2017-2022 年与阿片类药物使用障碍的医疗补助承保处方减少相关的州药物上限。

Health affairs scholar Pub Date : 2024-12-06 eCollection Date: 2024-12-01 DOI:10.1093/haschl/qxae165
Robert J Besaw, Carrie E Fry
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摘要

医疗补助计划是阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)治疗的最大支付方,包括治疗 OUD 的药物(MOUD)。由于预算中立的要求,一些医疗补助计划使用处方药上限来限制参保者每月可开具的处方数量。本研究利用医疗补助计划的州药物利用率数据中的付费服务和管理性护理数据,研究了 2017 年至 2022 年期间医疗补助计划处方药上限与医疗补助计划涵盖的两种 MOUD(丁丙诺啡和纳曲酮)处方之间的关联。有 10 个州规定了每月处方药上限,从 3 个处方到 6 个处方不等。通过多变量线性回归,我们估计,在设有每月用药上限的州,每 10 万名参保者少服用 1489.3 个 MOUD 处方。此外,与药物上限最小(3 种药物)的州相比,设有 4 种、5 种和 6 种药物上限的州的参保者每州季度开具的处方数量要多得多(分别多 907.7、562.6 和 438.9 个处方)。我们的结果在敏感性分析中表现良好。每月处方药上限与医疗补助计划(Medicaid)涵盖的 MOUD 处方减少有明显关联。需要 MOUD 的医疗补助参保者可能会受到不加区分的处方药上限政策的影响,从而有可能阻碍缓解阿片类药物危机的持续努力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
State drug caps associated with fewer Medicaid-covered prescriptions for opioid use disorder, 2017-2022.

The Medicaid program is the largest payer of opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment, including medications for OUD (MOUD). Because of budget neutrality requirements, some Medicaid programs use prescription drug caps to limit the monthly number of prescriptions an enrollee can fill. This study examined the association between Medicaid prescription drug caps and Medicaid-covered prescriptions for 2 forms of MOUD (buprenorphine and naltrexone) from 2017 to 2022 using fee-for-service and managed care data from Medicaid's State Drug Utilization Data. Ten states had monthly prescription drug caps, ranging from 3 to 6 prescriptions. Using multivariate linear regression, we estimated that enrollees in states with monthly drug caps filled 1489.3 fewer MOUD prescriptions per 100 000 enrollees. Further, compared with states with the smallest drug caps (3 drugs), enrollees in states with 4-, 5-, and 6-drug caps filled significantly more prescriptions per state-quarter (907.7, 562.6, and 438.9 more prescriptions, respectively). Our results were robust to sensitivity analyses. Monthly prescription drug caps were significantly associated with a reduction in Medicaid-covered MOUD prescriptions. Medicaid enrollees who need MOUD may be affected by indiscriminate prescription drug cap policies, potentially hindering ongoing efforts to mitigate the opioid crisis.

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