Transparent Pharmacy Benefits

Take control of 20% of your benefits spend.

Snapshot

Transparent Pharmacy Benefits offer purchasers true transparency and the ability to gain control of decision making based on factual information. By obtaining and using the data that a purchaser rightly owns, better decisions regarding pharmacy benefits can be made.

  1. Provide transparency and control over Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM) services
  2. Ensures members have relevant information to make informed choices
  3. Ensures clinical decisions are based solely on efficacy and ACTUAL cost
  4. Is a process that works on behalf of the purchaser’s best interests

The Details

There is a lot of confusion about pharmacy benefits and what is really going on within the data. The industry has made it more confusing and obfuscated than is necessary. As a result, purchasers of pharmacy benefits have lost control of unnecessary rising costs.

Brief History

Pharmacy used to be a small portion of the overall healthcare spend. Then PBMs came into existence in the eighties offering a more streamlined way of managing the pharmacy benefit.

PBMs also offered something no one in the pharmacy benefit industry had seen before: rebates. Pharmaceutical manufacturers had a desire to get their new, life-changing drugs into a preferred position on these new PBM “formularies.” At that time, paying the PBM for that preferred position made financial sense for the pharmaceutical manufacturer. The PBMs then passed along a portion of these rebates to some purchasers of health care. New found money!

Over time there has been no significant oversight of PBM practices. Outside of federal government programs, many states provide only audit fairness regulations. Even today, few states require PBM’s to register their businesses.

The Industry Today

Fast forward about 30 years and let us look at where we are with pharmacy benefits today. The pharmacy benefit has become 20 to 25% of the average employer’s healthcare spend. Specialty Pharmacy has everyone’s attention with $100,000+ therapies and more on the horizon. Rebates are being offered and can generate significant payment to the employer, but rebates also can be a challenge. What if PBMs are choosing which drugs are on “preferred” status based on financial position as opposed to clinical efficacy? Who is overseeing this? Unfortunately as stated before, transparency is hard to find.

Supporting Transparent Pharmacy Benefits is positive for almost all parties involved. It encourages pharmacy benefit participants to become more engaged in their therapy. And there are literally thousands of opportunities where, with proper information and education, participants can make better financial choices and even improve the chances of a quality outcome.

As an example, a drug for the treatment of diabetes, Metformin, has been around for decades and is a valuable therapy for treating the condition. It is a twice a day drug and can be obtained for less than $20 a month. Today, there are new formulations of Metformin that can be taken once a day, possibly improving patient compliance, but at a much greater cost to the participant and the employer, over $1,000 a month. If the participant was educated and informed, would they be able to maintain compliance and cost the system almost $12,000 less per year? Pharmacists that have additional training and are paid appropriately for their time can help patients with this situation as well.

The takeaway here is that purchasers of healthcare and especially pharmacy benefits can take back control while working with their PBM or PBM service partners to improve outcomes and increase the value of their overall Rx benefit.

What's needed to achieve transparent pharmacy benefits
  1. Clarity on How PBMs Work: Some PBMs are incentivized to push certain prescription brands. Additionally, “rebates” can be misleading and may not result in actual savings. True transparency is needed.
  2. Buy-in from HR and Executive Leadership: employing a new model requires senior level staff to be advocates of that model.
  3. Access to Data: it is not possible for employers to make informed decisions without access to their data, which should be provided by the PBM.
  4. A complete understanding of current PBM contracts: utilizing a neutral third-party consultancy will ensure the purchaser has a clear understanding of current terms and conditions that may be resulting in hidden costs.
  5. Consider Carving out Mail Order and Specialty Rx: using  separate vendors for Mail Order and Specialty Pharmacy Provider can save you money.
Step 1 to Transparent Pharmacy Benefits
  1. Pharmacy claims data must be fully understood and utilized by the purchaser. Pharmacy claims data is some of the most robust and readily available data in the healthcare industry.
  2. The PBM must recognize that pharmacy claims data should belong to the purchaser of pharmacy benefit services. This includes the purchaser's right to use that data to make informed decisions.
  3. Purchasers should use their data to obtain analytical resources to help analyze the true cost of pharmacy treatments and not solely depend on information the PBM provides.

    This is especially true when it comes to “guarantees” in the PBM-purchaser contract. Average Wholesale Price (AWP) with its associated “discount” is the common method for evaluating PBM financial performance. AWP really means “Ain’t What’s Paid.” Because of AWP's sometimes confusing and misleading aspects, purchasers should be wary. Purchasers often have no leverage in negotiations because they do not have all the facts

  4. There are many moving parts inside PBMs prescription claims processing systems and there are business practices that can be manipulated at any time. PBMs also have multiple distribution channels such as mail order and specialty. How can purchasers know if the PBM is manipulating them or shifting costs between channels?
  5. Purchasers should use their own data along with unbiased consultants (e.g., equipped with analytical know how, pharmacy industry knowledge, and vendor insight) to negotiate better PBM contracts. Then they can decide for themselves if they should leave all of the PBM services with one vendor or if they should carve out certain aspects of the pharmacy benefit.
  6. When evaluating a PBM’s distribution channels, purchasers should consider carving mail order and specialty pharmacy services away from the PBM services contract. There are also mail order and specialty pharmacy providers offering services for “cost plus a management fee,” which can be less expensive than the “Ain’t What’s Paid” model. Additionally, mail order pharmacy may not be a cost effective solution, depending on benefit design.

