Researchers: Plan HIV provisions discriminate against AIDS patients

January 29, 2015 at 07:28 AM
Share & Print

(Bloomberg) — A quarter of plans under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) effectively discriminated against AIDS patients in 2014 by requiring high out-of-pocket payments for all HIV drugs in a key class, according to Harvard University researchers.

Their small study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, examined AIDS drug costs in 48 plans under PPACA in 12 states, including Florida, Michigan, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Twelve of the plans from seven different insurers required AIDS patients who used drugs in the key class to pay 30 percent or more of the cost for all of the drugs in the class. That practice may deter patients with HIV from enrolling in those plans, authors Douglas Jacobs and Benjamin Sommers, both of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, wrote in the study.

"Our findings suggest that many insurers may be using benefit design to dissuade sicker people from choosing their plans," the researchers said.

Last May, in a federal civil rights complaint filed with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the AIDS Institute and the National Health Law Program made similar arguments. The parties contended that four insurers in Florida were discriminating against AIDS patients in some of their plans by putting all HIV medicine in the highest drug payment tiers, which often require steep out-of-pocket payments based on a percentage of a drug's cost.

Florida pattern

The new study shows that the pattern seen in AIDS drugs in Florida has been occurring in many other states, including New Jersey, Michigan, Utah, South Carolina, Pennsylvania and Louisiana, Jacobs and Sommers said in an interview. The Harvard study examined mid-level "silver plans" in 2014 and didn't look into whether the limitations continued to occur in 2015.

"This reconfirms what we have been saying and seeing," said Carl Schmid, deputy executive director of the AIDS Institute, which is based in Tampa, Fla. "There is obviously discrimination out there."

Plan designs that left AIDS patients with no low out-of-pocket cost drug options were "fairly widespread," said Jacobs, a public health student at Harvard and the study's lead author. "It seems to be a very significant problem."

Potential solutions

In November, HHS proposed guidance for 2016 that would make it harder for insurers to require high out-of-pocket costs for all drugs for a chronic condition. The rule would more clearly define that type of requirement as discrimination.

"If an issuer places most or all drugs that treat a specific condition on the highest cost tiers, we believe that such plan designs effectively discriminate against, or discourage enrollment by, individuals who have those chronic conditions," according to the proposed guidance.

The researchers suggested ways officials could go further. One solution is for the federal government to create certain protected drug classes for which there would be an upper limit on what insurers could require patients to pay, the Harvard researchers wrote in their article. It may also make sense for the government to require insurers to cover a certain minimum percentage of overall drug costs, they wrote. This would force insurers to lower out-of-pocket costs for some drugs if they raised them on others.

Still waiting

The companies named in the Florida civil rights complaint last May included Aetna Inc. (NYSE:AET), Humana Inc. (NYSE:HUM) and Cigna Corp. (NYSE:CI). Schmid said that while those insurers have reached agreements to lower AIDS drug costs for patients in Florida, the broader issue of what is allowed nationally under PPACA remains unresolved.

"We are still waiting" for the federal complaint to be resolved, said Schmid, who is based in Washington.

In a statement, Aetna said it has voluntarily updated its plans in order to ensure compliance with Florida law. The plans now puts all generic HIV drugs in the non-preferred generic tier, Aetna said.

Humana said as part of an agreement with Florida insurance officials, it moved all generic and brand drugs that cost under $600 a month off the specialty drug tier for its 2015 plans in that state.

Cigna said in November that it voluntarily agreed to move all generic drugs that had been in the specialty tier in Florida exchange plans to a lower tier, and it also capped monthly costs for four brand name HIV drugs for the plans in that state.

The Harvard study found four additional insurers not named in the Florida civil rights complaint had plan designs that may discriminate against AIDS patients, Jacobs said. The study doesn't name the insurers.

NOT FOR REPRINT

© 2024 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.

Related Stories

Resource Center