SENIOR JOURNAL.COM - Senior Citizens Information and News

Front Page    Search     Contact Us     Advertise in Senior Journal


SeniorJournal.com

INDEX


FRONT PAGE

PAGE TWO
More Headlines

  General Features

  Find Help

  SENIOR ALERTS

  Baby Boomers

  Odds & Ends

Health-Fitness

  Aging

 • Alzheimer's & Dementia

 • Fitness

 • Health/Medicine

 • Medical Research

 • Nutrition/Vitamin

Government

 • Politics

 • Medicare

 • Medicare Drug Program

 • Medicare Q&A - Dear Marci

 • Medicaid

 • Social Security

 • Social Security, Medicare Q&A

Enjoying Life

 • Books

 • Entertainment

 • Features

 • Grandparents

 • Senior Statistics

 • Senior Stars

 • Sex & Seniors

 • Sports

 • Travel

 • Senior Volunteers

On The Web

 • Links - Senior

 • Senior Friendly Business Links

 • Sites We Like

Elderly Issues

 • Elder Care

 • Assistance for Elderly

 • Housing

Money 

 • Discounts

 Guarding Your Wealth for Seniors

 • Money Matters

 • Reverse Mortgage

 • Retirement

Thinking

 • Opinions



Senior Journal: Today's News and Information for Senior Citizens & Baby Boomers

More Senior Citizen News and Information Than Any Other Source - SeniorJournal.com

Get Instant Supplemental Medicare Insurance Quotes.

• Go to more on Features for Senior Citizens or More Senior News on the Front Page

Find the Best Medicare Advantage Plans for Seniors

 
 

E-mail this page to a friend!

Features for Senior Citizens

Pill-Splitting Study Suggests Big Savings for Senior Citizens

Expensive cholesterol-lowering drugs provide prime target

   
  Pill-splitting requires a special inexpensive cutter, and can only be done with certain pills. It's not safe to split pills that have a time-release coating, for example, or that include medicines that exit the body quickly. But certain cholesterol-lowering statin drugs can be split safely.  

June 18, 2007 - Slicing certain pills in half could slice a hefty amount off of the cost of prescription drugs for senior citizens. While only some types of pills can be split safely, the practice could be used by millions of Americans – including many of those who take popular but expensive cholesterol-lowering drugs.

Now, a new University of Michigan study adds more evidence that splitting a high-dose pill and swallowing half of it, rather than taking a whole low-dose pill each time, doesn’t change those medicines’ impact on cholesterol levels.

It is also the first prospective randomized controlled trial of pill-splitting, and the first to look at the impact of out-of-pocket costs on patients’ willingness to take the time to split pills.

The study is published in the June issue of the American Journal of Managed Care by a team from the U-M Health System and the U-M College of Pharmacy.

“This study was done in part to see what the impact would be of having some of the cost savings go back to the patient,” says first author Hae Mi Choe, PharmD, CDE, clinical assistant professor in the College and a UMHS clinical pharmacist.

While the study did not find that out-of-pocket costs had an impact on the participants’ tendency to split and take their pills in the six-month study, most participants said that reduced co-pays would be needed to entice them to continue splitting pills.

 

Related Stories

 
 

Caution

Senior Citizens Should Be Careful, Advises 2004 article in U.S. News & World Report

The savings are enticing. "Depending on the pill, patients could save between 23 and 50 percent a year," says Randall Stafford, an internist and epidemiologist at the Stanford Prevention Research Center in California who has studied pill splitting. But cutting medicine can also take a slice out of your health and safety.

"Done incorrectly, the practice can endanger patient health," the current Journal of the American Pharmacists Association warns. It can lead to improper dosing and ruined pills. "You end up not getting the proper therapy, so you can get even sicker," says Thomas Cook, a professor in the pharmacy school at Rutgers-New Brunswick.

Read more...


Read more Features for Senior Citizens

 

The findings have already had an impact on one large employer’s prescription drug plan: U-M used them to justify a pill-splitting program that launched in early 2006. In its first full year, the program saved the University $195,000, and saved more than 500 employees and retirees a total of more than $25,000 in drug co-pay costs.

