Letters: What drugs cost, and why - Los Angeles Times
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Letters: What drugs cost, and why

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Re “Slashing choices to cut drug costs,†Column, May 4

David Lazarus misleadingly describes the role of the pharmacy benefit manager, or PBM, in determining which dispensing channel — home delivery or retail — patients use.

PBMs help create a robust, cost-effective pharmacy benefit. Plan sponsors lower costs by increasing generic drug utilization and patient adherence to prescribed drug therapy, and by offering a lower-cost dispensing option through home delivery. We offer these tools in a variety of options so that our clients can design plans that best meet their goals.

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Some plans maximize savings by requiring that patients with prescriptions for long-term maintenance drugs receive them through home delivery. Of the plans that require home delivery, many are labor unions and government agencies that feel a responsibility to stretch their members’ dues further or to make the most of tax dollars. Choice is preserved in every option we provide.

Steven Miller, MD

St. Louis

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The writer is chief medical officer at Express Scripts.

I would like to add an additional consequence to the mandated use of an online pharmacy after the second refill.

I take medication for high blood pressure and atrial fibrillation. My cardiologist, for various reasons, routinely makes changes to the medications or dosages. Because I am forced to buy a 90-day supply, I have hundreds of purchased but unused pills.

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For Medco, one of the PBMs in Lazarus’ article, this proves to be very cost efficient. That efficiency is one-sided, however. I have actually ended up paying a higher cost than if I had been allowed to buy a 30-day supply from my local pharmacy. I submit that these are the types of things that actually increase my blood pressure.

William Hale

Chino Hills

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