Eliminating co-pays may reduce more events
Eliminating co-pays may reduce more events
Could this influence revascularization?
The use of specific medications following a heart attack has been shown to reduce cardiovascular events and mortality, however; while highly effective, the rate of adherence to these medications is poor. Researchers from Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) evaluated whether eliminating co-payments for these medications would increase adherence and improve outcomes in patients who have had a heart attack. The study is published online in The New England Journal of Medicine.1
"The elimination of co-payments for certain medications following a heart attack resulted in improved patient adherence to the medications and positively impacted rates of major vascular events," said Niteesh Choudhry, MD, PhD, lead author of the paper and a researcher in the Division of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics at BWH as well as an Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA. "While the elimination of cost sharing did not significantly alter the trial's primary end-point, which included revascularizations along with vascular events, the intervention was successful in reducing rates of important clinical outcomes, lowering the amount that patients spent on medications and other non-drug health services, and did not increase overall health care costs."
Choudhry and colleagues found that the rate of the combined endpoint of major cardiovascular events or revascularization was not significantly improved by the elimination of copayments for prescription medicines. However, when all events were considered, and not only first events, rates of this outcome were reduced significantly by 11% in the intervention group. They also report that when taking revascularizations out of the equation, rates of first vascular event were reduced significantly by 14% and the individual outcomes, which include the rates of readmission for another heart attack, angina, heart failure and stroke, were all reduced. Additionally, total healthcare spending for patients during follow up did not significantly increase, and out-of-pocket costs for patients were lower in the intervention group, a relative reduction of 26%.
"This research shows that by eliminating co-pays for patients who are prescribed medications that are proven to be effective, patients will use them more. In this specific study, adherence to these medications increased four to six percentage points," Choudhry said. "Even with this improvement, overall adherence to these medications is very low, with less than half of patients who are prescribed these medications actually taking them. While cost-related underuse represents 'low-hanging fruit' and the intervention we evaluated appears cost-effective, more work is needed to identify other effective strategies for increasing adherence as a way to improve patient care and simultaneously lower the cost of providing care to these patients," Choudhry said.
Reference
- Choudhry N, Avorn J, Glenn R, et al. Full coverage for preventive medications after myocardial infarction. NEJM 2011; 365:2088-2097.
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