How Do M+C Plans Manage Pharmacy Benefits? Implications for Medicare Reform

Published: Mar 31, 2003

Understanding how Medicare+Choice (M+C) plans manage their drug benefits may generate important lessons for Medicare. This report, based on interviews with both national and regional managed care firms, provides an in-depth look at how plans have managed their M+C outpatient pharmacy benefits in recent years. Findings show that plans rely on a number of cost management strategies to constrain the growth in drug spending including formularies, tiered-copayments, mail-order benefits, and fixed caps or dollar limits on drug benefits. When spending begins to spiral and Medicare capitation rates do not increase commensurately, plans may revert to more certain methods for controlling drug costs like capping drug benefit levels, which helps limit their financial exposure, but shifts risk onto beneficiaries.

Sex Education in the U.S.: Policy and Politics

Published: Mar 30, 2003

This issue brief examines the federal, state and local policies that guide approaches to sex education today. It also examines recent research into community-level experiences and practices, as well as emerging evidence about the effectiveness of different types of sex education curricula.

TV Violence

Published: Mar 30, 2003

The fourth in a series of fact sheets on topics related to children, media and health pulls together the key facts on the prevalence of violence on television, and the results of scientific studies of the effects on children. The fact sheet also discusses the conclusions of the public health community as well as opposing viewpoints.

Health Insurance Premiums and Cost-Sharing: Findings from the Research on Low-Income Populations

Published: Mar 30, 2003

Health Insurance Premiums and Cost-Sharing: Findings from the Research on Low-Income Populations

This policy brief reviews studies on the impact of premiums and cost-sharing, particularly on low-income populations, and finds that premiums generally depressed participation in public programs and cost-sharing affected health utilization, access and outcomes.

Link to the Women’s Research and Education Institute

Published: Mar 30, 2003

Baby Boom to Generation X: Progress in Young Women’s Health

Baby Boom to Generation X: Progress in Young Women’s Health, by Alina Salganicoff, Barbara Wentworth, and Liberty Greene of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a chapter from The American Woman 2003-2004, Daughters of a Revolution–Young Women Today, Cynthia Costello, Vanessa Wight, and Anne J. Stone, editors. The chapter explores the changes that have taken place in young women’s health over the past twenty-five years. It discusses young women’s health status and access to care since the 1970s, outlines programmatic developments in health care as they affect young women, and examines the impact of cultural shifts in reproductive health and maternity care as well as the contribution of new medical advances.

Health Insurance Premiums and Cost-Sharing: The Impact on Low-Income Populations

Published: Mar 30, 2003

This fact sheet summarizes the issues surrounding premiums and cost-sharing in public coverage programs and discusses the impact of these mechanisms on participation and health outcomes, particularly for low-income populations.

Fact Sheet (.pdf)