Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Money & Business

Planning to Retire by Emily Brandon

Gap in Medicare Drug Coverage Causes Some to Stop Medication

September 05, 2008 04:39 PM ET | Emily Brandon | Permanent Link | Print

The doughnut hole—besides being a tasty treat—is what many people call the gap in Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage. Seniors who reach this gap must pay for the entire cost of their prescriptions out of pocket. Some retirees who can't afford their medicines actually stop treatment as a result, according to a recent study.

The standard Part D benefit has a $275 deductible and 25 percent coinsurance up to $2,510 in total drug costs in 2008. Then comes the doughnut hole where enrollees pay all of the next $3,216 in prescription costs. After that, catastrophic coverage kicks in, and beneficiaries pay 5 percent of any additional medicine costs.

About 26 percent of Part D enrollees who filled prescriptions in 2007 but did not receive low-income subsidies reached the coverage gap, according to research conducted by Georgetown University, the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago, and the Kaiser Family Foundation. Most (22 percent) remained in the gap for the rest of the year and saw their average out-of-pocket costs nearly double, from $104 to $196 monthly. Kaiser estimates that 3.4 million beneficiaries reached the coverage gap and faced the full cost of their prescriptions in 2007.

Only 4 percent of part D enrollees who filled prescriptions ultimately received catastrophic coverage. Most of these seniors paid the full cost of their medications for an average of just over four months and received catastrophic coverage for less than one month.

Senior Part D enrollees treating chronic conditions like Alzheimer's (64 percent), diabetes (51 percent), and depression (45 percent) were most likely to face the full cost of their prescriptions in 2007. Once they reached the gap, 15 percent of enrollees stopped their drug therapy for that condition, 5 percent switched to another medication in the class, and 1 percent reduced the number of drugs they were taking in the class.

Among Part D enrollees taking medications for specific conditions who reached the gap:

  • 10 percent stopped taking oral antidiabetic drugs
  • 18 percent gave up osteoporosis medications
  • 20 percent discontinued the use of proton pump inhibitors

Tags: Medicare | prescription drugs | senior health

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Reader Comments

Part D Insurace

My husband has severe heart problems and takes many medications. There are many medications that you can get for $4.00 at Wal Mart. That is what I do and we have not reached the hole yet. That was the only thing that made sense to me. I save his insurance for the more expensive drugs that that is not a generic for.

doughnut hole

don't you think Medicare has the amounts backwards. They should pay the $3000 plus dollars and the insured should pay the $2000 plus.

MEDICARERX

From what I understand, this program was designed by Karl Rove. Was voted on by congress with gop majority. All costs are based on drug companies list prices. Which leaves a lot of fat for insurance companies, discount drug stores, mail away pharmacies and drug companies. This will help all of the above and help deplete medicare money that much faster. What else would you expect from the republican. walsto

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Reporter Emily Brandon tells you how to get ready financially for retirement and to make your golden years the best they can be. You can E-mail Emily your retirement concerns at retire@usnews.com.

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