lessons from the 4 th century bc: “first do no harm” wendy j. wolf, md, mph president & ceo...
TRANSCRIPT
Lessons from the 4th Century BC:“First Do No Harm”
Wendy J. Wolf, MD, MPHPresident & CEO
Maine Health Access Foundation
www.mehaf.org
The Maine Health Access Foundation (MeHAF)
Maine’s largest private non-profit health care foundation created in April 2000 from the sale of Blue Cross & Blue Shield to Anthem Charged with increasing access to care state-wide for Maine’s uninsured and underservedCurrent Assets: $110 millionAnnual grants & program spending: $ 5 million
The MeHAF mission is to promote affordable The MeHAF mission is to promote affordable
and timely access to comprehensive quality and timely access to comprehensive quality
health care, and improve the health of every health care, and improve the health of every
Maine resident. Maine resident.
MeHAF supports strategic solutions for Maine’s health
care needs through grants and other programs,
particularly for projects that serve the uninsured and
medically underserved.
MeHAF has awarded millions to advance its mission and serve Maine people
$0
$5
$10
$15
$20
$25
$30
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Mill
ions
Since 2002, MeHAF has awarded over $30 million in cumulative grant and program support to nonprofits across Maine
MeHAF’s role in advancing access to medications for people who are uninsured, and promoting better
patient and family-centered care Grant Programs:
Medication Assistance Programs: Pharmacy benefit enrollment & medication management
Integration Initiative: Grants to advance integrated care between primary care, mental & behavioral health, and oral health
Special Grants: Medicare D outreach & enrollment with GOHPF, DHHS, Legal Services for the Elderly and Area Agencies on Aging
Advocacy: ME Citizen Leadership Fund grant for Rx drug education for Maine’s seniors and people with disabilities
Convening: Medication Management stakeholder group meetings
Policy studies: Adverse drug event analysis Education support: Academic detailing meeting
and this conference
Prescription Drugs: The good news
The development of effective pharmaceuticals has revolutionized medical care, offering treatments for a vast array of acute and chronic illnesses:
Some pharmaceuticals prevent or cure illnesses, especially those that historically resulted in premature death and disability (antibiotics, vaccines)
Most pharmaceuticals focus on alleviating the symptoms or side effects of chronic disease
The US has been a leader in the development of new pharmaceuticals and the industry is one of the nation’s most successful private sectors in the US economy.
Prescription Drugs:The not-so-good news
The growth of prescription drugs has resulted in an explosion of polypharmacy that often causes negative health outcomes
The rise of prescription drug costs is a significant factor in the rise of overall health care costs in Maine and the USA, and the retail prices of Rx drugs have more than doubled over the past decade
The growth of pharmaceutical industry profits has driven a greater focus on “copy-cat” drugs that target “profitable” illnesses.
Direct to consumer advertising has fueled consumer demand for drug therapy for many conditions that can be improved by life-style modification
Prescription Drugs:The concerning news
The growing use of pharmaceuticals in humans and animals has driven new issues for concern:
Growth of pro-industry bias that has eroded the objectivity of scientists, physicians and regulators
Promotion of off-label use to expand market share
Rx overuse and resistance
“Medicalization” of non-illness
Unintended consequences of newer technologies (genetic engineering)
Cross-species effects
Environmental impact
Prescription Drugs:The not-so-good news
Growth of Rx drug use
Dangers of polypharmacy
The role of medications in rising health care costs
Growth of Rx Drugs
Prescription drug use is the highest ever among insured Americans*
More than half of al insured Americans (51%) are taking Rx meds regularly for chronic health problems
Americans buy much more medicine per person than another country
Most widely used drugs: Anti-hypertensives
Lipid-lowering
Among seniors, 28% of women
and 22% of men take > 5 meds
Largest increase in 20–44 year olds
primarily due to more drugs for
depression, diabetes, asthma
ADD, seizures*Data from Medco Health Solutions Inc, May 2008
Rise of Polypharmacy
Average # of prescriptions filled by each person in the US increased from 8.9 per year in 1997 to 12.6 per year in 2007
Polypharmacy increases the risk of drug-drug interactions and adverse drug events (ADEs)
ADEs account for a significant number of hospitalizations in Maine (based on primary or secondary discharge diagnosis)
Quality medication management needs to focus on managing ALL medications – and DISCONTINUING medications that are ineffective or no longer needed
Prescription drugs account for a significant proportion of National Health Expenditures
Levit et al. Health Affairs, Jan/Feb 2003 and 2005 CMS Services Data
0
50
100
150
200
250
1980 1990 2000 2005
National Expenditures (billions)
Projected increases in national health expenditures for prescription drugs (in billions)
DHHS/CMS projections
0
100
200
300
400
500
1980 1990 2000 2005 2016
Why are prescription drugs so costly?
