August, 2016 - SUPPORT Summary of a systematic review | print this article |
Restrictions on reimbursement are defined as insurance policies that restrict reimbursement for selected drugs or drug classes, often using additional patient specific information related to health status or need.
Key messages
Pharmaceutical expenditures are a large component of health expenditures, accounting for an average of 17% of total health spending in Organization of Economic Cooperation and Devel-opment (OECD) countries in 2007 and exceeding 20% of health spending in eight countries. Restrictions on reimbursement are defined as the sets of insurance policies that restrict reimburse-ment for selected drugs or drug classes, often using additional patient specific information related to health status or need. Approval may be automatic (but subject to audit) if a reason is supplied. Included in this category are policies that are labelled as special authorization, special authority, special consideration, prior authorization, prior approval, pre-authorisation, restricted access, exemptions and for limited use.
Review objectives: To determine the effects of a pharmaceutical policy restricting the reimbursement of selected medications on drug use, healthcare utilization, health outcomes and costs (expenditures). |
||
Type of | What the review authors searched for | What the review authors found |
---|---|---|
Study designs & interventions |
Randomized and non-randomized trials, interrupted time series studies including repeated measures studies, and controlled before-after studies assessing prescribing policies - introduction of restriction to reimbursement, relaxation of previously instituted restrictions to reimbursement, or exemption from restrictive policies for targeted cost-effective drugs. |
24 studies evaluating restrictions to reimbursement policies. The majority of interventions were prior authorization. 5 studies evaluated policies of releasing or relaxing past restrictions to reimbursement. All of the studies were interrupted time series.
|
Participants |
Healthcare consumers and providers within a large jurisdiction or system of care (regional, national or international)
|
Participants were predominantly the beneficiaries of publi-cally subsidized or administered pharmaceutical insurance plans – most often senior citizens aged 65 years or over and low-income adult populations.
|
Settings |
All settings
|
Health insurance systems with substantial coverage of medicines in the USA (14), Canada (11), Norway (2) and Denmark (2)
|
Outcomes |
Primary outcomes: drug use (prescribed, dispensed or actually used), healthcare utilisation, health outcomes, costs (expenditures). Secondary outcomes: changes in equity of access to drugs, changes in access to medically necessary drugs by disadvantaged groups, changes in the distribution of financial burden
|
Drug use and drug expenditures (24 studies), health out-come data (2 studies), healthcare utilization (9 studies)
|
Date of most recent search: MEDLINE (2005 to January 2009) and other databases (2005 to October 2008)
|
||
Limitations: This is a well-conducted systematic review with only minor limitations; however the most recent searches were in January 2009.
|
Green CJ, Maclure M, Fortin PM, Ramsay CR, Aaserud M, Bardal S. Pharmaceutical policies: effects of restrictions on reimbursement. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2010, Issue 8. Art. No.: CD008654.
Green CJ, Maclure M, Fortin PM, et al. Pharmaceutical poli-cies: effects of restrictions on reimbursement. Cochrane Da-tabase of Systematic Reviews 2010, Issue 8. Art. No.: CD008654.
Twenty-four studies evaluated restrictions on reimbursement. The majority of interventions were prior authorization policies where drug benefit plans required physicians to apply for exemptions from restrictions before permission was granted to have all or part of the cost of the targeted drug paid for by the insurance plan.
Outcomes | Impact |
Number of participants (studies) |
Certainty of the evidence (GRADE) |
Target drug use, immediately after introduction
|
Median relative effect (range) -26% (-.04 to -92%)
|
7 studies
|
|
Target drug use, at 2 years after introduction |
Median relative effect (range) -17% (-9% to -70%)
|
4 studies
|
|
Expenditures on target drug or drug class at 6 months after introduction |
Median relative effect (range) - 57% (-36% to -85%)
|
3 studies
|
|
Expenditures on target drug at 2 years after introduction |
Median relative effect (range) - 49% (-18% to -79%)
|
2 studies
|
|
Health outcomes
|
One study found little or no difference in blood pressure control. The results of the other study were confounded.
|
2 studies
|
|
Health service utilization
|
Reported impacts on health service utilization varied.
|
9 studies
|
|
p: p-value GRADE: GRADE Working Group grades of evidence (see above and last page)
Findings | Interpretation* |
---|---|
APPLICABILITY | |
|
|
EQUITY | |
|
|
ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS | |
|
|
MONITORING & EVALUATION | |
|
|
*Judgements made by the authors of this summary, not necessarily those of the review authors, based on the findings of the review and consultation with researchers and policymakers in low-income countries. For additional details about how these judgements were made see: www.supportsummaries.org/methods
|
Related literature
Acosta A, Ciapponi A, Aaserud Met al. Pharmaceutical policies: effects of reference pricing, other pricing, and pur-chasing policies. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2014, Issue 10. Art. No.: CD005979.
Luiza VL, Chaves LA, Silva RM, et al. Pharmaceutical policies: effects of cap and co-payment on rational use of medicines. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2015, Issue 5. Art. No.: CD007017.
Wagner AK, Ross-Degnan D. The potential for insurance systems to increase access to and appropriate use of medicines in Asia-Pacific countries. In: K. Eggleston, ed. Prescribing Cultures and Pharmaceutical Policy in the Asia-Pacific. Brookings Press 2009.
Carapinha J, Ross-Degnan D, Desta A, Wagner AK. Health insurance systems in five Sub-Saharan African coun-tries: Medicines benefits and data for decision making. Health Policy 2011; 99: 193-202.
This summary was prepared by
Taryn Young, South African Cochrane Centre, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South
Africa.
Conflict of interest
None declared. For details, see: www.supportsummaries.org/coi
Acknowledgements
This summary has been peer reviewed by: Anita Wagner and Carolyn Green
This review should be cited as
Green CJ, Maclure M, Fortin PM, Ramsay CR, Aaserud M, Bardal S. Pharmaceutical policies: effects of
restrictions on reimbursement. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2010, Issue 8. Art. No.: CD008654.
The summary should be cited as
Young T. How do pharmaceutical policies that restrict reimbursement for select-ed medications effect health outcomes, drug use and expenditures, and healthcare utilization? A SUPPORT Summary of a systematic review. August 2016. www.supportsummaries.org
Keywords
evidence-informed health policy, evidence-based, systematic review, health sys-tems research, health care, low and middle-income countries, developing coun-tries, primary health care
Restrictions, reimbursement, pharmaceutical policy
This summary was prepared with additional support from:
The South African Medical research Council aims to improve the South Africa’s health and quality of life through promoting and conducting rele-vant and responsive health research.www.mrc.ac.za/
The South African Cochrane Centre, the only centre of the international Cochrane Collaboration in Africa, aims to ensure that health care decision making in Africa is informed by high quality, timely and relevant research evidence. www.mrc.ac.za/cochrane/cochrane.htm