Title

Cost-Related Nonadherence in the Medicare Program The Impact of Part D

Authors

Authors

J. J. Kennedy; M. Maciejewski; D. Liu;E. Blodgett

Comments

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Abbreviated Journal Title

Med. Care

Keywords

Medicare; Part D; adherence; cost sharing; medication; compliance; beneficiaries; D COVERAGE GAP; DRUG COVERAGE; PRESCRIPTION NONCOMPLIANCE; AMERICA; SENIORS; NATIONAL-SURVEY; UNITED-STATES; OLDER-ADULTS; BENEFICIARIES; HEALTH; IMPLEMENTATION; Health Care Sciences & Services; Health Policy & Services; Public, ; Environmental & Occupational Health

Abstract

Background: Cost-related nonadherence (CRN) among Medicare beneficiaries declined after the implementation of the Part D program, but it is unknown whether CRN changes varied on the basis of beneficiaries' change in drug coverage. Objective: To determine how CRN changed with the introduction of Part D, and whether CRN changes from 2005 to 2006 varied between newly insured beneficiaries, continuously insured beneficiaries, and continuously uninsured beneficiaries. Methods: CRN, drug coverage, and beneficiary characteristics in 2005 and 2006 were constructed from merged Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey Access to Care files (sample, n = 8935). Change in CRN was modeled using multinomial logistic regression to identify predictors of resolved CRN (reported in 2005 but not in 2006), unresolved CRN (reported in 2005 and 2006), and new CRN (reported in 2006 but not in 2005), relative to no CRN (not reported in 2005 or 2006). Results: Rates of CRN declined from 2005 to 2006 for all beneficiaries, with the greatest reductions (from 22.1% in 2005 to 14.3% in 2006) for newly insured beneficiaries who gained drug coverage through Part D. In adjusted analyses, newly insured beneficiaries were more likely to have resolved CRN (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.7; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-2.2). Younger beneficiaries (under the age of 65 years) and beneficiaries with multiple chronic conditions, poor health, and depression were significantly more likely to report CRN. Conclusions: Part D coverage reduced but did not eliminate CRN for newly insured beneficiaries. Unresolved CRN persisted for newly insured and continuously uninsured beneficiaries, particularly among disabled beneficiaries.

Journal Title

Medical Care

Volume

49

Issue/Number

5

Publication Date

1-1-2011

Document Type

Article

Language

English

First Page

522

Last Page

526

WOS Identifier

WOS:000289551800014

ISSN

0025-7079

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