PPA Joins Patients in Harrisburg to Advocate for Access to Meds

Marion Mass, M.D. asks lawmakers to “roll up their sleeves” and work with physicians on behalf of patients

Non medical switching happens when a patient is changed to a different medication because the PBM-imposed formularies, the drugs that are covered by insurers have changed. On Feb 18, 2020, PPA’s Marion Mass, MD stood beside patient advocates and gave testimony to The Consumer Affairs Committee of the Pa State House regarding Non Medical switching. Highlights below.

Mass’s testimony excerpts:

“I thank you for this opportunity to testify on behalf of Pennsylvania patients. Other than practicing as a pediatrician in Bucks and Montgomery County of Pennsylvania, I have no conflict of interest.  I paid my own way to come here today, as I do for every advocacy trip.

House Bill 853 is vital to protecting the health and well-being of patients, especially those with serious chronic medical problems. Patients, especially those with chronic illness and preexisting conditions,  deserve consistent benefits during the tenure of their insurance plans.

Let me start with a story.  Ryan was diagnosed with complex partial seizures at age 17, and for most of the last 20 years he has been well controlled on Topomax and Lamictal.  Initially, he had excellent coverage for brand names of both, but his out of pocket cost for the brand name shot up suddenly and unexpectedly to $320 for a 3 month supply, compared to $10 for the generic.   Ryan switched to generics three separate times during the middle of the policy year.  With two of the three switches, he suffered breakthrough seizures.  For those listening who are unaware, having a seizure not only is a life-threatening event while driving a car, or operating any mechanical or sharp implements, a breakthrough seizure prevents epilepsy sufferers from driving for 6 months.  He also suffered accentuated side effects of memory decline and dizziness, and intense worry of having a seizure at a dangerous time. These were affecting his personal and professional life.  Ryan is a staunch self advocate.  During the time of trying to advocate to get back on brand name, he suffered the disruptive and frustrating process of having to make multiple calls per week, lasting upwards of 30 minutes to his insurance company.  

There are 133,000 epileptic  patients in Pennsylvania.  There are 7.7 million patients with at least 1 chronic disease, and almost half of those have more than 1 chronic disease most necessitating medication. 

  Not all of those patients can advocate as well as Ryan.  Non-medical switching is dangerous to their health, and destructive to their well-being as well as their pocketbooks.

I have seen dozens of affected children personally and am here to tell this committee, and all of Pennsylvania that we must protect treatment decisions made between physicians and the patients for whom they care so that patients get the appropriate access that they deserve at a reasonable cost.

During the questioning, I am happy to reveal more specifically what I know regarding drug pricing, formulary switching and pharmacy benefit managers.  I can share citations from other states that have advanced legislation and have studies regarding the dangerous practice of non- medical switching.

For Pennsylvanians who are living with chronic health conditions, coverage changes allowed by non-medical switching can devastate health and finances. Coverage, when purchased, must remain fair and consistent –patients cannot change plans during the policy year, insurers should not be able to change formulary coverage during the policy year for treatments and services the patient is receiving. It’s time for this committee and all policy makers to think of patients first.  Just like you, did, physicians took an oath… ours was to protect patients.  Let’s roll up our sleeves and do that…. Together. ”

Angie Santiago, lead financial counselor, oncology, Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals, said her job includes helping patients understand what is covered by their health insurance as well as options for additional financial support. She noted that her hospital’s cancer center started having problems with non-medical switching about 18 months ago. She explained that non-medical switching allows insurers to re-categorize prescriptions as pharmacy benefits, requiring the prescription to be filled through a specialty pharmacy outside of the hospital. The switches are also able to occur in the middle of the plan year, preventing patients from switching their health plans, she said. She shared the story of one patient who had to change how he received and paid for his medicine in a few weeks in order to continue to receive his chemotherapy treatment. 

Robert Mentzer, advocate, shared his firsthand experience of non-medical switching when his daughter, who suffers from epilepsy, had her medication switched to a generic version, causing her to have a severe seizure. He explained that when his daughter’s medication was removed from coverage, his family had to choose to either switch to the generic version or pay the $3,250 out-of-pocket cost for the brand prescription. 

Sam Marshall, president and CEO, Insurance Federation of Pennsylvania, noted that health plans provide notice of any change in the drug formulary to allow a doctor to explain why the patient needs to remain on that particular medication. 

Arielle Chortanoff, government affairs director, Independence Blue Cross (IBX), said negative formulary changes are limited and require a 45-day notice to members with appeal rights available. . She noted that the bill fails to address the issue of cost

Dr. Mass said the amount of paperwork that patients and physicians receive from insurance companies and the process of completing these appeals take away from patient care. Chortanoff responded that insurers are developing tools to make it easier for physicians and patients to understand benefits and alleviate the paperwork burden. 

