MESSAGE
DATE | 2018-01-08 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] The scam that is your healthcare insurance - how
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From hangout-bounces-at-nylxs.com Mon Jan 8 18:46:51 2018 Return-Path: X-Original-To: archive-at-mrbrklyn.com Delivered-To: archive-at-mrbrklyn.com Received: from www2.mrbrklyn.com (www2.mrbrklyn.com [96.57.23.82]) by mrbrklyn.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id 1B9BC161132; Mon, 8 Jan 2018 18:46:50 -0500 (EST) X-Original-To: hangout-at-nylxs.com Delivered-To: hangout-at-nylxs.com Received: from mailbackend.panix.com (mailbackend.panix.com [166.84.1.89]) by mrbrklyn.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id 7F55C161132 for ; Mon, 8 Jan 2018 18:46:44 -0500 (EST) Received: from panix2.panix.com (panix2.panix.com [166.84.1.2]) by mailbackend.panix.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id 0CF7E2A82B for ; Mon, 8 Jan 2018 18:46:43 -0500 (EST) Received: by panix2.panix.com (Postfix, from userid 20529) id E9F6A33C79; Mon, 8 Jan 2018 18:46:43 -0500 (EST) Date: Mon, 8 Jan 2018 18:46:43 -0500 From: Ruben Safir To: NYLXS Message-ID: <20180108234643.GA2513-at-panix.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 User-Agent: Mutt/1.8.2 (2017-04-18) Subject: [Hangout - NYLXS] The scam that is your healthcare insurance - how the insurance companiess rip you off X-BeenThere: hangout-at-nylxs.com X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.17 Precedence: list List-Id: NYLXS Tech Talk and Politics List-Unsubscribe: , List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="===============0774426847==" Errors-To: hangout-bounces-at-nylxs.com Sender: "Hangout"
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The One that Broke the Camel's Back: DIR Fees Set to Catalyze Transparency = Discussion With a Wider Audience MARCH 20, 2017 Troy Trygstad, PharmD, PhD, MBA, Pharmacy Times Editor-in-Chief DIR Fees: the Latest in a Long Line of Spread Strategies Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) play an important and necessary role withi= n our private system of health care. Because there is no central authority = to set prices for drugs, PBMs step in to create a marketplace (of sorts) fo= r buyers and sellers. They also provide administrative functions, such as a= djudicating claims and writing checks on behalf of the payer. The 3 largest= PBMs handle billions of transactions a year, ostensibly to generate operat= ing revenue. However, these transactions are largely a commodity. So to sup= plement that revenue in order to generate profits, spread strategies need t= o be employed. Spread occurs when a portion of the buy=E2=80=93sell differe= nce can be retained by a PBM. This is akin to the house=E2=80=99s take in a= casino (except with nobody knowing what the percentage =E2=80=9Ctake=E2=80= =9D is). Direct and indirect remuneration (DIR) fees are the latest in a lo= ng line of reimbursement strategies that rely on spread that generate margi= n for PBMs. =20 Transparency Is the Kryptonite of Any Spread Business Squeezing one end of the proverbial margin balloon results in the other end= getting bigger. In the case of DIR fees, the federal government wanted a c= learer view into the spread and to receive a bigger part of that spread. Th= us, the payer side of the balloon got squeezed. As a result, community phar= macies, by and large, ended up rebalancing the air in the balloon on the ot= her side through DIR fees, which are simply a way to package the PBM margin= in another way and place the burden of that spread on the pharmacy. The pa= ckage may include network access fees, performance tiering, and other attri= butions of apportionment. It can be anything that is assigned to the dollar= amount in total. This strategy is only possible (politically or otherwise)= through lack of transparency in the clawback provisions. Although good at = generating profit, lack of transparency is an anathema to properly function= ing marketplaces. Remember collateralized debt obligations and the financia= l crisis? Nobody had any idea what was in those packaged debt vehicles; not= the buyers or sellers, just the people who created them. =20 No Longer Inside Baseball: The Transparency Discussion Goes Mainstream Part of the challenge of pushing back against lack of transparency in pharm= acy reimbursement is that it comes across as esoteric, with highly technica= l rebate structures and multiple parties involved under the surface, but