Bill Text: NY S00191 | 2009-2010 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Instructs the superintendent of insurance to deny policies imposing drug tiers based on expense or disease category and charging cost-sharing percentage for prescription medication.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-01-06 - REFERRED TO INSURANCE [S00191 Detail]

Download: New_York-2009-S00191-Introduced.html
                           S T A T E   O F   N E W   Y O R K
       ________________________________________________________________________
                                          191
                              2009-2010 Regular Sessions
                                   I N  S E N A T E
                                      (PREFILED)
                                    January 7, 2009
                                      ___________
       Introduced  by  Sen. SAMPSON -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
         printed to be committed to the Committee on Insurance
       AN ACT to amend the insurance  law,  in  relation  to  denying  policies
         imposing drug tiers and cost-sharing for prescription medication
         THE  PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, REPRESENTED IN SENATE AND ASSEM-
       BLY, DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
    1    Section 1. Legislative findings. The legislature finds that:
    2    (a) The cost of specialty drugs is a great concern. According  to  IMS
    3  Health,  about $37.7 billion was spent on specialty drugs in 2003, grow-
    4  ing by as much as 26.6  percent  since  2002,  nearly  double  the  13.4
    5  percent growth rate in total drug spending. The growth rate for special-
    6  ty  pharmacy drugs is expected to be 20 percent a year for the foreseea-
    7  ble future. Studies and efforts to cope with rising cost drugs,  includ-
    8  ing  specialty  drugs, should strongly consider affordability issues and
    9  minimizing the impact on patients' health.
   10    (b) The current health insurance system is increasingly  unaffordable,
   11  regularly adding new barriers to access. According to the Kaiser Founda-
   12  tion,  health  insurance  premiums rose 6.1 percent in 2007, faster than
   13  wages rising at 3.7 percent and inflation rising at 2.6 percent.  Annual
   14  premiums for family  coverage  averages  $12,106,  with  workers  paying
   15  $3,281.  Since  2001,  premiums  for  family  coverage have increased 78
   16  percent, while wages have gone up 19 percent and inflation has  gone  up
   17  17  percent.  Furthermore,  between  2000 and 2003, annual out-of-pocket
   18  spending rose $900 or 30 percent  for  employees  with  family  coverage
   19  including insurance premiums, deductibles and drug co-payments, increas-
   20  ing from $1,890 to $2,790.
   21    (c) Multi-tiered formularies have undoubtedly transformed the pharmacy
   22  benefit landscape.  By 2005, most workers with employer-sponsored cover-
   23  age  (74  percent) were enrolled in plans with 3 or more tiers, nearly 3
   24  times the rate in 2000 (27 percent). While cost containment measures are
        EXPLANATION--Matter in ITALICS (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                             [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                  LBD02054-01-9
       S. 191                              2
    1  necessary, certain cost-sharing policies, such as  tier  four  measures,
    2  have  exacerbated  costs  and  created new barriers to access. Tier four
    3  policies charge a percentage of the total cost of high-priced  specialty
    4  medications  (20-33  percent) rather than a fixed co-pay, resulting in a
    5  rise in cost-sharing from average co-pays of $25 per prescription up  to
    6  $325  or  even  $4000  in  some  instances.  These policies often target
    7  vulnerable populations by driving prices up for extremely sick  patients
    8  in  order  to reduce costs for healthy patients and/or to improve profit
    9  margins for Health Maintenance Organizations or Pharmacy Benefit  Manag-
   10  ers.  Families  and  individuals  struggling  with  diagnoses of anemia,
   11  cancer, multiple sclerosis and hepatitis C who  depend  on  cutting-edge
   12  medications  for functioning or survival, have been severely burdened by
   13  a new pricing system implemented in 86 percent of the Medicare plans and
   14  10 percent of private plans. Several studies reveal that  various  cost-
   15  sharing policies create negative health outcomes by reducing utilization
   16  and  increasing hospitalization.  One report cited in the Journal of the
   17  American Medical Association identified 132 articles which examined  the
   18  association  between  prescription  drug plans cost-containment measures
   19  and salient outcomes.   The results revealed  that  in  the  short-term,
   20  increased cost-sharing is associated with lower rates of drug treatment,
   21  worse  adherence among existing users, and more frequent discontinuation
   22  of therapy. Policies which worsen health outcomes must be  prevented  or
   23  halted  in order to avoid costly long-term consequences, but more impor-
   24  tantly to maintain high-quality healthcare for all New Yorkers.
   25    S2. Subsection (d) of section 3221 of the insurance law is amended  by
   26  adding a new paragraph 4 to read as follows:
   27    (4)  THE  SUPERINTENDENT SHALL DENY ANY FORM OF GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE
   28  POLICY WHICH  CATEGORIZES  PRESCRIPTION  MEDICATION  BASED  ON  SPECIFIC
   29  DISEASE  OR SPECIFIC COST AND CHARGES A COST-SHARING PERCENTAGE FOR SUCH
   30  PRESCRIPTION MEDICATION.
   31    S 3. Subsection (i) of section 3216 of the insurance law is amended by
   32  adding a new paragraph 26 to read as follows:
   33    (26) EVERY POLICY WHICH PROVIDES COVERAGE FOR PRESCRIPTION DRUGS SHALL
   34  NOT CATEGORIZE PRESCRIPTION MEDICATIONS BASED  ON  SPECIFIC  DISEASE  OR
   35  SPECIFIC  COST  AND  SHALL NOT CHARGE BASED ON A COST-SHARING PERCENTAGE
   36  FOR SUCH PRESCRIPTION MEDICATION.
   37    S 4. Section 4303 of the insurance law is  amended  by  adding  a  new
   38  subsection (ff) to read as follows:
   39    (FF)  EVERY POLICY WHICH PROVIDES COVERAGE FOR PRESCRIPTION CARE SHALL
   40  NOT CATEGORIZE PRESCRIPTION MEDICATIONS BASED  ON  SPECIFIC  DISEASE  OR
   41  SPECIFIC  COST AND MAY NOT CHARGE BASED ON A COST-SHARING PERCENTAGE FOR
   42  SUCH PRESCRIPTION MEDICATION.
   43    S 5. This act shall take effect on the one hundred twentieth day after
   44  it shall have become a law; provided however, that any rules  and  regu-
   45  lations  necessary  for  the  timely  implementation  of this act on its
   46  effective date shall be promulgated on or before such date.
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