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Effect of Copayments on Drug Use in the Presence of Annual Payment Limits

Publication
Article
The American Journal of Managed CareJune 2007 - Part 2
Volume 13
Issue 6 - Pt 2

OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that deductibles (copayment combined with annual limits on outof- pocket payments) may reduce the effect of copayments on drug use for patients who expect to reach the annual limit, using as a natural experiment the introduction of copayments with an annual maximum to the seniors’ drug plan in Nova Scotia.

STUDY DESIGN: An interrupted time-series design estimated effects of the introduction of and subsequent increase in drug copayments on the use (vs nonuse) of medications and on the mean daily quantity of use among users by patients’ likelihood of exceeding the annual maximum copayment. Effects on the use of less essential medications (histamine2-receptor antagonists) and more essential medications (oral antihyperglycemic agents) were examined.

METHODS: Data were drug claims for beneficiaries 65 years and older from April 1, 1989, through September 30, 1992. Regression models (applied to person-month data) estimated effects of the policies on the use and quantity of medication use.

RESULTS: Copayments ($3 per prescription and 20% of the prescription cost) were associated with reductions in the quantity of medication use, ranging from 5% to 15%, but Only when the annual maximum copayment was unlikely to be reached. Introducing a 20% Copayment increased the percentage who reached the annual maximum, decreasing the proportion of patients who reduced their drug use.

CONCLUSION: Although copayment policies are associated with reductions in the use of essential and less essential medications, annual limits on total copayments paid will limit copayment effects to patients who are unlikely to reach the annual maximum copayment.

(Am J Manag Care. 2007;13(part 2):328-334)

Copayments are often combined with annual limits on out-of-pocket payments. It is hypothesized that this may reduce the effects of copayments on drug use for patients who expect to reach the annual limit. The introduction of copayments with an annual maximum to the seniors’ drug plan in Nova Scotia provided a setting to test this hypothesis.

Copayments reduced the quantity of medications used from 5% to 15%, but only when the annual maximum was unlikely to be reached.

Persons in lower-income neighborhoods were more likely to reach the annual maximum and were thus less likely to reduce their drug use in response to policies.

Cost-sharing strategies such as copayments (a fixed fee per prescription), coinsurance (a proportion of ingredient cost or dispensing fee), and charges that vary with the total number or cost of prescriptions filled (eg, deductibles and limits on total payouts) are widely used to control expenditure growth in drug plans. For most individuals, modest charges have a less than proportional effect on drug use, with larger effects on those who spend a larger share of their budgets on drugs, namely, the sick and the poor.1-5 Copayments reduce the use of essential and less essential drugs2,6-11 and may be associated with adverse health consequences.2,8,12,13

Copayment policies are commonly combined with annual maximums on out-of-pocket copayments14,15; however, little is known about how such deductibles may modify the effect of copayments on patient drug use.6,16 Ellis17 hypothesized that a forward-looking patient who expects to exceed the deductible would treat the marginal cost of all drugs used as $0. Moffit18 made similar observations. If this is correct, the combination of copayments (or coinsurance) with a deductible (eg, an annual maximum on the total amount of copayments paid) may modify the effect of copayment policies on patient drug use behavior and mediate the potential for adverse effects on patients.

This study examined the effect of introducing 2 types of copayment policies, fixed copayments and coinsurance (both referred to generally as copayments) on the use and quantity of use of prescription drugs in the presence of an annual maximum copayment. Consistent with Ellis,17 we hypothesized that effects of copayment policies on drug use would vary depending on patients' expectations of reaching the annual maximum copayment. For patients with a high expectation of exceeding the annual maximum copayment, the perceived marginal cost of a prescription would be $0, and they would not reduce their drug use as a result of the copayments. Conversely, patients who did not expect to exceed the annual maximum copayment would perceive marginal out-of-pocket costs and reduce their drug use. We also hypothesized that the use (vs nonuse) of drugs would be less affected by copayments than the quantity of medications used, because the latter is more controlled by the patient and the former is more controlled by the physician's decision to prescribe. Finally, we hypothesized that price sensitivity and policy effects would be greater for seniors living in lowerincome neighborhoods.