Drug research & development is costlyPhRMA estimates the average cost of bringing one new drug to the market is $500 millionThe industry estimates this process takes an average of 12-15 years
However, the largest portion of the pharmaceutical industry’s budget goes toward advertising and marketing rather than research and development
Pharmaceutical companies spend 2 ½ times more on marketing and administration than on research and development.Academic researchers in public and private institutions frequently spearhead the development of new drugs with funding from the federal National Institutes of Health. Although tax dollars support this research, these discoveries are increasingly sold to private industry for development and profit.
Direct to consumer advertising is a significant factor driving up the cost of Rx drugs – but does it result in better quality and health outcomes?
The drug industry spends $3 billion/year in DTC ads
The industry argues:Educates patients about medical conditions, treatment options, side effects, etcPrompts dialogue between providers and patientsImproves appropriateness of prescribingImproves compliance
Others say:Increases cost by prompting requests for brand name drugsPromotes newer more expensive Rx,often with higher profit margin
Prescription Drugs:Opportunities for advocacy
The growing use of pharmaceuticals in humans and animals has prompted new issues for advocacy:
Growth of pro-industry bias that has eroded the objectivity and trust by scientists, physicians and regulators Promotion of off label use to expand market share“Medicalization” of non-illnessRx overuse and resistanceUnintended consequences of newer technologies (genetic engineering) Cross-species effectsEnvironmental impact
Prescription Drugs: Pro-Industry Bias
Erosion of Firewalls between Science and Industry The pharmaceutical industry has transformed the culture of medical school and scientists conducting basic research, instilling a pro-industry bias*
Example: Dr. Charles Nemeroff of Emory University—the principal investigator on a government-financed study of antidepressant drugs made by GlaxoSmithKline—failed to report almost a half a million dollars he was paid in fees and expenses from the drug company while he led the study (NY Times, 10/11/2008)
Researchers were 5 times more likely to recommend a drug when a study was funded by the industry rather than by a non-profit
Drug companies pay for postgraduate accreditation courses for doctors. Under the guise of offering educational opportunities for doctors, drug companies use the lectures and conferences they sponsor to push their products
Schools and medical centers often hold equity in the start-up companies that sponsor their research
*Angell, JAMA Sept 2008
Prescription Drugs:Opportunities for advocacy
Special issues for children
Promotion of off label use
Applying adult models to
childhood conditions
“Medicalization” of non-illness
Rx overuse and resistance
Unintended consequences
Prescription Drugs: Opportunities for advocacy Insure access – and advocate for standardization of pharmacy benefit programsPromote quality medication management that insure that unneeded or ineffective medications are eliminated (and returned to drug disposal sites).Advocate for comprehensive health information through better health IT and HealthInfoNet Support policies that insure scientific rigor, strict attention to conflict of interest and insure firewalls between industry, scientists, and providers to insure science and evidence is unbiased (Ex: Grassley/Kohl bill that would require drug companies to publicly disclose payments to physicians > $500/yr) Broad program to support academic detailing to combat promotion of brand name drugs and off label use Advance public policies that balance medication costs with quality and effectiveness Consider regulation to limit “medicalization” of non-illness so insurers are protected from mandates to cover non-evidence based treatmentsProactive hospital and insurer policies, and consumer education to prevent Rx overuse and resistanceSurveillance/examination of unintended consequences of newer technologies (genetic engineering) Convening of key leaders/researchers to examine cross-species effectsPolicies and public education to mitigate environmental impact