Conference Coverage

Technology softens prior authorization pain points


 

REPORTING FROM AMCP NEXUS 2019

. – Nebulous pricing associated with prior authorization continues to be a major pain point for health care professionals, but this may become a thing of the past – thanks to a technology called real-time pharmacy benefit.

Real-time pharmacy benefits (RTPB) is software or a software component that allows practicing clinicians to look up a patient’s out-of-pocket costs for a specific drug, regardless of the patient’s health insurance coverage. Users can see the costs, copayment, and deductible for branded and generic, as well as compare insurance costs versus cash pricing.

Lindsey Colbert, RN, program manager for care team efficiency at HealthPartners, and Leann McDowell, PharmD, supervisor, pharmacy utilization management at HealthPartners, investigated how integrating RTPB software into their existing platforms and operations could help address pricing nuances and their associated burden on patients and health care professionals. They presented the results of their pilot test and post–pilot test expansion at the annual meeting of the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy.

“Historically, clinicians were told not to quote prices, because having numerous insurance plans made it difficult to know what was going to be covered,” Ms. Colbert said. “Now, with real-time benefits, clinicians have pricing information readily available to them.”

HealthPartners pilot-tested RTPB at two locations before expanding to additional sites. They found that integrating real-time pharmacy benefits information improved the user experience and added cost savings for patients while improving workflow efficiency.

Health care professionals were more like to use RTPB for inquiries when the perceived patient cost was $50 or more – a price many clinicians perceive to be too expensive for many patients.

Before RTPB implementation, participating health care professionals reported waiting at least 45 minutes to get pricing on drugs requiring prior authorization. Integrating the RTPB software shaved the wait time down to 4 minutes – allowing them to quote drug prices to patients at the point of service.

Despite the benefits, everyone is not on board with RTPB.

Health care professionals already feel burdened by the information requirements of their electronic health records systems. They “count the number of computer clicks they have to make, so getting them to make an additional click to use RTPB requires another buy-in,” Ms. Colbert said.

While participating health care professionals were asked to run every prescription through RTPB, they reported using the software only when they knew a patient would either perceive cost as a potential barrier, or if they knew a drug would be expensive.

Investigators said they plan to continue working with clinicians to make RTPB integration more user-friendly by eventually eliminating the additional computer click required to run the program. They also plan to monitor the progress of the National Council for Prescription Drug Programs – developer of RTPB – regarding its adaptation of its new standard.

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