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Coinsurance trend means seniors likely to face higher out-of-pocket drug costs, report says

More than half of covered drugs in standalone plans require them to pay a percentage of the cost rather than a flat fee, a new analysis found.

Medicare beneficiaries may get dinged with higher prescription drug bills this year because more than half of covered drugs in standalone plans require them to pay a percentage of the cost rather than a flat fee, a new analysis found.

Fifty-eight percent of covered drugs in Part D drug plans are subject to "coinsurance" in 2016 rather than flat copayments, the analysis by Avalere Health found. The percentage of drugs requiring coinsurance has climbed steadily, increasing from 35 percent in 2014 to 45 percent last year. That percentage is approaching two-thirds of all covered drugs.

For beneficiaries, drug plans' increasing use of coinsurance may mean higher out-of-pocket costs, among other things. If a drug costs $200, instead of making a flat $20 copayment, they may owe 20 percent of the cost, or $40.

More coinsurance makes beneficiaries' drug costs less predictable, said Caroline Pearson, a senior vice president at Avalere. It may also result in fewer affordable options if patients can't achieve any savings by substituting drugs in the same therapeutic class, she said. The shift toward coinsurance also means that Medicare beneficiaries will have to rely to a greater extent on cost-estimating tools like the Medicare plan finder to figure out how much they may owe out of pocket.

[Also: Prescription drug spending rise expected to eclipse pace of overall health spending]

Medicare Part D plans typically divide drugs into five tiers with different levels of cost sharing. In the past, coinsurance may have been limited to high-cost specialty drugs, but that's changing. Last year, about two-thirds of people in drug plans faced coinsurance in more than one drug tier; this year the figure is 96 percent, according to Avalere.

Medicare Advantage managed care plans aren't shifting to coinsurance to the same degree as the standalone drugs plans that accompany traditional Medicare coverage, the analysis found. In 2016, 26 percent of covered drugs in Medicare Advantage plans required coinsurance.

"On the Medicare Advantage side, the premium includes both medical and drug benefits, and the drug piece is smaller," so the incentive to tightly manage drug costs may be lower in Medicare Advantage plans, Pearson said.

[Also: CMS tests new model to lower cost of prescription drugs]

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