METHODS

Study Population and Setting

The primary data source was NSSPP drug claims. Records included patient identifier, date filled, type of medication, quantity, and days' supply. Drugs were coded using the World Health Organization anatomic therapeutic chemical classification and the drug identification numbers assigned by Health Canada. The NSSPP registry was used to identify subjects' periods of program enrollment (generally from the 65th birthday until death or migration out of the province) and place of residence (based on the full postal code). Data on mean household income by enumeration areas were obtained from the 1991 Census of Canada. The mean household income was linked to claims data by postal code.19

Study Design

Claims data were used to estimate beneficiaries' use of medications by month. An algorithm, described in detail elsewhere, 26 was used to estimate whether or not a patient used a medication in each month and, if so, the mean daily quantity used. The quantity of medications used was measured as the mean number of mean standardized daily doses (SDDs) used per day between prescription dates.26-28 The SDD is estimated directly from the NSSPP claims data and reflects the mean use patterns over time in the study population. The number of SDDs is the mean number of “typical†daily doses consumed per day and is similar to the defined daily dose used by the World Health Organization.29

To measure patients' likelihood of reaching the annual maximum copayment, we computed a variable to measure each patient's expectation to exceed the annual maximum copayment by the end of each yearly accounting period. Computed for each patient in each month, it is an estimate of the probability of exceeding $150 in copayments by the end of the annual accounting period. It was estimated based on medication use in the previous 3 months and on the total copayments accumulated from the start of the accounting period up to that month. It was set to 1.0 once the maximum was reached.

The mean annual household income for each senior's neighborhood of residence was assigned to 1 of 3 categories (<$30 000, $30 000-$50 000, and >$50 000). Region of residence was defined as Halifax versus all other urban areas in the province. Halifax is the largest metropolitan area in the province and includes the acute care hospitals and most specialists.

Statistical Analysis

Figure 1 shows how estimated changes in trend (ie, slope) in the odds of drug use associated with each policy change varied by expectation to exceed the annual maximum copayment. The change in trend is estimated as the relative odds of use under the new policy relative to the previous trend. For example, a relative odds of 0.97 indicates that the odds of use were 0.97 the level in the month following the policy than they would have been if previous trends had continued (ie, a shift in slope toward decreasing rates of use).

When the expectation to exceed was low (ie, close to 0), the introduction of a $3 per prescription copayment was associated with a shift in trend toward reduced odds of H2RA use (0.970 [95% confidence interval, 0.960-0.978]) and, to a much lesser degree, OHA use (0.990 [95% confidence interval, 0.984-0.996]). However, effects diminished as the expectation to exceed increased for H2RAs and for OHAs (P < .001 for both).

The effect of introducing a 20% copayment policy on a change in trend for those with a low expectation to exceed was insignificant for H2RAs (0.994 [95% confidence Interval, 0.985-1.003]) and was small and not in the expected direction for OHAs (1.011 [95% confidence interval, 1.005-1.017]). However, in the case of H2RAs, a strong interaction with expectation to exceed was observed (P < .009). A shift in trend to increasing odds of H2RA use was observed for those with high expectations of exceeding the maximum copayment but not for those with low expectations. The interaction of expectation to exceed with the use of OHAs was statistically nonsignificant (P = .18). Policy

Policy effects on the quantity of use of both drugs were strong and varied by expectation of exceeding the annual maximum copayment. Figure 2 and Figure 3 show how the estimated proportionate change in the mean SDD use associated with each of the 2 copayment policies varied by expectation of exceeding the annual maximum copayment. Change is expressed as a change in level relative to the previous policy period (ie, relative to no copayment for the $3 per prescription policy and relative to $3 per prescription for the 20% of cost copayment policy).

