| Literature DB >> 30233150 |
Shikha Gupta1, Mary Ann McColl1, Sara J Guilcher2, Karen Smith3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The evidence is emerging that prescription medications are the topmost drivers of increasing health care costs in Canada. The financial burden of medications may lead individuals to adopt various rationing or restrictive behaviors, such as cost-related nonadherence (CRNA) to medications. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to provide an overview of the type, extent, and quantity of research available on CRNA to prescription drugs in Canada, and evaluate existing gaps in the literature.Entities:
Keywords: Pharmacare; drug costs; drug insurance; medication adherence
Year: 2018 PMID: 30233150 PMCID: PMC6134942 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S170417
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart.
Note: *Focused on generic vs branded pricing and prescribing, formulary of public drug programs, prescription auditing, and polypharmacy.
Descriptive summary of the studies included in review
| Study | Province/country | Population characteristic | Sample size | Study design | Focus of the study | Outcome measurement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Campbell et al | Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia | Adults with chronic conditions | N=1,849 | Population-based survey | Financial barriers to care including prescriptions | CRNA defined as stopped taking one or more medications for at least a week in last 12 months due to cost |
| Hennessy et al | Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia | Adults with chronic conditions | N=1,849 | Population-based survey | OOP spending on prescriptions and CRNA | CRNA defined if patients did not get drugs needed due to cost in the past 12 months |
| Tamblyn et al | Quebec | Patients accessing primary care | N=15,961 | Retrospective cohort study | Medication nonadherence with CRNA as one of the elements | Nonadherence defined as not filling incident prescription within 9 months |
| Hunter et al | Ontario and British Columbia | Homeless and vulnerably housed adults | N=716 | Prospective cohort study | Medication nonadherence with CRNA as one of the elements | CRNA defined as not taking medication prescribed by a doctor because it is too expensive |
| Kratzer et al | Ontario | Adults with chronic conditions | N=2,161,311 | Population-based survey | Effects of private drug coverage on prescription use | Drug use was defined as having drugs in the past month, and drug coverage was defined if private insurance covered all or part of the prescription medication cost |
| Ungar et al | Ontario | Children with asthma | N=17,046 | Retrospective cohort study using administrative database | Effect of cost-sharing on prescription use | Cost-sharing levels were categorized as: zero cost-sharing, <20% (low cost-sharing), and ≥20% (high cost-sharing) |
| McLeod et al | Pan-Canada | General Canadian population | N=14,430 | Population-based survey | Financial burden of prescription drug spending | Catastrophic OOP drug expenditure defined as HHs with drug budget share ≥10% |
| Després et al | Quebec | Non-senior adults with chronic conditions | N=2,872 | Retrospective cohort study | Effects of OOP costs on adherence in privately insured patients | Adherence defined as proportion of days covered over 1 year−the number of days supply of the medication during the follow-up period divided by the number of days of follow-up |
| Després et al | Quebec | Non-senior adults with chronic conditions | N=1,933 | Retrospective cohort study | Effects of OOP costs on adherence in publicly and privately insured patients | Adherence defined as proportion of days covered over 1 year |
| Kennedy and Morgan | Canada and the USA | Adult American and Canadian population | N=2,980 Canadians and 2,486 Americans | Population-based survey | Compare rates of CRNA for prescription drugs in the USA and Canada | CRNA identified if participant responded yes to “During the past 12 months, was there a time when you did not fill a prescription, or you skipped doses of your medicine, due to cost?” |
| Thanassoulis et al | Quebec, Ontario, and British Columbia | Seniors with chronic conditions | N=67,040 | Cohort study using administrative data | Impact of type of drug coverage on medication use | Drug use was determined at 30 days of discharge, stratified by prescription plan in each province |
| Sanmartin et al | Pan-Canada | General population | N=98% Canadians | Population-based survey | Trends in health care expenditure including OOP expenditure on prescription medications | Direct expenditures and insurance premiums for prescription medications Direct expenditures defined as those not covered by insurance, such as exclusions, deductibles, and expenses over limits, and exclude payments for which individuals have been or will be reimbursed |