Recently, several purchasers utilizing the carved-out approach and better PBM contracting have reduced their pharmacy spend by as much as 10 to 15 % compared to the same time period a year before. See the case studies for the details.

Common challenges to implementing transparent pharmacy benefits
  1. Appearance.
    You may have trouble making a move when you still see AWP discounts that “appear” to give you a significant cost savings. Remember, if you are using AWP for analysis, it is a flawed measurement that may cloud your true savings.
  2. Interference
    Existing consultants who are being incentivized through accepting PBM payments may interfere with your journey toward transparency, as it may not be in their best financial interest.
  3. Lack of Understanding
    Although this may not be an obvious pain point, there still might be a lack of understanding in the HR department about the benefits of Transparent Pharmacy Benefits, or they may simply be unaware of the options available to them. It is important to gain HR and executive buy-in.
  4. Transparent vs. Transparent Pass Through
    There is often confusion between transparent and transparent pass through. Transparent does not necessarily mean you are getting pass through pricing. Make sure you understand the different models and that the transparency is working its way to you, the consumer.
Add to Component

Each component is ever-evolving. Please submit additions & changes.

Resources

#1

In January 2016 a self-insured payor in California transitioned from a traditional model large PBM to this new Health Rosetta inspired Transparent Pharmacy Benefits based model. Mail order services and rebate services were carved away from the PBM contract. In addition, the PBM selected operated as a “pass through” model.  At the end of the first quarter 2016, the organization had realized a 12.41 % savings compared to the same time period in 2015.  Given that no adjustment was made for pharmaceutical manufacturer price increases during 2015 (which were approximately 12 %), the savings number was actually closer to 20 %.  Rebate projections are coming in at a 30 % increase over the previous PBM numbers. The savings analysis was based on direct comparison at the GPI (Generic Product Indicator) level and looked at ingredient cost at the per unit level.

#2

In January 2016 a health plan in the Northeast part of the country transitioned from a traditional model large PBM to this new Health Rosetta inspired Transparent Pharmacy Benefits based model. Specialty, Mail Order and Rebate services were carved away from the PBM contract. In addition, the PBM selected operated as a “pass through” model. At the end of the first quarter 2016, the organization had realized a 14.70 % savings compared to the same time period in 2015.  Given that no adjustment was made for pharmaceutical manufacturer price increases during 2015 (which were approximately 12 %) the savings number was actually closer to 20 %.  Rebate projections are coming in at a 25 % increase over previous PBM numbers.  The savings analysis was based on direct comparison at the GPI (Generic Product Indicator) level and looked at ingredient cost at the per unit level.

We're working on this. Click the "Add Resource" button to submit someone that should be here.

We're working on this. Click the "Add Resource" button to submit a vendor, such as a data analytics platform, pharmacy, transparent PBM, or something else.

We're working on this. Click the "Add Resource" button to submit data, benchmarks, or other useful info.

Add Resource

Each component is ever-evolving. Please submit additions & changes.

Next Steps

Achieving Transparent Pharmacy Benefits at your organization

Recommended action steps to get started:

  1. Request a claims extract file from your current PBM. Have an analysis of your prescription claims performed by a reputable and unbiased source.
  2. Check on your existing arrangement by obtaining a copy of your PBM contract. Hire an unbiased consultant (one who is not incentivized in any way and does not accept commissions from any PBM on any piece of their business) to review and analyze your Rx data and then marry those up to the contractual terms you’ve been offered. Make sure contract terms are clearly defined.
  3. Look into other vendors who can provide various PBM services and a higher level of transparency.
  4. Consider carving out existing specialty Rx.

 

The Health Rosetta Intro Course can help you see the forest for the trees.

Scroll down to the bottom of the page to start the complementary email course. It covers the Health Rosetta and specific components like Transparent Pharmacy Benefits. Most importantly, it covers how everything fits together, strategies and tactics for implementing, where to start generally, and where to look for help.

Component Leads

The key experts that curate, update, and expand the component.

Tim Thomas

CEO at Crystal Clear Rx, pharmacist, & deep PBM expert

Other Collaborators

Coming soon

Help make it better!

The Health Rosetta is open-source.
If you know of something we should add, let us know.

What's next?

1. Intro Course

A six-week email intro to the Health Rosetta.

2. Get the CEO's Guide

CEO's Guide to Restoring the American Dream: How to Deliver World Class Health Care to Your Employees at Half the Cost.

3. Schedule a complementary call

Tell us basics about your organization, current benefits, and goals. We'll help identify a tailored path.