“…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). Concerns have also been raised about the adverse effect of the donut hole on medication use (Zhang, Donohue, Newhouse, & Lave, 2009; Raebel, Delate, Ellis, & Bayliss, 2008; Fung et al, 2010; Hsu et al, 2008; Gu, Zeng, Patel, & Tripoli, 2010; Hales & George, 2010).…”