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Americans pay
the most for Prescription
Drugs and still don't take them
Newswise — An
international study of dialysis patients
shows that although U.S. residents have the
highest out-of-pocket drug costs, even those
who can afford their prescription drugs are
far less likely to take them than patients
in other countries.
The new research from
the University of Michigan School of Public
Health and the Arbor Research Collaborative
for Health found that high out-of-pocket
drug costs are only a partial reason why
fewer American dialysis patients took their
medications than in other countries, said
Richard Hirth, professor at the U-M School
of Public Health.
"There is something
about Americans that make them more
noncompliant with their drugs even when you
leave out the higher cost of the drugs,"
said Hirth, who co-authored the paper with
Scott Greer, assistant professor at the
School of Public Health.
"The study looked at
drug costs and adherence in hemodialysis
patients from 12 developed countries
participating in the Dialysis Outcomes and
Practice Patterns Study.
Dialysis patients in
the United Kingdom enjoyed the lowest
out-of-pocket spending, at $8 per month,
compared to $114 per month in the United
States.
The percentage of
people who did not adhere to their drug
regimens because of cost ranged from 3
percent in Japan to 29 percent in the United
States---a percentage higher than expected,
even accounting for the high cost of U.S.
prescriptions, Hirth said.
Hirth and Greer
simulated the impact of prescription drug
coverage under Medicare Part D, implemented
after the survey, and determined that U.S.
out-of-pocket burdens would remain high by
international standards, though no longer
the highest, with the projected U.S. burden
falling below that of Swedish patients.
Nonetheless, they
projected that although non-adherence would
decline after the implementation of Part D,
it would still remain well above that in any
other country in the sample.
Thus, the high
non-adherence rate in the United States is
only partially explained by high
out-of-pocket costs, Hirth said.
So, the researchers
examined features of health policy across
these 12 countries that might modify the
relationship between out-of-pocket costs and
non-adherence.
There is some
suggestion in the data that, in addition to
modifying the absolute out-of-pocket burden,
policies that craft exemptions from
co-payments for targeted subpopulations may
be particularly effective at reducing
non-adherence.
Dialysis patients are
the perfect study population because the
condition and the treatment---kidney failure
and dialysis---are similar everywhere, Hirth
said.
Prior research on drug
adherence has almost always focused on data
from a single country or has been based on
different data sources across countries,
obscuring the contributions of policy to any
observed differences.
A recent survey showed
that drug prices in the United States are 6
percent to 33 percent higher than in other
industrialized countries, with only Japan
having higher prices. There are two ways to
control drug costs: regulate the price
directly or via negotiation, and set the
mechanism for how people pay, such as a
co-pay or flat fee, and how you define who
has to pay.
"Since we don't control
the costs directly, we rely very heavily on
out-of-pocket costs," Greer said. "If you
can't control prices, you need to control
the co-pays."