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NASW Government Relations Update

October 4, 2004

Mark B. McClellan, M.D., Ph.D.
Administrator
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
Department of Health and Human Services
Attention: CMS-4068-P
P.O. Box 8014
Baltimore , MD 21244-8014

Dear Dr. McClellan:

The National Association of Social Workers (NASW) welcomes the opportunity to provide comments on the proposed rule "Medicare Program; Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit," 69 FR 46632. NASW is the largest professional social work organization with more than 153,000 members nationwide. NASW promotes, develops, and protects the practice of social work and social workers, while enhancing the well being of individuals, families, and communities through its work, service, and advocacy. We are concerned that the proposed rule does not provide sufficient protections for the 13 million Medicare beneficiaries with disabilities and chronic health conditions. The following are critical recommendations:

Coverage of Dual Eligibles (§ 423.34)

Of grave concern is the impact of the new Medicare drug benefit on those beneficiaries who currently have drug coverage through their state Medicaid programs, i.e. the dual eligibles . CMS must ensure that these very vulnerable beneficiaries receive coverage for the medications they need under the new drug benefit and are not harmed or made worse off when their drug coverage is switched from Medicaid to Medicare.

Based on social workers experience with this group of beneficiaries, we are gravely concerned that the proposed regulations would cause harmful disruption in care and inadequate drug coverage for dual eligibles . In particular, the proposed regulations do not address how access to needed medications by dual eligibles will be maintained when their drug coverage is switched from Medicaid to Medicare.

We urge CMS to take account of the unique circumstances and needs of this population, and delay transfer of drug coverage from Medicaid to Medicare for the dual eligibles for at least six months to allow adequate time to educate and enroll these vulnerable and often hard-to-reach individuals and to ensure they receive the drug coverage to which they are entitled.

CMS must also address the real threat of adverse health outcomes facing dual eligibles . Under the proposed rule, dual eligibles would effectively be forced to enroll in the lowest cost plans in their areas because the low-income subsidy they will receive will only cover the premium for these plans (and automatic enrollment would require placement in a low-cost plan). While it is critical that the transfer from Medicaid to Medicare drug coverage maintain continuity of care, the proposed regulations provide no such protection. To the contrary, the formularies for these low-cost drug plans will not be as comprehensive as the drug coverage these individuals currently have through Medicaid. Without access to the coverage they need, dual eligibles would have no real choice but to switch medications. Yet changing medications for those with complex conditions is both very difficult and potentially dangerous. For example, abrupt changes in psychiatric medications bring the risk of serious adverse drug reactions and interactions and the potential for a severe loss of functioning.

With respect to beneficiaries with mental illness, these regulations must give meaningful effect to the concern Congress itself voiced, stating in the conference report on the Act that: “[ i ]f a plan chooses not to offer or restrict access to a particular medication to treat the mentally ill, the disabled will have the freedom to choose a plan that has appropriate access to the medicine needed. The Conferees believe this is critical as the severely mentally ill are a unique population with unique prescription drug needs as individual responses to mental health medications are different.” [Report No. 108-391, pp. 769-770] Unfortunately, the proposed rule does not adequately provide the protection for people with mental illness that Congress called for. We urge that the regulations be revised to provide for “grandfathering” coverage of psychiatric medications for dual eligibles into the new Part D benefit, as a number of states have done in implementing preferred drug lists for their Medicaid programs.

Lastly, for the dual eligibles in particular, CMS must f und collaborative partnerships with organizations representing people with disabilities and other vulnerable populations. Such partnerships will be critical to an effective outreach and enrollment process. Targeted and hands-on outreach to vulnerable Medicare beneficiaries, especially those with low-incomes, is vitally important in the enrollment process. We strongly urge CMS to develop a specific plan for facilitating enrollment of beneficiaries with disabilities and complex medical conditions in each region that incorporates collaborative partnerships with the state and local agencies and the advocacy organizations that serve them.

Alternative, Flexible Formularies for Beneficiaries for Vulnerable Populations (§ 423.120(b))

For people with serious and complex medical conditions, access to the right medications can make the difference between living in the community, being employed and leading a healthy and productive life on the one hand, and facing deteriorating health, unnecessary hospitalizations and even death, on the other. Often, people with disabilities and complex medical conditions need access to the newest medications, because they have fewer side effects and may represent a better treatment option than older less expensive drugs. Many individuals have multiple disabilities and health conditions making drug interactions a common problem. Frequently, extended release versions of medications are needed to effectively manage these conditions. In other cases, specific drugs are needed to support adherence to a treatment regimen. Individuals with cognitive impairments may be less able to articulate problems with side effects making it more important for the doctor to be able to prescribe the best medication for the individual. Often that pharmacological process takes time since many people with significant disabilities must try multiple medications and only after much experimentation find the medication that is most effective for their circumstance. The consequences of denying the appropriate medication for an individual with a disability or chronic health condition are serious and can include injury or debilitating side effects, even hospitalization or other types of costly medical interventions.

