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Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006
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Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Page 1: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

Slide -1

Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit

Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D.

Atlanta Regional Office

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

March 17, 2006

Page 2: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

Slide -2

Objectives

Benefit Background/ Demographics

Eligibility and Cost Sharing

Covered Drugs and Formularies

Medication Therapy Management

Transition Information

Page 3: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

Slide -3

Medicare Prescription DrugCoverage Background

Currently, ~24% of people with Medicare do NOT have prescription drug coverage

Estimated 43 million Medicare beneficiaries will be eligible for Medicare prescription drug coverage in 2006

– ~91% (39 million) will receive drug coverage through a Medicare prescription drug plan or through an employer/union retiree plan that is eligible for retiree drug subsidy

Page 4: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Beneficiaries Estimated to Receive Drug Coverage Through Medicare Part D Plans or

Retiree Subsidy in 2006 (in millions)

18.4

9.86.3

3.0

1.6

Standard Benefit(Not Receiving LowIncome Subsidy)

Coverage ThroughEmployer/UnionRetiree Plans*

Full Benefit DualEligibles (Medicare &Medicaid)

Income <135% FPL& Assets Test Met

Income <150% FPL& Assets Test Met

Page 5: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Eligibility and Enrollment

Page 6: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Eligibility and Enrollment

Must be entitled to Medicare Part A and/or enrolled in Part B

Reside in plan’s service area

Enroll in Part D, higher premium for delay in enrollment

Initial enrollment: Nov 15, 2005 – May 15, 2006

Enrollment 2006 and beyond: Nov 15 – Dec 31

Page 7: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

Slide -7

Eligibility and Enrollment

Part D eligible individuals may enroll in a

– Prescription Drug Plan (PDP) or

– Medicare Advantage Prescription Drug plan (MA-PD plan)

Individuals enrolled in an MA plan must receive Part D coverage from the MA-PD plan

Employee Coverage

Page 8: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Auto-Enrollment Medicaid prescription drug coverage for full-benefit

dual eligibles ended 12/31/005

Full-benefit dual eligibles who did not enroll in a plan by 12/31/05

– CMS enrolled them in a prescription drug plan with a premium covered by the low-income premium assistance

– Their Medicare prescription drug coverage began 1/1/06

Full-benefit dual eligibles have a SEP

– Can change plans any time

Page 9: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Special Enrollment Period

Permanent move out of the plan service area

Individual entering, residing in, or leaving a long-term care facility

Involuntary loss, reduction, or non-notification of creditable coverage

Other exceptional circumstances

Page 10: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Postponing Enrollment

Higher premiums for people who wait to enroll

– Exception for those with prescription drug coverage at least as good as a Medicare prescription drug plan

Assessed 1% of base premium for every month

– Eligible to enroll in a Medicare prescription drug plan but not enrolled

– No drug coverage as good as a Medicare prescription drug coverage for 63 consecutive days or longer

Page 11: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

Slide -11

Beneficiary Cost-sharing

Page 12: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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2006 Standard Benefit

From: To:

Coverage Ranges

Benefit Stages% Covered by Benefit

Annual Deductible $0 $250 0% ($250)

Initial Coverage $250.01 $2,250 75% ($500)

Coverage Gap $2,250.01 $5,1001 0% ($2,850)

Catastrophic $5,100.01 No 95%2 ($3,600)Coverage Maximum

1 Catastrophic coverage begins when the beneficiary satisfies the $3,600 TrOOP

requirement.

2 Medicare is liable for 80% and the PDP is liable for 15%

TrOOP

$37 monthly premium then

Page 13: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

Standard Benefit 2006

$250 $2250 $5100

$ +

Beneficiary Liability

Deductible

Coverage Gap

Total Spending

≈ 95%

80% Reinsurance

15% Plan Pays

Catastrophic

Coverage

5% Coinsurance

Medicare Pays Reinsurance

75% Plan Pays

25% Coinsurance

Out-of-pocket

Threshold

Direct Subsidy/Beneficiary Premium

$750 $3600 TrOOP

Total Beneficiary

Out-Of-Pocket$250

Page 14: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Extra Help for People with Low Incomes: Subsidy

Categories Must be Part D eligible

Some groups are automatically eligible (deemed)

Encouraged to apply before enrollment in PDP or MA-PD

Income < 150% of FPL for family size

Resources not exceeding $10,000 ($20,000 for married couples)

