Feature

Looking for lower Medicare drug costs? Ask your pharmacist for the cash price


 


UnitedHealthcare, whose popular prescription drug plans dominate the market, does not include them in any of its Medicare, Medicaid, or commercial insurance contracts, said Matt Burns, a company spokesman.

Pharmacy benefit managers also said gag orders are not typical. “If it is happening, it is very much an outlier,” said Mark Merritt, president and CEO of the Pharmaceutical Care Management Association.

However, some pharmacists disagree. Kala Shankle, policy and regulatory affairs director for the National Community Pharmacists Association, which represents 22,000 independent pharmacies, said insurers have punished pharmacists who violate gag orders by dropping them from the plan’s network.

In Ohio, one of several states that have banned gag orders in insurance contracts, including some Medicare drug plans, officials responded to complaints about the problem.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Surgical specialists are top earners
MDedge Cardiology
Two more and counting: Suicide in medical trainees
MDedge Cardiology
FDA’s Gottlieb floats ideas on Medicare drug coverage
MDedge Cardiology
Diabetes spending topped $101 billion in 2013
MDedge Cardiology
Specialty practices hire more physician assistants and nurse practitioners
MDedge Cardiology
Drugmakers blamed for blocking generics have cost U.S. billions
MDedge Cardiology
I’M NOT A PROVIDER
MDedge Cardiology
MDedge Daily News: Keeping patients summer safe
MDedge Cardiology
Peer mentorship, groups help combat burnout in female physicians
MDedge Cardiology
Ad hoc PCI dominates in elderly
MDedge Cardiology