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North Carolina AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP)

North Carolina AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP). State Pharmaceutical Assistance Program (SPAP). What is an SPAP. State Pharmaceutical Assistance Program (SPAP) Special designation by CMS Data sharing between ADAP and CMS Medicare eligible clients on ADAP identified

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North Carolina AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP)

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  1. North CarolinaAIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP) State Pharmaceutical Assistance Program (SPAP)

  2. What is an SPAP • State Pharmaceutical Assistance Program (SPAP) • Special designation by CMS • Data sharing between ADAP and CMS • Medicare eligible clients on ADAP identified • Low Income Subsidy (LIS) status identified • Federal Poverty Level identified • State funds used to pay cost sharing • RW (federal) funds currently don’t count toward meeting TrOOP

  3. Medicare Part D – Brief Overview • Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit • Started in 2006 • Provides prescription drug coverage for anyone Medicare eligible • Individual signs up for a PDP • May be eligible for LIS through Social Security – separate application • All HIV drugs (ARVs) covered (CMS requirement) • Premiums vary, deductibles vary ($0 - $295) • Cost sharing varies (copays, coninsurance, donut hole) – called TrOOP

  4. Medicare – Brief Review • True-Out-Of-Pocket (TrOOP) Costs • Individual’s responsibility for their medications • Deductible • Percentage of the medication cost • Copays • Donut hole (coverage gap – individual pays entire cost of the medication)

  5. Medicare – Brief Review • The Donut Hole – What is it? • Individual pays the entire cost of medications • How does an individual get into the donut hole? • The total medication cost is used to move the person into the donut hole – what the drug plan pays and what the person pays (copay/coninsurance) • To get into the donut hole = $2700 total drug costs • To get out of the donut hole = $4350 completely paid by the person

  6. Why An SPAP? • In 2006 – ADAP was approved to continue covering the Medicare eligible clients even though clients had prescription drug coverage – Why? • May have resulted in medication gaps since donut hole is unaffordable for most • Clients would have been worse off with the new PDP – coverage level much less • Potential for increased transmission of HIV if viral load is not maintained at a low or undetectable level

  7. Why An SPAP? • As an ADAP • Cannot use Ryan White (federal) funds to coordinate with Medicare Part D • Provided medication regimen at the full cost to ADAP • Medication costs not coordinated with or reported to Medicare • As an SPAP – • State funds used to pay the TrOOP on behalf of the client for all drugs on the ADAP formulary • Copays, coinsurance, donut hole paid for by ADAP • Costs reported to Medicare TrOOP facilitator • No cost to client for drugs on the ADAP formulary

  8. What is Required for Medicare Eligible Clients on NC ADAP • Must meet NC ADAP eligibility criteria • Must sign up for a Medicare Part D PDP or Advantage Plan with Prescription Drug Coverage • Client pays premium – averages $30/month • Client pays copay or co-insurance for non-ADAP formulary drugs • If below 150% of the federal poverty level must sign up for the low income subsidy (LIS) through Social Security

  9. NC SPAP Process • Same central pharmacy used for both ADAP and SPAP clients • Original pharmacy contract required that Medicare and Medicaid eligibility are checked at time of medication dispense • If Medicare eligible – dispense processed through the PBM • TrOOP facilitator updated real-time • Billing separate – only state funds used for clients on SPAP • Dispensing reports separate

  10. Benefits of SPAP • ADAP pays only the client’s TrOOP for drugs on the NC ADAP formulary (copays/coninsurance/donut hole) • All costs paid on behalf of client are reported to the Medicare TrOOP facilitator • Helps move client into catastrophic coverage level • Saves a significant proportion of the costs previously expended for the client’s regimen as a regular ADAP client • Helps ensure open enrollment into ADAP • Allows for additional services, such as adherence counseling • Allows for an expanded formulary

  11. Challenges • NC ADAP information about Medicare eligible clients was incomplete • Educating Case Managers about Medicare Part D and the SPAP • Enrollment not during normal open enrollment period • Contacting Clients • Ensuring enrollment into Part D • Resistance from clients and case managers • Non-ADAP Medication Costs • CMS Data Files • Medications not on Medicare PDP formulary

  12. Questions? • Sally Kohls: 919-733-9602 or sally.kohls@ncmail.net • Robert (Bob) Winstead: 919-715-3115 or robert.winstead@ncmail.net • NC ADAP Website http://www.epi.state.nc.us/epi/hiv/adap2.html

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