2018-03-16
Does 1€ per prescription make a difference? Impact of a capped low-intensity pharmaceutical copayment
Publication
Publication
Applied Health Economics and Health Policy , Volume 16 - Issue 3 p. 407- 414
Background Increasing patient contributions and reducing the population exempt from pharmaceutical co-payment and co-insurance rates were one of the most common measures in the reforms adopted in Europe during 2010–2015. Objective We estimated the association between the introduction of a capped co-payment of €1 per prescription and drug consumption of the publicly insured population of Catalonia (Spain). Methods We used administrative data on monthly pharmaceutical consumption (defined daily doses [DDDs]) from January 2012 to December 2014, for a representative sample of 85,000 people. Results Our results showed that consumption increased in the 2 months previous to the introduction of the measure, and fell with the introduction of the ‘Euro per prescription’ co-payment. The average net response associated with the reform (including anticipation) was a reduction of 4.1 DDDs per person per month, representing a 6.4% reduction. The decrease in pharmaceutical consumption was larger for those individuals who had free medicines prior to the reform compared with those who already paid a coinsurance rate (9.7 vs. 1.4 DDDs per person per month). The largest reduction in DDDs per person occurred in the following groups: dermatologic drugs, antihypertensives, non-insulin antidiabetic drugs, insulin antidiabetic drugs, and laxatives. Conclusion A uniform capped low co-payment may give rise to a major reduction in drug consumption to a much greater extent among those who previously had free prescriptions.
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| doi.org/10.1007/s40258-018-0382-x, hdl.handle.net/1765/130826 | |
| Applied Health Economics and Health Policy | |
| Organisation | Department of Applied Economics |
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García-Gómez, P., Mora, T., & Puig-Junoy, J. (2018). Does 1€ per prescription make a difference? Impact of a capped low-intensity pharmaceutical copayment. Applied Health Economics and Health Policy, 16(3), 407–414. doi:10.1007/s40258-018-0382-x |
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