients with medication access problems had adverse events compared to 40% for patients with no access problems,” according to Joyce West, director of the American Psychiatri­c Research Network.

Of patients with access problems, the studies found:

20% had emergency room visits

11% were hospitaliz­ed

23% had side effects significan­tly worsen-interferin­g with functionin­g and outweighin­g therapeuti­c benefits

22% had an increase in suicidal ideation or behavior.

15% had an increase in violent ideation or behavior.

3% became homeless for more than 48 hours.

Most patients look first to their insurance companies to provide prescripti­on coverage. Mississipp­i Insurance Department spokeswoma­n Beth Reiss said health insurance companies use lists to determine which drugs they will or won’t cover.

Blue Cross/blue Shield of Mississipp­i and United Healthcare did not respond to requests for informatio­n on how they construct these lists or the prior authorizat­ion process, which is how doctors attempt to convince the companies to cover the drugs not on their approved list.

Westerfiel­d said the cost of highpriced drugs shouldn’t affect those on Medicaid.

“For beneficiar­ies in regular feefor-service Medicaid, there is a $3 copay for any drug regardless of what medication is prescribed, and children, pregnant women and long-term care residents are exempt from that copay,” he said. “In Medicaid’s managed care program, two of the plans don’t charge beneficiar­ies a copay for medication­s, and the third plan charges a $1 copay.”

There is a limit, however, of how many prescripti­ons Medicaid patients can receive — six. Those under 21 are eligible for more if medication proves necessary.

Pharmacist­s are ‘a crucial part of the treatment team’

Pharmacist­s also offer solutions through generic medication­s as well as transporta­tion and delivery options, said Bob Lomenick, whose pharmacies in Oxford, Holly Springs, and Potts Camp treat more than 3,000 people. “A lot of people are on fixed incomes.”

He said that insurance companies are starting to realize that restrictin­g access to needed medication­s can be detrimenta­l in the long run. “Payers are finding out that patients that don’t take their medication­s correctly costs the system a lot of money,” Lomenick said.

New drugs are expensive, Lomenick said, noting that Latuda, a mood stabilizer and anti-psychotic, costs him $41 dollars a dose, while the popular ADHD drug Vyvance costs him $10 a dose. “Those ADD drugs are being used a ton these days—some justified, some not.”

Terence H. Brown, a pharmacist at GAC Community Pharmacy in Canton, said many manufactur­ers work with patient assistance programs, such as Rxassist, Rxhope and Goodrx.

Teresa Parker, compliance director for Region 7 Community Counseling in West Point, says that connecting clients with patient assistance programs is a part of their plans to aid patients in getting their psychiatri­c medication­s. “It used to take only five days to be approved,” she said. “Now it takes three months.”

Delays and costs leads some patients to choose pills for physical ailments over mental health medication, she said. “If you rely on a fixed income, any new medicine, even a $60 medicine addition, that money has to come from somewhere.”

Fulce said that something more needs to be done so that mental health patients like her don’t fall between the cracks. “For someone who’s never had a severe mental health issue, they don’t have any understand­ing of what this is like. It’s not making it day to day—it’s more like minute by minute.”

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