For patients with low expectation to exceed, both policies were associated with substantial and significant decreases in the mean quantity of medications used. For H2RAs (Figure 2), the $3 per prescription policy was associated with about a 5% decrease in the quantity used (P < .001), while the 20% coinsurance policy was associated with an additional 15% decrease in the quantity used (P < .001). Results for OHAs (Figure 3) were similar, although the reduction in the quantity of medications used associated with the 20% coinsurance policy was smaller than that for H2RAs.

For both study drugs, effects of both policies diminished as expectation to exceed increased (P < .001). At a higher expectation to exceed, no policy effect on the quantity of medication use was observed. This is consistent with the hypothesis of no reduction in medication use for persons who expect to exceed the annual maximum copayment. Policy effects on the quantity of drug use by expectation to exceed were not found to vary significantly by neighborhood income level.

Policy Effects on the Expectation of Reaching the Annual Maximum Copayment The shift from a $3 per prescription copayment to 20% coinsurance had countervailing effects. On the one hand, it resulted in additional declines in the quantity of medication use for persons with a low expectation to exceed the maximum copayment. On the other hand, it also increased dramatically the percentage of persons expected to exceed the maximum copayment (Table), reducing the percentage of patients affected by the policy. For example, based on the distribution of the expectation to exceed variable and our estimated effects on the quantity of use, about 65% of seniors would reduce their OHA use under the $3 copayment policy, but only about 33% of seniors would reduce their OHA use under the 20% coinsurance policy.

The data given in the Table also indicate that policy effects are indirectly associated with neighborhood income. Although policy effects did not vary by income group, persons inlower-income neighborhoods are more likely to reach the annual maximum copayment and are less likely to reduce their drug use in response to the policies.

DISCUSSION

This study exploited a unique opportunity to examine how patients changed their drug use in response to the introduction of 2 subsequent copayment policies in the presence of an annual maximum copayment. The use of individual-level population-based data enabled examination of how patients' responses to copayments varied by neighborhood income level and by their likelihood of exceeding the annual maximum copayment in out-of-pocket copayments. Validity was enhanced by the stability of the study population (little mobility) and by the lack of other policy changes or events likely to confound results. Although the policies were instituted in the 1990s, their effects on patient drug use behavior are salient and generalizable to the current policy environment in which copayments are often combined with annual out-ofpocket limits.6,14

Consistent with our hypothesis, the effect of copayments on patients' drug use varied by patients' likelihood of exceeding an annual maximum in copayments. We observed a “doseresponse†relationship; the policy effect on reductions in drug use diminished with increasing likelihood of exceeding the annual maximum copayment. Moreover, this dose-response relationship was replicated across 2 drug classes and across 2 types of copayment policies introduced in the same population at different points in time. Consistent with Ellis17 and Moffit,18 these results suggest that patients are forward thinking and perceive the marginal out-of-pocket cost as $0 if they expect that their total copayments will exceed an annual maximum. Conversely, patients who do not expect to exceed the annual maximum copayment perceive a marginal prescription cost as greater than $0 and tend to reduce medication use. Our results are also consistent with findings by Contoyannis et al4 that the elasticity of drug expenditures with respect to price is affected by deductibles. Lack of patient knowledge about drug costs under the coinsurance policy may introduce uncertainty in expectation of exceeding the maximum copayment, which may also mediate the effects we observed.32

A rival explanation for our results is that patients with a high expectation of exceeding the annual maximum copayment will tend to be taking more medications and may respond to copayments by reducing the use of medications with lower perceived utility. If so, the reduced policy effect with higher expectation to exceed may reflect greater opportunity to reduce the use of another medication instead of the study drug. Future studies should examine how price effects on use vary across types of medications used by a patient. Another possible explanation is that patients who are not price sensitive may be more likely to reach the annual maximum copayment.