We strongly support the suggestion in the proposed rule that certain populations require special treatment due to their unique medical needs, and the enormous potential for serious harm (including death) if they are subjected to formulary restrictions and cost management strategies envisioned for the Part D program. We believe that to ensure that these special populations have adequate, timely, and appropriate access to medically necessary medications, they must be exempt from all formulary restrictions and they must have access to all medically necessary prescription drugs at a plan's preferred level of cost-sharing. We recommend that this treatment apply to the following overlapping special populations who:

  • are dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid;
  • live in nursing homes, ICF-MRs and other residential facilities;
  • have life threatening conditions; or
  • have pharmacologically complex condition such as mental illness, Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis, HIV/AIDS, and epilepsy.

Furthermore, new limits on cost management tools must be imposed for these vulnerable populations. We urge CMS to make significant improvements to the consumer protection provisions in the regulations in order to ensure that individuals can access the medications they require. For example we strongly oppose allowing any prescription drug plan to impose a 100% cost sharing for any drug. We urge CMS to prohibit or place limits on the use of certain cost containment policies, such as unlimited tiered cost sharing, dispensing limits, therapeutic substitution, mandatory generic substitution for narrow therapeutic index drugs, or prior authorization. We are also concerned that regulations will create barriers to having the doctor prescribe the best medication for the individual including off-label uses of medications that are common for many conditions. We strongly recommend that the final rule prohibit plans from placing limits on the amount, duration and scope of coverage for covered Part D drugs.

Involuntary Disenrollment for Disruptive Behavior (§ 423.44)

The proposed regulation raises grave concerns in allowing Medicare drug plans to involuntarily disenroll beneficiaries for behavior that is “disruptive, unruly, abusive, uncooperative, or threatening” (§ 423.44(d)(2)). These provisions create enormous opportunities for discrimination against individuals with mental illness and cognitive impairments. Those who are disenrolled will suffer severe hardship as they would not be allowed to enroll in another drug plan until the next annual enrollment period and as a result they could also be subject to a late enrollment penalty increasing their premiums for the rest of their lives. Plans must be required to develop mechanisms for accommodating the special needs of these individuals, and CMS must provide safeguards to ensure that they do not lose access to drug coverage.

As a matter of principle, for a critical safety net program such as Medicare prescription drugs for dual eligibles, NASW cannot support automatic disenrollment of this population under any circumstances. We are therefore alarmed that CMS has proposed an expedited disenrollment process that would undermine the minimal standards and protections included in the proposed rule. This expedited process proposal must not be included in the final rule. In addition, CMS must provide a special enrollment period for beneficiaries who are involuntarily disenrolled for disruptive behavior and must waive the late enrollment penalty for these individuals as well. The final rule must include the following protections:

  • drug plans must be prohibited from disenrolling a beneficiary because he/she exercises the option to make treatment decisions with which the plan disagrees, including the option of no treatment and/or no diagnostic testing;
    • drug plans may not disenroll a beneficiary because he/she chooses not to comply with any treatment regimen developed by the plan or any health care professionals associated with the plan;
    • documentation provided to CMS arguing for approval of a plan's proposal to involuntarily disenroll an individual must include:
    • documentation of the plan's effort to provide reasonable accommodations for individuals with disabilities in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act; and
    • documentation that the plan provided the beneficiary with appropriate written notice of the consequences of continued disruptive behavior or written notice of its intent to request involuntary disenrollment ; and
  • drug plans must provide beneficiaries subject to involuntary disenrollment with the following notices:
    • advance notice to inform the individual that the consequences of continued disruptive behavior will be disenrollment ;
    • notice of intent to request CMS' permission to disenroll the individual; and
    • A planned action notice advising that CMS has approved the plan's request for approval of involuntary disenrollment
Appeals Procedures (§§ 423.562-423.604)