wi= thout a lot of fanfare the average person can understand or attach much emo= tion to because transparency is a matter between providers and payers. Howe= ver, several catalyzers now in play are changing that dynamic and widening = the aperture of the discussion to include mainstream policymakers and media= channels: =20 Catalyzer #1: DIR Fees Were Born out of Regulation to Create Transparency f= or the Government Anytime a program that involves government is implemented, it will ultimate= ly be subject to public scrutiny, open forums, and disclosure. Avenues to e= ngage, if you are a patient advocate or a provider advocate, are much more = plentiful. DIR fees (and ultimately, spread itself) will likely be the issu= e that pierces the transparency veil of all mechanisms that create spread b= ecause the rules and procedures around government make the discussion hard = to hide. =20 Catalyzer #2: DIR Fees Require Opacity to Generate Margin Spread margin is an animal of opacity. In the absence of nondisclosure and = in a transparent environment, margin is generated as a fee (not spread). DI= R fees require opacity to exist. The country=E2=80=99s mood is currently no= t favorable toward the guy behind the curtain. =20 Catalyzer #3: DIR Fees Affect the Consumer Recent reporting has uncovered ways in which DIR fees may affect consumers = and their out-of-pocket spend. That is a game changer when it comes to broa= dening the audience of the interested. =20 Catalyzer #4: President Trump=E2=80=99s Populist Stance on Drug Costs This one is the kicker. For years, pharmacies and Pharmaceutical Research a= nd Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) have been at odds during budget season = because both contribute to the total cost of drugs, fighting over therapeut= ic interchange and pharmacy reimbursement cuts as the way to moderate incre= asing costs. However, as PhRMA and pharmacies have been squeezed over time,= the portion of available margin going to these 2 stakeholders has come mor= e in line per transaction with PBM spread. This has had the effect of bring= ing otherwise warring parties closer together to spotlight the PBM industry= =E2=80=99s role as part of the drug cost driver equation (which is the oppo= site of its intended market purpose). The fact that a Republican is proposi= ng price controls will shine a $300 billion-watt bulb on how drugs are purc= hased and reimbursed through the entire value chain. =20 Catalyzer #5: Legislation (Regardless of Outcomes) No proposed or introduced legislation is worth a darn unless it has broad p= olitical momentum behind it. Legislators can introduce legislation all day = long that gets referred to committee, with no hearings or fanfare. However,= because of catalyzers 1 through 4 above, House Resolution 1038 and Senate = Bill 413, which speak to transparency, now have legs. And even if they neve= r reach a vote, they will no doubt have a much wider audience, and that is = a game changer. =20
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The One that Broke the Camel's Back: DIR Fees Set to Catalyze Transparency = Discussion With a Wider Audience MARCH 20, 2017 Troy Trygstad, PharmD, PhD, MBA, Pharmacy Times Editor-in-Chief DIR Fees: the Latest in a Long Line of Spread Strategies Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) play an important and necessary role withi= n our private system of health care. Because there is no central authority = to set prices for drugs, PBMs step in to create a marketplace (of sorts) fo= r buyers and sellers. They also provide administrative functions, such as a= djudicating claims and writing checks on behalf of the payer. The 3 largest= PBMs handle billions of transactions a year, ostensibly to generate operat= ing revenue. However, these transactions are largely a commodity. So to sup= plement that revenue in order to generate profits, spread strategies need t= o be employed. Spread occurs when a portion of the buy=E2=80=93sell differe= nce can be retained by a PBM. This is akin to the house=E2=80=99s take in a= casino (except with nobody knowing what the percentage =E2=80=9Ctake=E2=80= =9D is). Direct and indirect remuneration (DIR) fees are the latest in a lo= ng line of reimbursement strategies that rely on spread that generate margi= n for PBMs. =20 Transparency Is the Kryptonite of Any Spread Business Squeezing one end of the proverbial margin balloon results in the other end= getting bigger. In the case of DIR fees, the federal government wanted