Medicare Part D is associated with reducing the financial burden of health care services in Medicare beneficiaries with diagnosed diabetes.

View Abstract

BACKGROUND

Medicare Part D, implemented in 2006, provided coverage for prescription drugs to all Medicare beneficiaries.

OBJECTIVE

To examine the effect of Part D on the financial burden of persons with diagnosed diabetes.

RESEARCH DESIGN, SUBJECTS, AND OUTCOME MEASURES

We conducted an interrupted time-series analysis using data from the 1996 to 2008 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (11,178 persons with diabetes who were covered by Medicare, and 8953 persons aged 45-64 y with diabetes who were not eligible for Medicare coverage). We then compared changes in 4 outcomes: (1) annual individual out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE) for prescription drugs; (2) annual individual total OOPE for all health care services; (3) annual total family OOPE for all health care services; and (4) percentage of persons with high family financial burden (OOPE ≥10% of income).

RESULTS

For Medicare beneficiaries with diabetes, Part D was associated with a 28% ($530) decrease in individual annual OOPE for prescription drugs, a 23% ($560) reduction in individual OOPE for all health care, a 23% ($863) reduction in family OOPE for all health care, and a 24% reduction in the percentage of families with high financial burden in 2006. There were similar reductions in 2007 and 2008. By 2008, the percentage of Medicare beneficiaries with diabetes living in high financial burden families was 37% lower than it would have been had Part D not been in place.

CONCLUSIONS

Introduction of Part D coverage was associated with a substantial reduction in the financial burden of Medicare beneficiaries with diabetes and their families.

Abbreviation
Med Care
Publication Date
2013-10-01
Volume
51
Issue
10
Page Numbers
888-93
Pubmed ID
23969594
Medium
Print
Full Title
Medicare Part D is associated with reducing the financial burden of health care services in Medicare beneficiaries with diagnosed diabetes.
Authors
Li R, Gregg EW, Barker LE, Zhang P, Zhang F, Zhuo X, Williams DE, Soumerai SB