The appeals processes outlined in the proposed regulations are overly complex, drawn-out, and inaccessible to beneficiaries. Under these proposed rules, there are too many levels of internal appeal that a beneficiary must request from the drug plan before receiving a truly independent review by an administrative law judge (ALJ) and the timeframes for plan decisions are unreasonably long. In order to qualify for a hearing by an ALJ, beneficiaries must first request a coverage determination or exception from a tiered cost-sharing scheme or formulary which can take between 14 and 30 days, unless a plan honors a beneficiary's request that the determination or exception be expedited in which case it could still take up to 14 days. To appeal adverse determinations or exception decisions, beneficiaries must request plans to review their decision again and make a redetermination within 30 days unless the beneficiary paid out-of-pocket for the medication at issue, in which case the plan has 60 days to decide. Even if a plan honors a request to expedite a redetermination , the deadline for plans to make a decision could be as long as 14 days. Following a redetermination , beneficiaries may appeal to a so-called independent review entity for a reconsideration of their case, but these entities will not be authorized to review or question the criteria plans use to evaluate exceptions requests. The proposed rules do not even set deadlines for reconsideration decisions. After receiving a reconsideration decision, beneficiaries are only allowed to appeal to an administrative law judge if the amount in controversy meets a threshold level of $100 and it is unclear how CMS will calculate whether a beneficiary has met this threshold.

In addition to imposing unreasonable delays and burdens on beneficiaries, these appeal processes are far from transparent. Drug plans would be authorized to establish their own criteria for reviewing determination, exceptions, and redetermination requests and these criteria will vary from plan to plan. Plans would also be authorized to establish varying degrees of paperwork requirements for beneficiaries and their prescribing physicians who wish to request exceptions from tiered cost-sharing schemes or formularies. Far from ensuring that beneficiaries ' rights are protected, which should be their primary function, these procedures would actually impede the right of beneficiaries to a fair hearing.

Beneficiaries with disabilities and complex health needs often have an extremely limited capacity to navigate grievance and appeals procedures. To accommodate the special needs of these beneficiaries and others who are vulnerable or with low income, CMS must establish a simpler process that puts a priority on ensuring ease of access and rapid results for beneficiaries and their doctors and includes a truly expedited exceptions process for individuals with immediate needs, including individuals facing health care crises, which should be modeled after the federal Medicaid requirement that states respond to prior authorization requests within 24 hours.

We also urge CMS to require plans to dispense a temporary supply of drugs in emergencies. The proposed system does not ensure that beneficiaries' rights are protected and does not guarantee beneficiaries have access to needed medications. For many individuals with disabilities such as epilepsy, mental illness or HIV, treatment interruptions can lead to serious short-term and long-term consequences. For this reasons the final rule must provide for dispensing an emergency supply of drugs pending the resolution of an exception request or pending resolution of an appeal.

Outreach and Enrollment (§ 423.34)

The proposed regulations do not adequately address the need for collaboration with state and local agencies and community-based organizations on outreach and enrollment of beneficiaries with disabilities and complex health conditions. In the conference report for the Medicare Modernization Act, Congress directed that “the Administrator of the Center for Medicare Choices [sic] shall take the appropriate steps before the first open enrollment period to ensure that Medicare beneficiaries have clinically appropriated [sic] access to pharmaceutical treatments for mental illness” (Report No. 108-391, pp. 769-770).

To respond to Congress's concern with ensuring enrollment and comprehensive coverage for beneficiaries, CMS must partner with community-based organizations focused on addressing the needs of vulnerable beneficiaries and the state and local agencies that coordinate benefits for them. Beneficiaries with special needs will most likely turn to organizations that they know and trust with questions and concerns regarding the new Part D drug benefit. Making information and educational materials available at these sites will help inform beneficiaries about the new benefit, but providing community-based organizations with pamphlets and brochures alone is not adequate. To answer the many difficult, detailed, and time-consuming questions that beneficiaries will have about the new program, extensive face-to-face counseling services will be needed. Social workers and community-based organizations can provide the kind of detailed help needed, but they will need additional resources.

CMS must develop a specific plan for facilitating enrollment of beneficiaries with special needs, in each region that incorporates collaborative partnerships with and additional funding for state and local public and nonprofit agencies and organizations focused on these needs. In addition, in their bids, drug plans should include specific plans for encouraging enrollment of often hard-to-reach populations.

NASW strongly urges that the concerns discussed above be addressed in order to ensure access to medications under the Part D drug benefit for the many Medicare beneficiaries who need them.

Thank you for your consideration of our comments.

Sincerely,

 

Toby Weismiller, ASCW
Director, Professional Development and Advocacy

 
Suite 700, 750 First Street, Washington, DC 20002-4241
202-408-8600 www.socialworkers.org/advocacy
 
 
 
 
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