Rep. Oberlander asked Dr. Mass if she had any experience with issues related to diabetes. Dr. Mass said insulin is typically covered to treat diabetes. She added that there’s no transparency on the money flowing between pharmacy benefit managers and pharmaceutical companies despite Pa’s Auditor General Eugene DiPasquale asking for this transparency. Mass later pointed out that Pharmacy Benefit Managers(PBM) are now owned or own insurance companies, and that PBM in a shocking conflict of Interest have the right to receive money from drugmakers. “In any other industry, this would be a kickback” Mass stated. It would be illegal, but kickbacks are legal for PBM and their hospital counterparts the GPO.  

Rep. Neilson asked for more information on the panels making these decisions. Yantis said formulary changes are decided by a group of physicians and clinicians who meet quarterly to review drugs coming into the market and compare them to the drugs currently on the formulary to make recommendations to the Highmark pharmacy team on the best tier for that drug. Dr. Mass said large pharmacies like CVS own pharmacy benefit managers and could create their own panel (with in-house pharmacists) to make decisions. She again noted that pharmacy benefit managers are allowed to accept monetary remuneration from pharmaceutical manufacturers. Rep. Neilson asked if anything has been done legislatively to prescribe how those panels are put together. Yantis said they are put together based on best practices and not a state or federal regulation. 

Doug Furness, senior director of legislative and regulatory affairs, Capital Blue, and Michael Yantis, vice president of state government affairs, Highmark, also testified.

Sign to Support Price Transparency in Health Care

Marion Mass, M.D.

Cost transparency is the necessary first step in reducing the unsustainable growing cost of medical care. America is spending half of her tax dollars on health care . Hard working Americans wage growth is being gobbled up by out of pocket costs. Regardless of your personal views on President Trump, his Administration’s Executive Order on transparency will help drive down the cost of health care for ALL Americans. Transparency needs our support as those who run the show want to keep costs hidden. Some in the hospital industry whose cost increases outpace EVERY other sector, are fighting against transparency, teamed up with the health care insurance companies.

We invite YOU to join us in signing the letter below thanking President Trump and the Administration for their bold moves toward achieving real price transparency to create a trusted, functional market in healthcare. Sign at this link: https://actnow.io/DTEUKAo

Thank you to our friends at Patient Rights Advocate, Association of Independent Doctors and AMAC Action, all part of the Free2Care network alongside PPA, for this letter writing campaign.

The Practicing Physicians of America
February 2, 2020

Dear President Trump,

We are writing to thank you for the bold moves you and your Administration are making to bring transparency to healthcare. 

Please stay strong against the forces who want to keep the American people in the dark — blindfolded to know prices before we get care, held hostage without access to our complete health information, and having to pay for our healthcare with a blank check.

Healthcare is Americans’ number one concern. According to the 2019 Harvard Harris Poll, price transparency is a solution that 88 percent of Americans on both sides of the aisle agree on. Meanwhile, studies also show, fear of financial ruin is causing people to avoid seeking the healthcare they need, too often until it’s too late. 
 
Americans want and deserve full transparency. We want to know the real prices of healthcare before we receive it. We want to know the quality of the care available to us. We want easy, real-time, digital access to our complete health information including prices, clinical history, and payments. Currently, our opaque system makes all that impossible.
 
We, a cohort of Americans fighting for a better healthcare system, are so grateful that you and your Administration are courageously working to implement the bipartisan transparency laws that already exist. You are doing so despite strong resistance from the Healthcare Industrial Complex — hospitals, insurers, pharmaceutical companies, and the many middle players — who are all capitalizing on patients’ misfortunes.  

Your transparency and interoperability rules will restore Americans’ trust in our healthcare system. These rules will hold the healthcare industry accountable, cut out middle players, and greatly reduce healthcare costs and drug prices by ushering in competition, choice, and the ability for consumers to shop for the best care at the lowest possible price. 
 
Once we have systemwide healthcare price transparency, we will benefit from a functional healthcare market that operates on free-market principles. We will be able to buy healthcare the way we buy groceries or gasoline, clothing or cars. As healthcare prices plummet, wages and savings accounts will increase. By shining a light on hidden prices and quality information, you will put patients in control of their healthcare, and Americans will become healthier and wealthier. 
 
On behalf of patients, workers, seniors, employers and taxpayers, thank you again for taking these brave steps toward Making America’s Healthcare Great Again!