| Rotermann et al | Pan-Canada | General population | N=11,386 | Population-based survey | Determinants of prescription medication use including HH income | Drug use was determined if respondents had taken at least one prescription medication within 2 days of their HH interview |
| Allin and Hurley | Pan-Canada | General population | N=33,161 | Population-based survey | Impact of drug coverage on physician utilization | Physician utilization measured by asking if person has seen a family doctor or specialist in last 12 months |
| Kapur and Basu | Pan-Canada | General population | N=n/a | Population-based survey | Extent of drug coverage and financial burden of prescription drugs | Financial burden of prescription drugs calculated as OOP drug expenses of HHs as a proportion of HH income |
| Law et al | Pan-Canada | General population | N=5,732 | Population-based survey | Extent and determinants of CRNA | CRNA defined as if costs led people who reported taking medication in past year to do anything to make their prescription last longer, not fill a new prescription or not renew a prescription |
| Zhong | Ontario | General senior and non-senior population | N≥60,000 | Population-based survey | Inequality in drug use with respect to income | Drug utilization was determined by asking the participants: “How many different numbers of prescription drugs have you taken in the last 4 weeks?” |
| Millar | Pan-Canada | Senior and non- senior population diagnosed with a chronic disease | N=70,884 | Population-based survey | Availability of drug insurance and its effect on prescription drug use | Number of drugs taken in the past month used as an indicator of the influence of drug insurance coverage on medication use |
| Luffman | Pan-Canada | General senior and non-senior population | N≥20,000 HHs | Population-based survey | OOP prescription drug spending across various provinces | OOP drug spending referred to expenditures for medicines, drugs, and pharmaceutical products prescribed by a doctor such as exclusions, deductibles, and expenses over limits |
| Lee and Morgan | Pan-Canada | Senior population | N=5,269 | Population-based survey | CRNA and its determinants | CRNA defined as not filling a prescription or skipping doses within the last 12 months because of OOP costs, among those who reported taking at least one prescription |
| Kemp et al | Australia, Canada, the UK, the USA, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Germany | General population | N=8,898 | Population-based survey | CRNA and its determinants across countries | Cost-related medication underuse assessed if there was a time in the last 12 months when respondent did not collect a prescription or skipped doses because of the cost? (yes/no) |
| Hanley | Ontario | Non-senior population | N=31,630 | Population-based survey | Impact of prescription drug insurance on unmet health care needs | Unmet health care need was identified if participants decided not to seek care because he or she anticipated that a visit to a physician would result in a prescription |
| Dhaliwal et al | Alberta | Individuals with heart disease | N=13 | Qualitative study | Experiences of patients who reported financial barriers to care including prescriptions | CRNA was identified if participants shared that they forgo their pills if they cannot afford it |
| Dewa et al | Pan-Canada | Senior and non-senior community- dwelling Canadians | N=33,000 | Population-based survey | Characteristics of people covered or not covered for public prescription drug insurance | Having a drug insurance was identified if participant said yes to “Do you have insurance that covers all or part of the costs of your prescription medications?” |
| Demers et al | Pan-Canada | Senior and non-senior individuals including social assistance recipients | N=32 | Policy analysis | To examine the impact of variation in provincially funded public drug benefits on patients’ prescription drug costs having similar prescription needs | Cost-sharing strategies were examined in the form of premium, deductible, co-payment, and maximum annual contribution by the beneficiary, and pharmacists’ dispensing fees |
| Kennedy and Morgan | Canada and the USA | Adult American and Canadian population | N=8,688 | Population-based survey | Extent and determinants of CRNA in two countries | CRNA was measured as failure to obtain prescribed medication due to cost in the prior month |
| Guilcher et al | Pan-Canada | Health care professional, non-health professionals, and policymakers | N=180 | Qualitative study | Perspectives of key stakeholders about the availability and use of prescription drugs for neurological conditions | n/a |
| Wang et al | Pan-Canada (Quebec vs rest of Canada) | Canadians between age of 12 and 64 | N=10,653 | Experimental study | Impact of universal prescription drug insurance on health care utilization and health outcomes | Drug insurance status was determined if a person reported having drug insurance. Measures of health care utilization include drug utilization, physician visits, and hospitalization. Drug utilization measures the number of distinct medications taken in the previous month |
