Medicare Part D and Clinical Opportunities

On a recent conference call, we learned that a significant Medicare Part D plan would NOT have any clinical opportunities for pharmacists in 2016. This is disappointing on many levels. The fact that Medicare will allow a plan to do this is troubling, especially with the increased lip service being paid by Medicare with respect to quality measures.

Pharmacists should be upset by this, but there is another facet to this that is equally troubling: Medicare Part D plans are not searchable based on clinical services offered. While the Medicare.gov plan discovery tool does display the presence of an MTM program it is not prominent and does not adequately describe the program’s context or extent (see the example below). These omission are significant, especially given the emphasis on quality being touted by Medicare. If a patient considers their local pharmacist to be an important part of their care, and desires to have clinical services (locally provided by their pharmacy) included in their drug plan, they are adrift with little guidance.

While it is possible that Medicare may eventually include clinical opportunities as a searchable term, and / or make differences  in how the services are provided more obvious to the end user, it may come down to companies like iMedicare to fill this void in the near term. This company can be used by pharmacies to quickly help their patients choose a plan based on the same information used by the Medicare.gov website. If iMedicare supplemented the information already being provided by Medicare with a description of MTM and clinical opportunities for the given plan, it would allow pharmacists to explain which plans include this important feature. These details on how each plan handles MTM are very valuable, as some plans do not use local pharmacists to perform these clinical services, or severely restrict the number of patients that are eligible. Given this additional information, patients would have a more complete understating of plans and could then make better decisions about their Medicare Part D plans

Published by

Michael Deninger

Mike graduated from the University of Iowa with a BS in Pharmacy in 1991 and completed his Ph.D. in 1998. He has over 20 years of practice experience, over half of which is as a pharmacy owner. Areas of expertise also include technology in practice, including integration with data sources.

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