Out-of-pocket spending for oral contraceptives among women with private insurance coverage after the Affordable Care Act

Objectives: We aimed to identify which types and brands of oral contraceptive pills have the largest shares of oral contraceptive users in large employer plans with out-of-pocket spending and which oral contraceptives have the highest average annual out-of-pocket costs. Study design: We analyzed a s...

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Main Authors: Brittni Frederiksen, Matthew Rae, Alina Salganicoff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-01-01
Series:Contraception: X
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590151620300198
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author Brittni Frederiksen
Matthew Rae
Alina Salganicoff
author_facet Brittni Frederiksen
Matthew Rae
Alina Salganicoff
author_sort Brittni Frederiksen
collection DOAJ
description Objectives: We aimed to identify which types and brands of oral contraceptive pills have the largest shares of oral contraceptive users in large employer plans with out-of-pocket spending and which oral contraceptives have the highest average annual out-of-pocket costs. Study design: We analyzed a sample of medical claims obtained from the 2003–2018 IBM MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters Database (MarketScan), which is a database with claims information provided by large employer plans. We only included claims for women between the ages of 15 and 44 years who were enrolled in a plan for more than half a year as covered workers or dependents. To calculate out-of-pocket spending, we summed copayments, coinsurance and deductibles for the oral contraceptive prescriptions. Results: We found that 10% of oral contraceptive users in large employer plans still had out-of-pocket costs in 2018. Oral contraceptives with the largest share of users with annual out-of-pocket spending are brand-name contraceptives with generic alternatives. The three contraceptives with the highest average annual out-of-pocket spending were brand-name contraceptives without generic alternatives. Three of the 10 contraceptives with the largest shares of users who have annual out-of-pocket spending and 3 of the 10 contraceptives with the highest average annual out-of-pocket spending contain iron. Conclusions: Women with health insurance are still paying out of pocket for oral contraception, and future research should investigate which health plans have fewer fully covered contraceptives and effective modes of educating providers and patients about how to maximize the no-cost coverage benefit that has been extended to women. Implications: The Affordable Care Act eliminated out-of-pockets costs for contraception for most insured women. However, some women still pay out of pocket for certain oral contraceptive brands and types that may have covered alternatives. Providers and patients could benefit from more education on how to maximize the no-cost coverage benefit extended to women.
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spelling doaj.art-d38d887489314cfdac47632787f111b82022-12-21T23:15:01ZengElsevierContraception: X2590-15162020-01-012100036Out-of-pocket spending for oral contraceptives among women with private insurance coverage after the Affordable Care ActBrittni Frederiksen0Matthew Rae1Alina Salganicoff2Kaiser Family Foundation, 185 Berry St. #2000, San Francisco, CA 94107; Corresponding author.Kaiser Family Foundation, 1330 G St. NW, Washington, DC 20005Kaiser Family Foundation, 185 Berry St. #2000, San Francisco, CA 94107Objectives: We aimed to identify which types and brands of oral contraceptive pills have the largest shares of oral contraceptive users in large employer plans with out-of-pocket spending and which oral contraceptives have the highest average annual out-of-pocket costs. Study design: We analyzed a sample of medical claims obtained from the 2003–2018 IBM MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters Database (MarketScan), which is a database with claims information provided by large employer plans. We only included claims for women between the ages of 15 and 44 years who were enrolled in a plan for more than half a year as covered workers or dependents. To calculate out-of-pocket spending, we summed copayments, coinsurance and deductibles for the oral contraceptive prescriptions. Results: We found that 10% of oral contraceptive users in large employer plans still had out-of-pocket costs in 2018. Oral contraceptives with the largest share of users with annual out-of-pocket spending are brand-name contraceptives with generic alternatives. The three contraceptives with the highest average annual out-of-pocket spending were brand-name contraceptives without generic alternatives. Three of the 10 contraceptives with the largest shares of users who have annual out-of-pocket spending and 3 of the 10 contraceptives with the highest average annual out-of-pocket spending contain iron. Conclusions: Women with health insurance are still paying out of pocket for oral contraception, and future research should investigate which health plans have fewer fully covered contraceptives and effective modes of educating providers and patients about how to maximize the no-cost coverage benefit that has been extended to women. Implications: The Affordable Care Act eliminated out-of-pockets costs for contraception for most insured women. However, some women still pay out of pocket for certain oral contraceptive brands and types that may have covered alternatives. Providers and patients could benefit from more education on how to maximize the no-cost coverage benefit extended to women.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590151620300198ContraceptionOut-of-pocket expensesEmployer-sponsored insuranceCost-sharingSpendingAffordable Care Act
spellingShingle Brittni Frederiksen
Matthew Rae
Alina Salganicoff
Out-of-pocket spending for oral contraceptives among women with private insurance coverage after the Affordable Care Act
Contraception: X
Contraception
Out-of-pocket expenses
Employer-sponsored insurance
Cost-sharing
Spending
Affordable Care Act
title Out-of-pocket spending for oral contraceptives among women with private insurance coverage after the Affordable Care Act
title_full Out-of-pocket spending for oral contraceptives among women with private insurance coverage after the Affordable Care Act
title_fullStr Out-of-pocket spending for oral contraceptives among women with private insurance coverage after the Affordable Care Act
title_full_unstemmed Out-of-pocket spending for oral contraceptives among women with private insurance coverage after the Affordable Care Act
title_short Out-of-pocket spending for oral contraceptives among women with private insurance coverage after the Affordable Care Act
title_sort out of pocket spending for oral contraceptives among women with private insurance coverage after the affordable care act
topic Contraception
Out-of-pocket expenses
Employer-sponsored insurance
Cost-sharing
Spending
Affordable Care Act
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590151620300198
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AT alinasalganicoff outofpocketspendingfororalcontraceptivesamongwomenwithprivateinsurancecoverageaftertheaffordablecareact