| Zheng et al | Ontario | Patients visiting an outpatient clinic | N=60 | Small survey | Predictors leading to CRNA | CRNA was assessed by asking patients to think for last 12 months and describe how frequently they left prescriptions unfilled, delayed filling prescriptions, took prescriptions with reduced frequency, and lowered dosages because of the cost |
| Goldsmith et al | Ontario and British Columbia | Adults engaging in CRNA in past or currently | N=35 | Qualitative study | Understand patients’ experiences of CRNA through typology development | CRNA was explored by asking participants’ most recent experience with stopping, reducing, or not filling a prescription medication due to OOP costs |
| Yao et al | Saskatchewan | Seniors with chronic illnesses | N=188,109 | Retrospective cohort study | Quantify the impact of drug benefit plan on medication adherence that capped OOP costs at $15 per prescriptions | Adherence was measured over 365 days using medication possession ratio |
| Assayag et al | Quebec | Non-senior patients with depression | N=2,249 | Matched cohort study | Adherence between privately and publicly insured patients | Adherence over 1 year was estimated using the proportion of prescribed days covered |
| Daw and Morgan | Pan-Canada | n/a | N=n/a | Analyses of administrative database | Review of provincial drug benefit programs to find factors leading to catastrophic drug expenditures | Assessed premiums and cost-sharing mechanisms in the form of the expenses borne by the patient (or via supplementary private insurance): deductibles, co-payments/co-insurance, and OOP limits to find catastrophic drug expenditures |
| Anis et al | British Columbia | Elderly patients with rheumatoid arthritis | N=2,968 | Retrospective cohort study using administrative database | Effect of prescription drug cost-sharing on overall health care utilization | In people who reached the annual maximum co- payment of $200 for any calendar year from 1997 to 2000, the outcomes assessed were number of hospital admissions, the number of physician visits, and the total number of prescriptions filled |
| Tamblyn et al | Quebec | Elderly and welfare recipients | N=93,950 elderly persons and 55,333 adults on welfare | Interrupted time series analysis | Adverse effects of prescription drug cost- sharing on overall health care utilization | Mean number of drugs used per month, ED visits, and hospitalization, nursing home admission, and mortality before and after policy introduction |
| Lexchin and Grootendorst | Industrialized countries including Canada | Vulnerable population | N=25 studies | Systematic review of literature | Effects of user fees for prescription drugs on drug use, other health services use, and overall health status | User fee included costs that patients pay OOP for prescriptions such as in the form of co-payment, deductibles, reimbursement limits, etc. |
| Law et al | Pan-Canada | General population | N=28,091 | Population-based survey | Consequences for prescription drug costs | Health consequences that led to use of additional health care services such as a doctor visit or ER visit, and other consequences leading to trade-offs between prescriptions and other basic needs |
Note:
Number of case scenarios.
Abbreviations: CRNA, cost-related nonadherence; OOP, out-of-pocket; HH, household; ED, emergency department; ER, emergency room; n/a, not available.
Extent of cost-related nonadherence to prescription medications
| Extent | Population | Province | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 9.6% reported CRNA to medications ranging from 3.6% (95% CI 2.4–4.5) to 35.6% (95% CI 26.1–44.9) depending on income and availability of insurance | General population | Pan-Canada | Law et al |
| 2 | 8.2% reported CRNA to medications who were prescribed at least one medication in last 12 months | General population | Pan-Canada | Law et al |
| 3 | 8.3% Canadians aged 55 years and older reported CRNA to medications | Senior population | Pan-Canada | Lee and Morgan |
| 4 | 15% reported CRNA to medications | Patients visiting outpatient clinic | Ontario | Zheng et al |
| 5 | Prevalence of CRNA between privately and publicly insured individuals was 14% and 18%, respectively | Non-senior patients with depression | Quebec | Assayag et al |
| 6 | 4.1% reported CRNA to medications | Adults with chronic conditions | Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia | Hennessy et al |
| 7 | 13% reported stopped taking medications in last 12 months at least for a week due to cost | Adults with chronic conditions | Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia | Campbell et al |
| 8 | 31.3% of the incident prescriptions were not filled in the last 9 months | Patients accessing primary care | Quebec | Tamblyn et al |
| 9 | 26% reported nonadherence to prescriptions | Homeless and precariously housed adults | Ontario and British Columbia | Hunter et al |
Abbreviation: CRNA, cost-related non-adherence.
