Newswise August 22, 2016 — People who gained health coverage
following the implementation of the federal Affordable Care Act's coverage
expansion sharply increased their use of prescription drugs, while their
out-of-pocket spending for medications dropped significantly, according to a
new RAND Corporation study.
Studying the experiences of nearly 7 million prescription drug
users nationally, researchers found that among those who gained private
insurance there was a 28 percent increase in prescriptions filled and a 29
percent reduction in out-of-pocket spending per prescription compared to the
previous year when they were uninsured.
Those gaining Medicaid — the government insurance program for
low-income people — filled 79 percent more prescriptions and paid 58 less
out-of-pocket per prescription after gaining coverage.
The effects were even larger for individuals with one of five
chronic conditions such as diabetes and asthma that were tracked by
researchers. The findings are published online by the journal Health
Affairs.
“This is strong evidence that the Affordable Care Act has
increased treatment rates while reducing out-of-pocket spending, particularly
for people with chronic health conditions,” said Andrew W.
Mulcahy, lead author of the study and a health policy researcher at
RAND, a nonprofit research organization.
“Improving the treatment of people with chronic conditions is
an important step in improving health outcomes.”
The study also tracked the drop in the uninsurance rate among
the study population, which was adjusted to be representative of all
prescription drug users nationally. Researchers found a 30 percent drop in the
number of uninsured from 2013 to 2014.
In addition, states that opted to expand Medicaid by early
2014 had significantly larger declines in uninsurance rates (39 percent) when
compared to states that had not (23 percent).
There is little research on the change in health care
utilization caused by the ACA. RAND researchers examined changes in
prescription use over a three-year period by analyzing prescription
transactions for nearly 7 million individuals who had purchased medication from
a retail pharmacy in January 2012 prior to the coverage expansion.
Researchers developed methods to assign individuals to
insurance status categories by reviewing whether they paid for prescriptions
with cash or using insurance coverage. Individuals' prescription purchase
patterns were tracked from before the coverage expansion in 2013 through the
end of 2014, after the ACA coverage expansion.
People who had one of five chronic condition categories
studied — diabetes, high cholesterol, anxiety or depression, asthma or chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease, and hormone therapy for breast cancer — sharply
increased the number of prescriptions filled after gaining coverage, but had
lower annual out-of-pocket expenses.
For example, individuals with high cholesterol who gained
private coverage had $200 less in annual out-of-pocket spending while those
newly covered under Medicaid had $359 less in out-of-pocket spending.
Support for the study was provided by the Department of Health
and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation. Other authors of the study are Christine
Eibner of RAND and Kenneth Finegold of the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation.
RAND
Health is the nation's largest independent health policy
research program, with a broad research portfolio that focuses on population
health, health care costs, quality and public health systems, among other
topics.
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