I'm pleased to welcome this article by Ali Khoshnevis. Ali is an optometrist and CEO of WeRx.org,
a pharmacy price comparison site and app with the goal of helping
patients find the lowest cost medications in their neighborhood. Please read on for another take on transparency.
My
brother and I, both optometrists, had a heart-to-heart discussion about
the loss of one of our patients. We realized he was not taking his
medications, which was leading to vision loss. When pressed, the patient
said he had a choice of eating, supporting his family, or purchasing
his medication.
He
was under the impression that the $150 price for his generic cholesterol-lowering medication
was "about the same" at any nearby pharmacy. We later realized that some
of those nearby pharmacies charged from $11 to $25 for the
same medication. Our studies revealed this type of discrepancy existed
for almost all of his medications.
Our
patient lost his life after suffering a stroke. This was a bitter pill
to swallow, but his loss led us to a period of discovery and
determination to prevent this from happening again.
His life could have been saved with the knowledge of the vast price differences at retail pharmacies. That's when my brother and I began our mission to promote transparency in retail drug pricing. I have left the practice of optometry to dedicate my career to addressing this problem.
This is when we
met Sumanah, a 26-year-old event planner in New York City suddenly
diagnosed with congestive heart failure. Sumanah was like many typical
26-year olds, without health insurance and no savings capable of paying
for her medical bills. Taking 10 medications for her condition, Sumanah
was paying full price at what she “thought” was the cheapest pharmacy. After she discovered that not only were some pharmacies cheaper for the
same exact medication, she learned that some pharmacies could be
upwards of 16 times more expensive than another pharmacy right across
the street. Using this information, Sumanah was able to price shop for
the right pharmacy and save a lot on her prescription costs. This
story, although not uncommon, shows how important shopping around for
medications can be.
In their May issue, Consumer Reports published an article confirming
the experience Sumanah and many others have each time they go to fill a
prescription. The study focuses on five of the most prescribed
medications in the U.S. and reviews more than 200 pharmacies for price
comparisons. The findings show the details of each pharmacy and drug
researched as well as the overall discrepancy between the lowest cost
pharmacy and the highest cost pharmacy. For the same prescriptions, the
difference was a whopping $749 per month or 447% between the highest
and lowest cost options.
Price
shopping prescriptions from one pharmacy to another can dramatically
reduce out-of-pocket costs for patients without changing medications. The cost savings can be vast and can help those unable to afford
medication in the past, be able to consider options at a low cost
pharmacy. The current lack of pharmaceutical price transparency causes
many patients to simply stop taking their medication because it is too
expensive for them to afford, which is a truly dangerous option for
patients to consider.
Currently,
medication non-adherence is cited by The IMS Institute of Healthcare
Informatics as the largest contributor to healthcare costs in their
June, 2013 study, “Avoidable Costs in U.S. Healthcare.”
The study shows that a patient’s inability to stay on a prescribed
medication is estimated to cause over $100 billion in avoidable
healthcare costs due to the resulting health complications, hospital
visits, and additional advanced treatment
Many
patients, and their healthcare providers, assume medications at
different local pharmacies are about the same price. We’ve been
operating solely in our roles as care providers for too long, and have
been oblivious to changes in other parts of the healthcare system. While
we work to keep patients healthy, parts of our healthcare system try to
maximize profits at the expense of our patients and the entire system.
We invite you to join us on a mission to improve healthcare and save lives.
6 comments:
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Nice
When I use your tool, my meds are the same price--down to the penny--all over town. No help there!
This is what the history of US fee-for-service healthcare has brought us - many people think that healthcare is supposed to be prohibitively expensive, so they either avoid going to the doctor entirely (bad idea) or, if they do wind up in a doctor's office, they feel like they have no control or say in what happens there, or afterward. This includes prescription costs.
Kudos to WeRx.com, and other orgs that work with patients to get the prescription drugs they need to get better, or to stay alive. I'm currently working on a project that will put patients at the controls for developing clinical trials and investigations, which we aim to make a part of accessible, human-scale medicine for EVERYONE.
Hi Deb, I am sorry to hear that. Many drugs have only one manufacturer and therefore almost a monopoly. Which makes the price expensive and the nearly the same price regardless of the pharmacy
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