Consistent with previous studies,2,7-12 we found that copayments affect the use of essential drugs (OHAs) and less essential drugs (H2RAs). Our study did not examine whether changes in drug use resulting from policy changes affected health outcomes; however, we expect that OHAs are likely vital among a higher percentage of patients than H2RAs and that there is more concern about reductions in their use. Recent studies2,8,12,13 provide some evidence to suggest that copayments are associated with negative health outcomes. Prudence suggests that policy makers should proceed on the basis that copayments and coinsurance can result in negative health outcomes.

Combining annual maximums on out-of-pocket payments with copayment policies may reduce the potential for negative health outcomes and for inequities from copayment policies. Selecting a combination of copayments and annual maximums may reduce the potential for deleterious policy effects among vulnerable patients, such as those with chronic and multiple health problems or those requiring multiple or more expensive medications. Low-income seniors will be more represented in this group. However, there is also a “moral hazard†that annual maximum copayments may limit reductions or may even increase the use of less essential medications.33 Future work should examine how copayments interact with other costsharing and cost-shifting policies, such as annual premiums, reference-based pricing,34 and prior authorization.35

We found that copayment policies have a much bigger effect on the quantity of medication use by users than on whether or not a drug is used. This finding is notable given that we estimated consumption based on prescriptions filled and may have underestimated actual medications consumed. Stronger effects on the quantity of use may reflect that consumption is under the control of the patient, while the decision to prescribe rests largely with the physician. Future studies on effects of cost-sharing policies on drug use should differentiate effects on the use vs on the quantity of use rather than simply using overall measures of utilization or expenditure.

Inconsistent with other studies,1,5 we did not find that copayments had stronger effects on drug use for low-income patients. This could reflect the use of an ecological measure of income; however, because our neighborhood income measure was strongly associated with rates of drug use, it seems viable. Nevertheless, neighborhood income may be a poor proxy for household income.36,37

However, we found that the use of an annual maximum copayment leads to an indirect income effect. Persons in lower-income neighborhoods were more likely to reach the annual maximum copayment and were less likely to reduce their drug use in response to copayment policies.

CONCLUSIONS

We confirmed findings of previous studies2,7-12 showing that copayment policies are associated with reductions in the quantity of use of essential and less essential medications. However, our results show that annual limits on out-of-pocket copayments restrict these effects to patients who are unlikely to reach the annual maximum copayment. Therefore, the use of such deductibles may reduce potential risks to patients resulting from reductions in the use of essential medications, but may increase the use of less essential medications.

Acknowledgment

Author Affiliations: From the Departments of Community Health and Epidemiology (GK) and Medicine (CS) and the College of Pharmacy (IS), Dalhousie University, and the Nova Scotia Department of Health (JH), Halifax, Nova Scotia; and the Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario (PG).

Funding Source: This study was supported by the Canadian Health Services Research Foundation, Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation, and Nova Scotia Department of Health–Nova Scotia Seniors’ Pharmacare Program. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent the official policy of federal, provincial, or territorial governments or the project funders. Data were accessed through the Population Health Research Unit at Dalhousie University.

Correspondence Author: George Kephart, PhD, Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Dalhousie University, 5790 University Ave, 4th Fl, Halifax, NS B3H 1V7. E-mail: george.kephart@dal.ca.

Author Disclosure: Mr Skedgel reports receiving funding from Pfizer Belgium to present at a conference. Dr Sketris holds a chair in Drug Use Management and Policy from the Canadian Health Management and Policy from the Canadian Health Services Research Foundation/Canadian Institutes of Health Research, cosponsored by the Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation. The authors (GK, IS, PG, JH) report no relationship or financial interest with any entity that would pose a conflict of interest with the subject matter discussed in this manuscript.

Authorship Information: Concept and design (GK, IS); acquisition of data (GK, CS, JH); analysis and interpretation of data (GK, CS, PG, JH); drafting of the manuscript (GK, IS, PG); critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content (GK, CS, IS, PG, JH); statistical analysis (GK, CS); provision of study materials or patients and supervision (GK); obtaining funding (GK, IS); administrative, technical, or logical support (GK, CS).

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