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SPONSOR: |
Marquardt |
DATE TYPED: |
3/08/03 |
HB |
965 |
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Senior RX Act |
SB |
|
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Dunbar |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
$5,000.0 |
|
Significant See Narrative |
Recurring
|
Tobacco
Settlement Program Fund |
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to: SB 391, HB 402,HB 513, SB 160 and HB 648.
Responses
Received From
Department
of Health (DOH)
Health
Policy Commission (HPC)
Human
Services Department (HSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
HB
965 appropriates $5,000,000 from the tobacco settlement fund to the department
of health in fiscal year 2004 for the development and implementation of the
Senior Rx Program.
House
Bill 965 entitled the “Senior Rx Act” creates a prescription drug program for
seniors in the Department of Health (DOH).
HB 965 would direct the DOH to enter into a contract with a private
insurer(s) that transacts health or prescription drug insurance in the state to
arrange for the availability, at a reasonable cost, of polices that provide
coverage for prescriptions and pharmaceutical services.
The
DOH would not permit the insurer(s) to impose a formulary that is more
restrictive than a formulary the insurer concurrently offers in the commercial
marketplace. Under the program, and
subject to availability of state funds, a person who purchases an insurance
policy would be entitled to a subsidy grant from the Senior Rx Fund to cover a
portion of the cost of that insurance if the person meets the eligibility
criteria established by the DOH.
The
amount of the subsidy granted by the Senior Rx Act would not exceed the lesser
of the annual cost of an insurance policy pursuant to the policy under the
program or $500 per year. Eligibility
criteria for the Senior Rx Program include: 62 years of age, ineligible for
Medicaid, ineligible for or unable to purchase other prescription drug coverage
under a public or private insurance plan or program and has been domiciled in
the state for at least one year.
Under
HB 965, the DOH would be responsible for the development of an application
process for receipt of applications for the program. Duties would include verification of domicile and income, review
and analysis of complete applications and determination for a level of
subsidy. Results of the process would
be made to the applicant in writing and a reconsideration process for denials
would be established.
The
DOH would establish a schedule of available subsidy grants to assist eligible
persons. The DOH would establish a
sliding fee for the subsidy grants that would be based up a percentage of the
federal poverty guidelines. The Department shall also consider the number of
persons in the household and the total income of the household in which the
applicant resides in the determination of the subsidy grant. Payments under the
program shall be made directly to the insurer(s) under contract and notify the
eligible person of the payment. If a
payment were made to an individual that was later found to be ineligible, the
DOH could take appropriate action to collect the amount of the payment. Funds
recovered would be deposited in the Senior Rx Fund.
The Senior Rx Fund would be created in the State Treasury to carry out the provisions of the Senior Rx Act. The DOH would be authorized to transfer, federal, state or other public or private funds that may be received as matching funds to this account.
Significant
Issues
In New Mexico, an
estimated 24% of the population is uninsured and nearly as many are insured but
are without prescription benefits.
There is a significant lack of access and affordability of prescription
drugs for many of New Mexico’s senior citizens. The monthly cost for senior citizens prescription drugs averages
four hundred fifty dollars ($450) per month.
Many senior citizens are on a fixed income and are unable to afford prescription
drugs. Some go without food and other
essentials to buy medications, or do without drug therapy altogether
DOH states that it may be difficult to ascertain whether applicants have other prescription drug benefits. Applicants may be unwilling to disclose that they have other prescription drug benefits or might discontinue the benefit if they have access to the benefit proposed in HB 965.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of
$5,000.0 contained in this bill is a recurring expense to tobacco settlement
fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY 04
shall revert to the tobacco settlement fund.
HB965 appropriates
$5,000.0 from the Tobacco Settlement Program Fund for a program that is not
directly related to tobacco education, prevention or cessation, or to health
costs associated with tobacco related illnesses.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
HB
965 would have significant administrative impact on DOH since it does not
contain an appropriation for DOH to carry out the provisions and existing staff
could not conduct the development and implementation. Under HB 965, the
Department would be required to contract with a private insurer(s) to obtain
policies that contain coverage for prescriptions and pharmaceutical services
for beneficiaries under the Senior Rx program.
This procurement is quite involved and would require additional
expertise from other Departments and agencies.
This activity alone could consume a good portion of fiscal year 2004.
The Department would be responsible for establishing an application, developing criteria, appeals and collection for ineligible payments as part of the distribution of funds to contractors/insurer(s) on behalf of eligible seniors. The logistics for an effective program such as this would involve a statewide effort to reach the projected 10,000 eligible seniors. The implementation of this new effort and expenditure of funds in fiscal year 2004 may not be possible.
RELATIONSHIP
HB
965 relates to other bills introduced concerning expanded benefits for seniors,
including:
TECHNICAL ISSUES
“Reasonable cost” and “restrictive formulary”
should be defined clearly.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The pharmaceutical
benefit coverage is very limited under Medicare. Medicare Plus Choice managed
care providers are beginning to respond to recent federal reimbursement changes
that allow them to continue and expand their current enrollments.
HB
865 would establish a program administered by the Department of Health to
address some of the senior prescription medication issues. Estimates of amounts that seniors expend on
prescription drugs far exceed the $500 per capita amount proposed in HB
965. The bill would have a significant
fiscal and administrative impact on DOH and the implementation of this new
effort and expenditure of funds in fiscal year 2004 may not be possible.
In 2002, the Health Policy Commission performed
a wide-ranging and extensive study on prescription drug access in New Mexico,
in response to HJM 22 (2001). A major
component of that study was a phone survey of 3,305 New Mexicans. Survey results found that of the 2,627 respondents
who reported having a need for prescription drugs in the previous 12 months:
·
The
average annual out-of-pocket expense per household for prescription drugs was
$634.66.
·
12%
had less than full access to the medications they needed.
·
Of
these, the populations that had the most difficulties with access were
low-income persons, the uninsured, low/fixed income seniors, disabled persons
and immigrants.
·
Respondents
who reported the poorest health status had the worst access.
·
Persons who were eligible for prescription drug
programs were often overwhelmed by the “amount of paperwork, bureaucracy, time
and effort” necessary to navigate through the system.
·
Seniors
of all income categories reported spending more than any other group on their
prescription medications.
o Even seniors who are
able to afford supplemental coverage often have difficulty paying for the
premiums, co-payments and out-of-pocket expenses, regardless of their income.
o Of
survey respondents, 20% of seniors with incomes less than $10,000 annually and
14% with annual incomes less than $15,000 had less than full access to
prescription drugs.
HB965 would increase access to needed
prescription drugs for some seniors, but it is difficult to determine how many
New Mexicans might actually benefit from this program, without information
about the actual cost(s) of the insurance coverage, the amount of subsidy, the
sliding scale details, etc.
BD/sb