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New
Regulation Limit the Prices Paid for Doctor-Dispensed RX and
Reduce Costs, But Unlikely to Reduce Patient Access
CAMBRIDGE, MA,
July 19, 2012—
As states around the country debate or adopt
new regulations to limit the
prices paid for doctor-dispensed drugs, a new study
from the Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI) says
the regulations reduce costs, but are unlikely to reduce
patient access to pharmaceuticals. The study examines the
results of a change to the California statute that has
become a model for many other states. Critics of the
regulations express concern that many patients will not get
needed medications if they do not get them at the
physicians’ offices.
The study, Physician Dispensing in
Workers’ Compensation, examines physician dispensing
before and after a 2007 change in the California statute
that governed the prices paid to
physician-dispensers. Prior to the statutory change,
physicians typically charged much higher prices than
pharmacies for the same medication. For example, for the
most common drug, Vicodin®, physicians were paid $0.85 per
pill compared to $0.43 for pharmacies—nearly double the
price. After the reforms, physicians were paid $0.52 per
pill compared to $0.48 for pharmacies. After the law
changed, physicians were paid prices for prescription
medications that were similar to those paid to
pharmacies for the same medication.
“There is a great discrepancy between what
doctors and pharmacies charge for dispensing the same drug,”
observed Dr. Richard Victor, WCRI’s Executive Director. “One
question for policymakers is whether the large price
difference paid when physicians dispense is justified by the
benefits of physician dispensing. Policymakers can learn
from the California experience.”
One of the chief concerns expressed by
supporters of physician dispensing (in California and in
other states) was that doctors would stop dispensing needed
prescriptions when it became less profitable. However, the
California post-reform experience shows that physicians
continued to dispense prescriptions, even when the prices
paid were lower. Before the reforms, 55 percent of all
prescriptions were dispensed at physician offices. Three
years after the reforms, 53 percent of all prescriptions in
California were physician-dispensed so patients had similar
access to physician dispensed medications, but at a much
lower cost.
The report also examines several other
concerns expressed by supporters of physician dispensing.
One is that spending on prescription drugs might increase if
a California-type reform were adopted. They argue that
physicians almost always dispense less expensive generic
versions of drugs, while pharmacies dispense both brand
names and generics. The study found that for the specific
medications commonly dispensed by physicians, generics were
almost always dispensed by both physicians and pharmacies.
In many states, when generic drugs were dispensed,
physician-dispensers were paid much higher prices per pill
than pharmacies for the same prescription.
The data used for this study include nearly
5.7 million prescriptions paid under workers’ compensation
for approximately 758,000 claims from 23 states over a
period from 2007/2008 to 2010/2011. The 23 states in this
study represent over two-thirds of the workers’ compensation
benefits paid in the United States. These states include
Arkansas, Arizona, California, Connecticut, Florida,
Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maryland,
Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York,
North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, Virginia, and Wisconsin. Several of the states in
this study (Arizona, California, Georgia, South Carolina,
and Tennessee) recently adopted reforms aimed at reducing
the prices of physician-dispensed drugs.
About WCRI:
The Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI) is an
independent, not-for-profit research organization based in
Cambridge, MA. WCRI is a recognized leader in providing
objective, credible, and high-quality information about
public policy issues involving workers' compensation
systems. WCRI's members include employers; insurers;
governmental entities; managed care companies; health care
providers; insurance regulators; state labor organizations;
and state administrative agencies in the U.S., Canada,
Australia and New Zealand. |