Feature

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


 

As part of President Donald Trump’s blueprint to bring down prescription costs, Medicare officials have warned insurers that “gag orders” keeping pharmacists from alerting seniors that they could save money by paying cash – rather than using their insurance – are “unacceptable and contrary” to the government’s effort to promote price transparency.

But the agency stopped short of requiring insurers to lift such restrictions on pharmacists.

That doesn’t mean people with Medicare drug coverage are destined to overpay for prescriptions. Under a little-known Medicare rule, they can pay a lower cash price for prescriptions instead of using their insurance. But first, they must ask the pharmacist about that option, said Julie Carter, federal policy associate at the Medicare Rights Center, a patient advocacy group.

“If they bring it up, then we can inform them of those prices,” said Nick Newman, PharmD, a pharmacist and the manager at Essentra Pharmacy in rural Marengo, Ohio. “It’s a moral dilemma for the pharmacist, knowing what would be best for the patient, but not being able to help them and hoping they will ask you about the comparison.”

A simple question could unlock some savings for millions of beneficiaries.

But details may be hard to find: Medicare’s website and annual handbook don’t mention it.

“If you don’t know that there are a bunch of different prices that could be available at any given pharmacy, you don’t know what you don’t know,” said Leigh Purvis, the AARP Public Policy Institute’s director of health services research.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Drugmakers blamed for blocking generics have cost U.S. billions
MDedge Family Medicine
Congress passes ‘right to try’ legislation
MDedge Family Medicine
Postop delirium management proposed as hospital performance measure
MDedge Family Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Keeping patients summer safe
MDedge Family Medicine
Peer mentorship, groups help combat burnout in female physicians
MDedge Family Medicine
Effects of psoriatic arthritis not just physical
MDedge Family Medicine
Cognitive bias: Its influence on clinical diagnosis
MDedge Family Medicine
When our biases derail the diagnosis
MDedge Family Medicine
Restoring healing to the patient-provider conversation
MDedge Family Medicine
Detached parents: How to help
MDedge Family Medicine