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Managed Care July 2006 |
Public Payers Foot Greater Pharmacy Costs Through 2005, private health insurance had covered most of the cost of prescription drugs. That picture is changing as public payments, mostly under Part D, are projected to exceed private health insurance and out-of-pocket payments.  |
Managed Care January 2008 |
Copayment Rates Outpace Inflation Workers are definitely paying more for health benefits today than they were in 2000, especially for prescription drug copayments.  |
Managed Care May 2001 |
Study: Consumers benefited most during '90s conversion to managed care Out-of-pocket spending on health care went virtually unchanged from 1990 to 1997, thanks in large part to employers' conversion from indemnity plans to managed care...  |
The Motley Fool May 6, 2008 Brian Orelli |
Free Drugs Free over-the-counter drugs are a win-win for health insurers and their members.  |
Managed Care December 2005 |
Pharmacy Cost Increases Below Medical for the First Time in Four Years According to a survey of 70 health care insurers, prescription costs are expected to increase at a lower rate than medical costs during the next 12 months.  |
Managed Care January 2002 |
Employers struggle to preserve pharmacy benefit In an effort to protect the pharmacy benefit for employees, companies are using a variety of techniques to manage expenditures...  |
Managed Care August 2002 |
24 States Hope Pharmacy Plus Helps Medicaid Twenty-four states may gamble that providing a prescription drug program to low-income elderly who do not qualify for Medicaid could save them money in the long run.  |
Managed Care April 2005 |
Medicare Modernization Act to Increase Public Sector Spending Nearly 50 Percent While the burden on the public sector to supply health care benefits to Medicare and Medicaid enrollees will increase, on the private side, a reevaluation of current forms of health insurance coverage may take place as growth in premiums continues to outpace growth in compensation.  |
Managed Care March 2001 |
Does Cost-Sharing For Drugs Lead To Adverse Events? A study in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggests that HMOs' increased use of cost-sharing to soften prescription drug expenses may have actually increase overall medical costs over the long term.  |
The Motley Fool August 18, 2006 Dan Caplinger |
The Medicare Drug Dilemma: Part 1 Seniors have a great benefit available to them, but it's tough sorting through it all. We're here to help.  |
InternetNews October 13, 2004 Roy Mark |
Report: The Internet and Drugs Don't Mix It seems an increasing number of Americans are researching drugs online, but safety fears chill buying.  |
Managed Care October 2007 |
The Formulary Files Retirees stop taking drugs when annual benefit runs out.  |
Managed Care March 2006 |
Study: No Need To Burden Consumers To Cut Drug Bill A study by Express Scripts shows that changing the prescription benefit copayments can reduce costs by encouraging more use of generic drugs. All without shifting costs to consumers.  |
Managed Care October 2003 |
Link between cost-sharing, noncompliance cited Two-thirds of American adults surveyed in a Wall Street Journal/Harris Interactive poll say that increasing out-of-pocket health care costs will deter people from seeking health care services when needed.  |
Reason Aug/Sep 2001 Jacob Sullum |
Through the Nose An FDA advisory committee has voted overwhelmingly to recommend over-the-counter status for Claritin, Allegra, and Zyrtec, three popular prescription allergy drugs. But the drugs' manufacturers are opposing a switch, fearing that it could hurt their profits...  |
The Motley Fool August 1, 2006 Selena Maranjian |
Prescription for Prescription Bargains Did you know that your medications might be cheaper around the corner? Another way to offset your net expenses on medications is to make some money on drugs -- by investing in drug-related firms.  |
Managed Care March 2000 Tim Sawyers |
Test Prospective PBM Before Signing Contract How to select, then monitor a pharmacy benefit management company, from a consultant and former HMO director of pharmacy services.  |
Pharmaceutical Executive October 1, 2011 David Balekdjian |
In Establishing the Evidence Base, He Made Science Count Robert Seidman leveraged his role as the insurer group WellPoint's first Chief Pharmacy Officer to drive many important changes in the institutional relationship between Big Pharma and its now equally big customers.  |
Managed Care March 2006 |
Prescription Drug Cost Increase Lowest Since 1994 A slowdown on spending for prescription drugs is credited for leading the slowing in health care costs overall, according to a recent study.  |
The Motley Fool December 12, 2006 Dan Caplinger |
Don't Fall Into the Doughnut Hole Medicare Part D provides valuable benefits for seniors. However, because the doughnut hole is a gap in coverage by prescription-drug plans, seniors must be prepared to deal with the costs associated with it.  |
Managed Care August 2001 Steve Perlstein |
Four-Tier Approach Injects Consumerism Into Drug Benefit In tying copayments closely to the actual cost of medications, Humana takes a step toward promoting awareness of resource use...  |
Managed Care February 2007 |
Managed Care Outlook Coverage for children leads policy debate.  |
Managed Care March 2001 |
Maine Gets HCFA Waiver for Drug Discount Program The Health Care Financing Administration has given Maine officials clearance to offer a discount prescription program to 200,000 people without a pharmacy benefit...  |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 1, 2005 Patrick Clinton |
Playing Doctor Why Congress plans to ban erectile dysfunction drugs from Medicare and Medicaid, and why they shouldn't do it.  |
Managed Care June 2002 Jeffry R. Ellis |
Third-Party Payers Don't Realize Burdens Placed on Pharmacists PBMs and HMOs, by imposing a workload that doesn't allow enough time for needed functions, seem to want pharmacists to fail, this author asserts.  |