Factors associated with cost-related nonadherence
| Factors | Studies | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Low income or lack of regular employment (n=15) | Hennessy et al; |
| 2 | Young age (non-senior) (n=12) | Tamblyn et al; |
| 3 | Multiple comorbidities, chronic illness, severe illness, or poor health status (n=10) | Hennessy et al; |
| 4 | High out-of-pocket expenditure on drugs, and expensive or costly drugs (n=10) | Campbell et al; |
| 5 | No drug insurance (n=9) | Rotermann et al; |
| 6 | Province of residence (n=7) | McLeod et al; |
| 7 | Having public drug insurance vs private insurance (n=5) | Kratzer et al; |
| 8 | Race and ethnicity: immigrant or aboriginal status, or being non-white (n=3) | Law et al; |
| 9 | Not having a primary physician (n=3) | Hunter et al; |
| 10 | Women (sex) (n=2) | Kennedy and Morgan; |
| 11 | Less education (n=2) | Kapur and Basu; |
| 12 | Living alone or not having spouse or partner (n=2) | Kapur and Basu; |
| 13 | Living in a rural area (n=1) | Kapur and Basu |
Impact of cost-related nonadherence to prescription medications
| Impact/consequences | Population | Province | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Relative to those with no drug insurance, the insured make more use of physician services after controlling for need of seeking care | General population | Pan-Canada | Allin and Hurley |
| 2 | People without prescription drug insurance were more than twice as likely as those with insurance to report an unmet need for health care | Non-senior population | Pan-Canada | Hanley |
| 3 | Introduction of the mandatory drug coverage program increased medication use and GP visits. No statistically significant effects were found for specialist visits and hospitalization | Canadians between age of 12 and 64 | Pan-Canada | Wang et al |
| 4 | Across the 4 years, there were 0.38 more physician visits per month, 0.50 fewer prescriptions filled per month, and 0.52 fewer prescriptions filled per physician visit, during the cost-sharing period than during the free period. Among patients who were admitted to the hospital at least once, there were 0.013 more admissions per month during the cost- sharing period than during the free period | Elderly patients with rheumatoid arthritis | British Columbia | Anis et al |
| 5 | After co-payments were introduced, the number of prescription drugs used per day decreased by 9% among older people and by 16% among those receiving social assistance; these reductions were associated with an increased rate of emergency department visits by 14.2 and 54.2 events per 10,000 person-months, respectively | Elderly and welfare recipients | Quebec | Tamblyn et al |
| 6 | Cost-sharing leads patients foregoing essential medications and to a decline in health care status. Co-payments or a cap on the monthly number of subsidized prescriptions lower drug costs for the payer, but any savings offset by increases in other health care areas | Vulnerable population | OECD countries including Canada | Lexchin and Grootendorst |
| 7 | Many Canadians forewent basic needs such as food (about 730,000 people), heat (about 238,000), and other health care expenses (about 239,000) because of drug costs | General population | Pan-Canada | Law et al |
| 8 | Some participants identified that their CRNA led to adverse clinical outcomes. Some of them also “separated” medications into essential and nonessential categories and prioritized medications over healthy food | Individuals with heart disease | Alberta | Dhaliwal et al |
| 9 | Self-reported financial barriers to drugs were not found significantly associated with increased number of emergency department visits or hospitalizations, though patients facing financial barriers to take medications were 50% less likely to take medications | Adults with chronic conditions | Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia | Campbell et al |
Abbreviations: GP, general practitioner; OECD, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development; CRNA, cost-related non-adherence.