a c= learer view into the spread and to receive a bigger part of that spread. Th= us, the payer side of the balloon got squeezed. As a result, community phar= macies, by and large, ended up rebalancing the air in the balloon on the ot= her side through DIR fees, which are simply a way to package the PBM margin= in another way and place the burden of that spread on the pharmacy. The pa= ckage may include network access fees, performance tiering, and other attri= butions of apportionment. It can be anything that is assigned to the dollar= amount in total. This strategy is only possible (politically or otherwise)= through lack of transparency in the clawback provisions. Although good at = generating profit, lack of transparency is an anathema to properly function= ing marketplaces. Remember collateralized debt obligations and the financia= l crisis? Nobody had any idea what was in those packaged debt vehicles; not= the buyers or sellers, just the people who created them. =20 No Longer Inside Baseball: The Transparency Discussion Goes Mainstream Part of the challenge of pushing back against lack of transparency in pharm= acy reimbursement is that it comes across as esoteric, with highly technica= l rebate structures and multiple parties involved under the surface, but wi= thout a lot of fanfare the average person can understand or attach much emo= tion to because transparency is a matter between providers and payers. Howe= ver, several catalyzers now in play are changing that dynamic and widening = the aperture of the discussion to include mainstream policymakers and media= channels: =20 Catalyzer #1: DIR Fees Were Born out of Regulation to Create Transparency f= or the Government Anytime a program that involves government is implemented, it will ultimate= ly be subject to public scrutiny, open forums, and disclosure. Avenues to e= ngage, if you are a patient advocate or a provider advocate, are much more = plentiful. DIR fees (and ultimately, spread itself) will likely be the issu= e that pierces the transparency veil of all mechanisms that create spread b= ecause the rules and procedures around government make the discussion hard = to hide. =20 Catalyzer #2: DIR Fees Require Opacity to Generate Margin Spread margin is an animal of opacity. In the absence of nondisclosure and = in a transparent environment, margin is generated as a fee (not spread). DI= R fees require opacity to exist. The country=E2=80=99s mood is currently no= t favorable toward the guy behind the curtain. =20 Catalyzer #3: DIR Fees Affect the Consumer Recent reporting has uncovered ways in which DIR fees may affect consumers = and their out-of-pocket spend. That is a game changer when it comes to broa= dening the audience of the interested. =20 Catalyzer #4: President Trump=E2=80=99s Populist Stance on Drug Costs This one is the kicker. For years, pharmacies and Pharmaceutical Research a= nd Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) have been at odds during budget season = because both contribute to the total cost of drugs, fighting over therapeut= ic interchange and pharmacy reimbursement cuts as the way to moderate incre= asing costs. However, as PhRMA and pharmacies have been squeezed over time,= the portion of available margin going to these 2 stakeholders has come mor= e in line per transaction with PBM spread. This has had the effect of bring= ing otherwise warring parties closer together to spotlight the PBM industry= =E2=80=99s role as part of the drug cost driver equation (which is the oppo= site of its intended market purpose). The fact that a Republican is proposi= ng price controls will shine a $300 billion-watt bulb on how drugs are purc= hased and reimbursed through the entire value chain. =20 Catalyzer #5: Legislation (Regardless of Outcomes) No proposed or introduced legislation is worth a darn unless it has broad p= olitical momentum behind it. Legislators can introduce legislation all day = long that gets referred to committee, with no hearings or fanfare. However,= because of catalyzers 1 through 4 above, House Resolution 1038 and Senate = Bill 413, which speak to transparency, now have legs. And even if they neve= r reach a vote, they will no doubt have a much wider audience, and that is = a game changer. =20
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_______________________________________________ Hangout mailing list Hangout-at-nylxs.com http://lists.mrbrklyn.com/mailman/listinfo/hangout
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