Managed Care March 2004 |
More State Medicaid Programs Use Preferred Drug Lists To Manage Costs Medicaid, enacted in 1965, is currently costing over $200 billion per year. With rapidly rising health care costs, including prescription drugs, state Medicaid budgets are feeling the strain. Here's what they're trying to do to manage.  |
Reason February 2009 Ronald Bailey |
I Want a New Drug States that adopted new drugs more rapidly, had the smallest increases in disability rates.  |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 30, 2007 Peter Pitts |
Opinion: Fewer Cents, More Sense Our healthcare system may be broken, but playing the blame game is not going to fix it. Remember that disease - not Big Pharma - is the enemy.  |
Managed Care March 2000 |
Three-tier drug copayments in; closed formularies on way out?  |
| AskMen.com |
You're Doing It Wrong Police in northern Idaho arrested a robber accused of demanding a controlled drug from a pharmacy, then throwing cash on the counter before fleeing.  |
The Motley Fool August 15, 2007 Mary Dalrymple |
Drug Costs Giving You a Headache? If you want to cut your prescription drug costs, you can do more than just switch to generic brands. Shop around and ask questions. It's your health, and it's your money.  |
Managed Care September 2000 |
Three New England States Form Drug-Buying Cooperative Now that the governors of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont have agreed to form a prescription drug-buying cooperative, the hard work of fleshing out the plan begins...  |
Managed Care November 2000 |
For first time ever, HMO enrollment drops in 1999 National HMO enrollment fell by 400,000 last year, from its all-time high of 81.3 million. For at least two years, a wider array of managed care products and an ever-smaller pool of people still covered under indemnity plans slowed the rate of HMO enrollment growth...  |
Managed Care February 2005 |
Medicare's Drug Coverage Seeks To Strike Compromise Health plan officials are still trying to determine just how the final rules for the new Medicare prescription drug benefit will affect them, because it appears that government officials tried their best to address the competing concerns of all players.  |
InternetNews June 13, 2005 Roy Mark |
Fake Canadian Drug Sites Proliferating New study shows 80 percent of sites claiming to be Canadian drug stores are registered in other countries.  |
Managed Care November 2004 Martin Sipkoff |
OTC Status for Low-Dose Lovastatin Would Have Widespread Implications The FDA stands poised to approve OTC low-dose statins, following a similar change in United Kingdom.  |
Reason September 2005 Kerry Howley |
Locking Up Life-Saving Drugs U.S. prescription laws make us sicker and poorer because the system that puts drugs over the counter is driven by profits and patents.  |
Managed Care January 2001 |
Express Scripts' Formulary Rulings To Go Online The public will have a chance to see what until now has been, mostly, understood only by managed care insiders: how a prescription drug winds up on a formulary...  |
The Motley Fool September 21, 2006 Nathan Parmelee |
Wal-Mart Goes Generic The supposed most terrible retailer of all is doing a very good thing with generic drug sales. The program will, of course, benefit Wal-Mart by creating additional traffic to its stores. This move could change the game for a number of retailers over the next few years.  |
Managed Care August 2002 Madeleine A. Estabrook |
Regulators Take More Interest In Role of PBMs in Health Care In a highly regulated industry such as health care, it is just a matter of time before every component of the industry comes under scrutiny and review. Pharmacy benefit managers are taking center stage now.  |
The Motley Fool December 6, 2004 Brian Gorman |
Pill-Popping Nation Americans are using more prescription drugs. Unfortunately for big pharma investors, pharmaceutical companies' benefits from these trends are tempered by other factors.  |
Managed Care July 2005 |
Cost being equal, consumers prefer older drugs Seven out of 10 consumers would prefer a drug that had been on the market for 10 years or more, compared to a newer drug, even if the copayments were equal. This could be a sign that consumers are more inclined to start using generic medications.  |
Managed Care August 2007 |
Managed Care Outlook Specialty drugs increasingly used to treat chronic conditions.  |
Managed Care March 2008 |
Drug Caps Lower Spending, but .... These policies tend to make consumers shoulder some of the cost of prescriptions and the cost could be a barrier to medication adherence.  |
Managed Care January 2001 |
Study: Elderly Exit When They Exceed Rx Benefit Cap In a study that confirms what has long been assumed, Medicare HMO enrollees become more likely to drop their carriers when they exceed annual pharmacy-benefit caps...  |
Chemistry World November 20, 2014 Rebecca Trager |
US drug development costs surge Developing and winning market approval for a new prescription drug in the US takes about a decade and costs approximately $2.6 billion, according to data released by Tufts University researchers.  |
The Motley Fool October 19, 2010 Brian Orelli |
Watch a 40% Decline Disappear The greatest thing going for Johnson & Johnson is its diversity in product offerings.  |
Managed Care October 2003 |
Medco Health Solutions tops consumer survey The 2003 WilsonRx Survey reports that patients have identified Medco Health Solutions as the top pharmacy benefit manager for the third year in a row.  |
Managed Care July 2005 Tony Berberabe |
Change in Thinking For Pharmacy Benefits in CDHP The difference between the pharmacy benefit in a consumer-directed health plan and a traditional health plan is greater generic drug utilization.  |
The Motley Fool November 27, 2007 Brian Orelli |
Second Chance for Merck's MEVACOR Merck licenses the rights to an over-the-counter version of its cholesterol-lowering drug MEVACOR to GlaxoSmithKline, but the deal is far from done. Investors, take note.  |