Abstract

To measure the effect of a change in an insurance company's reimbursement formula on prescription department gross margins for all prescriptions and subgroups of prescriptions. Retrospective descriptive analysis. Wisconsin. Two units of a chain pharmacy. Reimbursement changed from usual and customary price to average wholesale price less 10% plus a $2.00 dispensing fee for single-source products, and maximum allowable cost plus a $2.00 dispensing fee for multisource products. Gross margins for prescriptions dispensed in the month before and after the reimbursement change. The average estimated gross margin decreased 26.9% after the change in reimbursement, and the effect on the average gross margin for generic prescriptions was nearly twice that of the effect on the average gross margin for brand name prescriptions. The effect of the reimbursement change on different therapeutic classes ranged from an increase of 0.7% in the cardiovascular class to a decrease of 68.2% in the eyes, ears, nose, and throat class. The effect of the reimbursement change was greater for low-cost prescriptions than for high-cost prescriptions. The large effect of the reimbursement change, combined with continued growth in third party prescriptions, raises concerns about whether pharmacies can accept third party contracts with low reimbursement rates and still maintain current profitability and service levels.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call