
Medicare Drug Costs Spike as Plans Quickly Shift to Co-Insurance
By Mary Helen Gillespie
Out-of-pocket costs for commonly prescribed brand name medications have grown substantially for Medicare Part D beneficiaries as drug plans increasingly tie patient costs to list prices, according to new research from the USC Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics published in JAMA.
Medicare clients typically pay either a fixed dollar amount (known as a co-payment) or a percentage of a drug’s list price (known as co-insurance), depending on their Part D plan. And that’s what’s causing more financial pain.
Simply put, the higher the list price, the higher the Part D out-of-pocket costs are depending on your Medicare prescription plan’s policy.
The share of stand-alone Part D prescription drug plans using co-insurance for preferred branded drugs sharply increased from 9.9% in 2020 to 71.9% in 2024, researchers found. By comparison, fewer than 5% of drug plans offered through more comprehensive Medicare Advantage coverage used co-insurance for preferred branded drugs last year.
“For patients facing co-insurance (a percentage of the drug price), out-of-pocket burden increases when list prices increase, as they have for brand-name drugs over the last decade,” JAMA reported.
Patients with co-payments, which are flat fees, are largely shielded from these dynamics, the study said.
Tags: Medicare Out-of-pocket Costs Part D Prescription Drugs Retirement Retirement Daily