Differences in Managed Care Drug Formularies: What can Consumers Learn?
Pharmaceutical coverage has become an especially important issue in health plan design. This article develops an objective measure of drug coverage generosity in managed care drug formularies. Formulary generosity is important because patients respond differently to drugs within a therapeutic class,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Medical care research and review 2000-09, Vol.57 (3), p.326-339 |
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description | Pharmaceutical coverage has become an especially important issue in health plan design. This article develops an objective measure of drug coverage generosity in managed care drug formularies. Formulary generosity is important because patients respond differently to drugs within a therapeutic class, and so there is benefit in offering a wide variety of products to prescribing physicians. The measure of coverage generosity considers not only the number of products offered to patients through a formulary, but whether plans systematically exclude more expensive products. The correlation between formulary generosity and health plan member satisfaction is analyzed to see if formulary generosity is perceived by subscribes to be related to perceived health plan quality. The findings are that plans vary widely in offering access to pharmaceuticals but that generosity is not highly correlated with health plan satisfaction. |
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This article develops an objective measure of drug coverage generosity in managed care drug formularies. Formulary generosity is important because patients respond differently to drugs within a therapeutic class, and so there is benefit in offering a wide variety of products to prescribing physicians. The measure of coverage generosity considers not only the number of products offered to patients through a formulary, but whether plans systematically exclude more expensive products. The correlation between formulary generosity and health plan member satisfaction is analyzed to see if formulary generosity is perceived by subscribes to be related to perceived health plan quality. The findings are that plans vary widely in offering access to pharmaceuticals but that generosity is not highly correlated with health plan satisfaction.</description><identifier>ISSN: 1077-5587</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1552-6801</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1177/107755870005700304</identifier><identifier>PMID: 10981188</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications</publisher><subject>Biological and medical sciences ; Decision Making ; Drug formularies ; Drug Prescriptions - economics ; Drug Prescriptions - statistics & numerical data ; Drugs ; Formularies as Topic ; General aspects ; Generosity ; Health insurance ; Health Services Accessibility ; Humans ; Insurance coverage ; Insurance Coverage - statistics & numerical data ; Managed care ; Managed Care Programs - economics ; Managed Care Programs - organization & administration ; Managed health care ; Medical sciences ; Patient Satisfaction ; Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee ; Planification. 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This article develops an objective measure of drug coverage generosity in managed care drug formularies. Formulary generosity is important because patients respond differently to drugs within a therapeutic class, and so there is benefit in offering a wide variety of products to prescribing physicians. The measure of coverage generosity considers not only the number of products offered to patients through a formulary, but whether plans systematically exclude more expensive products. The correlation between formulary generosity and health plan member satisfaction is analyzed to see if formulary generosity is perceived by subscribes to be related to perceived health plan quality. The findings are that plans vary widely in offering access to pharmaceuticals but that generosity is not highly correlated with health plan satisfaction.</description><subject>Biological and medical sciences</subject><subject>Decision Making</subject><subject>Drug formularies</subject><subject>Drug Prescriptions - economics</subject><subject>Drug Prescriptions - statistics & numerical data</subject><subject>Drugs</subject><subject>Formularies as Topic</subject><subject>General aspects</subject><subject>Generosity</subject><subject>Health insurance</subject><subject>Health Services Accessibility</subject><subject>Humans</subject><subject>Insurance coverage</subject><subject>Insurance Coverage - statistics & numerical data</subject><subject>Managed care</subject><subject>Managed Care Programs - economics</subject><subject>Managed Care Programs - organization & administration</subject><subject>Managed health care</subject><subject>Medical sciences</subject><subject>Patient Satisfaction</subject><subject>Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee</subject><subject>Planification. Prevention (methods). Intervention. Evaluation</subject><subject>Prescribing</subject><subject>Public health. Hygiene</subject><subject>Public health. 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Prevention (methods). Intervention. Evaluation</topic><topic>Prescribing</topic><topic>Public health. Hygiene</topic><topic>Public health. 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source | Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Publications; MEDLINE; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Biological and medical sciences Decision Making Drug formularies Drug Prescriptions - economics Drug Prescriptions - statistics & numerical data Drugs Formularies as Topic General aspects Generosity Health insurance Health Services Accessibility Humans Insurance coverage Insurance Coverage - statistics & numerical data Managed care Managed Care Programs - economics Managed Care Programs - organization & administration Managed health care Medical sciences Patient Satisfaction Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee Planification. Prevention (methods). Intervention. Evaluation Prescribing Public health. Hygiene Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine Regression Analysis United States USA |
title | Differences in Managed Care Drug Formularies: What can Consumers Learn? |
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