Apply at State Medicaid Agency, local Social Security office, Internet applications, mailings, community partners

Page 15: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Extra HelpGroup 1

≤100% FPL

Group 2

> 100 <135 FPL

Group 3

≥135 <150% FPL

Premium $32.20/month

$0 $0 Sliding scale based on income

Deductible $250/year

$0 $0 $50

Coinsurance up to $3,600 out of pocket

$1/$3 copay $2/$5 copay 15% coinsurance

Catastrophic 5% or $2/$5 copay

$0 $0 $2/$5 copay

Page 16: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Covered Drugs &

Formularies

Page 17: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Medicare Prescription Drug Coverage

Available only by prescription

Prescription drugs, biologicals, insulin

Medical supplies associated with injection of insulin

A PDP or MA-PD may not cover all drugs

Brand name and generic drugs will be in each formulary

Page 18: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Formulary Review: Rationale

MMA requires CMS to review formularies to ensure

– beneficiaries have access to a broad range of medically appropriate drugs to treat all disease states, and

– formulary design does not discriminate or substantially discourage enrollment of certain groups

Page 19: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Provision of Notice Regarding Formulary

Changes Prior to removing/changing drug from formulary

Plan must:

– Provide 60 days notice to CMS, prescribers, network pharmacies, and pharmacists

– For enrollees, must provide either:

• Direct written notice at least 60 days prior to date the change becomes effective, or

• At the time a refill is requested, provide a 60 day supply of drug and written notice

Page 20: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Any Willing Pharmacy Requirement

Plans must contract with any pharmacy that meets standard terms & conditions

Standard terms & conditions may vary (e.g., by geography, type of pharmacy)

Page 21: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

Slide -21

Excluded Drugs

Drugs for– Anorexia, weight loss, or weight gain– Fertility– Cosmetic purposes or hair growth– Symptomatic relief of cough and colds

Prescription vitamins and mineral products– Except prenatal vitamins and fluoride preparations

Non-prescription drugs Barbiturates Benzodiazepines

Page 22: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Medicare Part B Versus Part D Coverage Issues

There WILL still be Part A and Part B drugs

Part A drugs

– Drugs bundled together with hospital payment

Part B drugs

– 1. Drugs delivered in MD office

– 2. Drugs delivered in by medical equipment

– 3. Few outpatient Chemo and immunosupp’s

– 4. Hospital Outpatient drugs billed separately

– 5. ESRD drugs (ie EPO)

Page 23: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Medication Therapy Management

Page 24: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Medication Therapy Management

Requirements:

– MTM program for targeted beneficiaries*

– May be furnished by a pharmacist or other qualified provider

– Developed in cooperation with licensed, practicing pharmacists and physicians

Page 25: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Medication Therapy Management

Targeted beneficiaries:

Multiple diseases

+

Multiple drugs

+

Incur annual costs that exceed a cost threshold of >$4,000 (likely to incur)

Page 26: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Transition Information

Page 27: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Transition Process

Goal: ensure beneficiaries receive medications at lowest cost and meet beneficiary needs

Transition process required by PDPs §423.100(b)(3)

– Must provide “appropriate transition process”

– MUST meet policy CMS Guidelines

Page 28: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Transition Guidance

Transition for

– (1) initial transfer to The Benefit

– (2) new enrollees

– (3) between PDPs P&T committee expect to review &

recommend PDP transition process Temporary one time supply fills

recommended Public Notice of Transition Process

Page 29: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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January 21, 2005 - Final Rule Published

March 23 - MA-PD & PDP applications

April 18 - Formulary submission

June 6 - Bid submission

July - Final pharmacy contracts

August / September - PDPs announced

October 1 - Marketing begins

November 15 - Enrollment begins

January 1, 2006 - Benefit begins

Drug Benefit Timeline

Page 30: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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For more information http://www.cms.hhs.gov.medicarereform/pdbma

http://www.cms.hhs.gov/medicarereform

http://www.medicare.gov

http://www.cms.hhs.gov/providers

http://ssa.gov

1-800-Medicare

* Pharmacy link is here

http://www.cms.gov/medicarereform/pharmacy

Page 31: Slide -1 Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Denise S. Stanley, Pharm.D. Atlanta Regional Office Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 17, 2006.

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Questions