President Biden has repeatedly promised to make health care more affordable. And his administration has taken some important steps. But sadly, officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services just passed up an opportunity to save patients millions at the pharmacy.

In December, CMS released a draft of its annual rule regulating how private insurance plans must operate in the year ahead.

Some of what CMS has proposed will certainly benefit many patients. For example, the new rule requires insurers who operate on the federal health exchange to include among their offerings standardized plans that include fixed-dollar-amount “copays” rather than “coinsurance.” With coinsurance, beneficiaries pay a percentage of the cost of the medication — a potentially steep financial burden for patients who need the latest, greatest (usually expensive) treatments. Under the new rule, a Gold-level plan would have a copay of $15 for a 30-day supply of generic medications, $30 for brand-name drugs and $250 for a specialty drug. Such a plan could potentially save patients thousands of dollars in coinsurance payments.

The proposed rule also warns insurers against requiring high coinsurance rates for all of the medications prescribed to treat a particular health condition. It clearly states that insurers cannot discriminate against beneficiaries based on their health condition and expected health needs. And it requires formulary decisions to be based on clinical guidelines for treatment, not merely cost considerations.

But in one key area, the proposed rule falls short — in a way that would be easy for CMS to rectify with a small revision when the rule is finalized.

The problem concerns how insurers treat the financial assistance that drug makers often provide directly to patients. This assistance totaled $14 billion in 2019 — reducing patients’ costs and thus helping them afford their prescriptions and follow their doctors’ orders.

The proposed rule, however, allows insurers not to count this patient assistance toward a policyholder’s annual out-of-pocket maximum. That’s an option more and more insurers are taking advantage of — nearly 25% of healthcare plans provided by medium and large businesses, for example, according to data from the Kaiser Family Foundation. 

To understand how unfair this is, consider a hypothetical. If a working-class patient receives $1,000 from a relative, or a local charity, to help cover a copay or coinsurance, insurers would count that spending towards her out-of-pocket maximum. But if the patient receives the same $1,000 from a drug company, those insurers wouldn’t count it.

By refusing to do so, insurance companies both collect the $1,000 in financial assistance from the drug manufacturer while at the same time requiring the patient to pay that amount out-of-pocket. That’s double-dipping. In its effect on the patients’ pocketbook, the out-of-pocket maximum for which they are responsible increases by the amount of the financial assistance.

The issue of how to treat this copay assistance isn’t an arcane accounting question — it directly impacts patients’ health.

If taken properly, prescription drugs keep patients healthy and out of hospitals and doctors’ offices. But when patients fail to take their medicines due to cost concerns, they end up sicker, often requiring expensive hospital care. In fact, about one in every ten hospitalizations results from prescription non-adherence.

Co-pay assistance can boost drug adherence and thus lower overall health spending — but only if patients can actually realize the savings.

Twelve states and Puerto Rico have already passed laws requiring insurers to count manufacturer copay assistance toward beneficiaries’ annual out-of-pocket maximums. Others are looking to follow suit on this matter of basic fairness.

But it’s a national problem and needs a national solution. In Congress, Reps. Donald McEachin (D-VA) and Rodney Davis (R-IL) have introduced a bipartisan bill, HR 5808, to address it directly by law. In the meantime, the Biden administration could easily solve it by revising the final rule – a big step toward fulfilling its promise to make drugs more affordable.

BY TYLER DURDEN