2012
DOI: 10.1111/1475-6773.12022
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Association of Medicare Part D Medication Out‐of‐Pocket Costs with Utilization of Statin Medications

Abstract: Objectives. To examine the association between statin out-of-pocket (OOP) costs and utilization among the Medicare Part D population. Data Sources/Study Setting. 2006-2008 administrative claims and enrollment data for the 5 percent Medicare sample. Study Design. Sample included 346,583 beneficiary-year observations of statin users enrolled in stand-alone prescription drug plans, excluding low-income subsidy recipients. We estimated the association between a plan's OOP statin costs and statin utilization using … Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Consistent with prior research (Karaca-Mandic et al, 2012a; Karaca-Mandic et al, 2012b, Karaca-Mandic et al, 2010; Goldman et al, 2004), plan OOP drug costs were computed for each beneficiary not receiving any low-income-subsidy (LIS) by calculating the average monthly OOP cost for a representative, fixed basket of oral osteoporosis drugs separately for 2007 and 2008 (Karaca-Mandic et al, 2012a; Karaca-Mandic et al, 2012b, Karaca-Mandic et al, 2010). The Part D Denominator Files, Prescription Drug Event Files, and Plan Characteristics Files allowed us to identify beneficiaries’ enrollment in specific drug plans, their initiation of oral osteoporosis medications, and their plan’s cost-sharing information during the pre-initial coverage limit (pre-ICL) and donut (gap) phases respectively.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Consistent with prior research (Karaca-Mandic et al, 2012a; Karaca-Mandic et al, 2012b, Karaca-Mandic et al, 2010; Goldman et al, 2004), plan OOP drug costs were computed for each beneficiary not receiving any low-income-subsidy (LIS) by calculating the average monthly OOP cost for a representative, fixed basket of oral osteoporosis drugs separately for 2007 and 2008 (Karaca-Mandic et al, 2012a; Karaca-Mandic et al, 2012b, Karaca-Mandic et al, 2010). The Part D Denominator Files, Prescription Drug Event Files, and Plan Characteristics Files allowed us to identify beneficiaries’ enrollment in specific drug plans, their initiation of oral osteoporosis medications, and their plan’s cost-sharing information during the pre-initial coverage limit (pre-ICL) and donut (gap) phases respectively.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among patients who start medication therapy, low adherence rates and high discontinuation rates are common (Brookhart et al, 2007; Weycker et al, 2006; Solomon et al, 2005). In general, higher pharmacy cost sharing is associated with the use of fewer medications especially among older adults (Harris, Stergachis, & Reid, 1990; Smith, 1993; Lillard, Rogowski, & Kington, 1999; Joyce, Escarce, Solomon, & Goldman, 2002; Goldman et al, 2004; Goldman, Joyce, & Zheng, 2007; Karaca-Mandic, Swenson, Abraham, & Kane, 2012a). While Medicare Part D has increased beneficiaries’ access to prescription drugs (Licthenberg & Sun, 2007), there are significant differences in drug plans’ cost-sharing (Karaca-Mandic et al, 2012a), tiered formulary structures (Hoadley, Hargrave, Merrell, Cubanski, & Neuman, 2007), number of covered drugs (Hoadley, Hargrave, Merrell, Cubanski, & Neuman, 2008), and provision of gap coverage (Hoadley, Cubanski, Hargrave, Summer, & Neuman, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…; Karaca‐Mandic et al. ; Rezayatmand, Pavlova, and Groot ), individual‐level characteristics including demographic, socioeconomic, and psychological factors (Cummings et al. ; Lewey et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Past research has examined the challenges of medication adherence across numerous contexts, including specific chronic diseases (Cramer 2004), multiple chronic conditions (Williams, Manias, and Walker 2008), and cost-and medication-related factors (Claxton, Cramer, and Pierce 2001;Gellad, Grenard, and Marcum 2011). Researchers have documented the influence of several factors on medication adherence, such as higher cost sharing and OOP expenses (Leibowitz, Manning, and Newhouse 1985;Joyce et al 2002;Goldman, Joyce, and Karaca-Mandic 2006;Goldman, Joyce, and Zheng 2007;Gibson et al 2010;Karaca-Mandic et al 2012;Rezayatmand, Pavlova, and Groot 2013), individual-level characteristics including demographic, socioeconomic, and psychological factors (Cummings et al 1982;Lewey et al 2013;Rolnick et al 2013), and health care system factors (Schmittdiel et al 2011). Although scholars have synthesized findings using meta-analyses, there remains a lack of consensus across the factors heavily influencing medication adherence (Eaddy et al 2012;Conn et al 2014;Murphy et al 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%