The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Some seniors’ drug costs to rise by hundreds of dollars

2020 increase stems from expiring part of Affordable Care Act.

- By John Tozzi The New York Times reports were used in this article.

Senior citizens with high prescripti­on drug costs are facing hundreds of dollars in additional expenses next year, according to a new analysis of Medicare’s drug program by a nonprofit research group.

Medicare’s drug benefit, known as Part D, is complicate­d. Patients in the program have a deductible where they must pay 100% of the cost: $435 in 2020, according to the analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation. After that, they pay a quarter of the costs until they reach the threshold for catastroph­ic coverage, when richer benefits kick in.

Next year, the catastroph­ic coverage threshold will go up by $1,250 — meaning people on brand-name drugs will pay about $400 more a year out-of-pocket, according to the analysis. People taking generics will pay even more.

Medicare enrollment season starts today and runs through Dec. 7. During this period, Medicare enrollees can switch between original fee-for-service Medicare and Medicare Advantage, the all-in-one managed care alternativ­e to the traditiona­l program.

High drug costs are a source of discontent among voters. Vying for 2020 voters, the Trump administra­tion has boasted about its efforts to get pharmaceut­ical companies to lower list prices for medication­s, while ire at drugmakers and insurers has animated Democratic calls for a broader health-care overhaul.

Next year’s rising costs stem from an expiring part of the Affordable Care Act, which temporaril­y tamped down increases in the catastroph­ic coverage threshold.

Medicare Part D covers about 44 million Americans on the federal health program for the elderly and disabled. Administer­ed by private insurers, the program distribute­s the cost of medication­s among enrollees, health plans, drugmakers and the government. Low-income people in the program get subsidies to help with costs.

In 2017, 4.9 million people had drug spending and incomes high enough that they either entered the coverage gap or went all the way through it, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Above the catastroph­ic coverage level, seniors are on the hook for 5% of medication costs, with no upper limit.

Various legislativ­e proposals would cap total out-ofpocket costs for the Medicare drug benefit. A bill supported by Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi would limit seniors’ exposure to $2,000, while a proposal advanced by the Republican-controlled Senate Finance Committee would set the limit at $3,200. The Trump administra­tion has also proposed insulating seniors from cost-sharing after they reach the catastroph­ic threshold.

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