Pill-splitting relies on the fact that many medicines are manufactured in tablet formulations that contain different doses of the active ingredient. Some of the higher-dose tablets can be cut in half with a blade to produce two lower-dose tablets – for example, 80 milligram tablets can be cut to produce two 40-mg tablets.

Because drug manufacturers and wholesalers don’t usually charge twice the price for twice the dose, the cost of half of a high-dose pill is far lower than the cost of buying a whole pill containing the same dose of medicine. So, pill-splitting can save money for the insurance plan or pharmacy-benefit manager that buys the pills for a group of insured patients -- and for the employer or government agency that pays for the plan.

But few prescription plans currently structure their benefits to encourage pill-splitting, by charging lower co-pays to patients who buy high-dose pills they intend to split.

Patients have been splitting pills on their own for years. Some do it without their doctors’ knowledge, to try to save money. But others do it with help from physicians who write prescriptions for a higher dose and instruct patients on how to make one month’s supply last two months. However, this can result in potentially dangerous confusion, and skew the patient’s and doctor’s records.

 

Related Stories

 
 

HandiRecords is Handy Checkbook-Size Information Organizer for Senior Citizens, Caregivers

Necessary medical, insurance, contact information organized in one easy-to-access location

May 26, 2007

Slower Growth in Drug Spending Tempers Growth in Health Expenditures

Health care spending grows at slowest pace since 1999, but nears $2 trillion

January 9, 2007


Read more Features for Senior Citizens

 

In recent years, pharmacists have worked to determine which tablets can be safely split, and which — such as drugs that exit the body quickly, or that have time-release coatings — cannot.

Cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins are among the most widely-used classes of medicines, with tens of millions of Americans taking the drugs. They’re also good candidates for splitting because they linger in the body for a relatively long time, and because small day-to-day dose fluctuations that can happen when pills are split don’t make a major difference in cholesterol levels.

The U-M study involved patients who were taking atorvastatin, pravastatin, or simvastatin, which are sold commercially as Lipitor, Pravachol, and Zocor or generic simvastatin, respectively. The patients were all being treated by physicians at a single UMHS health center. They were also better educated and more likely to be white and female than the general U.S. adult population. 

Two hundred eligible patients completed the initial survey regarding their perception on pill splitting, Of them, 111 patients agreed to participate in a 6-month trial of pill splitting in which half were randomized to receive a financial incentive of 50 percent reduction in their co-payment per refill and half did not.

All study participants were given two different pill-splitters to compare and to use for six months. They allowed the researchers to review their prescription information and cholesterol levels for a pre-study period as well as during the study.  On average, the co-pay reduction was about $5 to $7 per month.

A total of 103 patients completed the entire six-month randomized study, and 109 completed the survey at the end. The patients who were randomly assigned to receive co-pay reductions were no more likely than the other patients to refill their prescriptions on time or to experience an increase in cholesterol levels.

The follow-up survey showed that 89 percent of all participants would be willing to continue splitting pills if they would receive a co-pay reduction, and 80 percent said that splitting pills had been “no big deal” for them. Most said it would take a 50-percent co-pay reduction to entice them to keep splitting, but 24 percent said they would only keep splitting if the out-of-pocket cost was zero. Few of the patients reported problem with splitting pills, or missing doses because they had to split.

Although the study didn’t show that reducing out-of-pocket costs affected patients’ adherence to their statins over the six-month study period, the survey at the end of the study showed a clear desire among most participants to save money in return for long-term pill splitting.

That’s why the U-M benefits office, which sponsored the study, decided to include a co-pay reduction in the pill-splitting program that it launched for all 80,000 U-M employees, retirees, dependents and survivors in January 2006. So far, more than 500 people who take statins have signed up; further medications are being considered for inclusion in the program.

U-M’s use of a single prescription drug plan that provides prescription coverage regardless of which health plan an individual chooses, makes it easier to try programs such as pill splitting. The same is true for large systems such as the federal Department of Veterans Affairs, which requires that nearly all veterans taking statins split their pills — but does not charge co-pays for any medicines.

Still, Choe says, other employers and agencies can re-design their prescription plans to encourage and reward pill-splitting, by restructuring the co-pay for each month’s supply of higher-dose pills. “We should always try to find ways to make medications more affordable for patients,” she says.

Editor’s Notes:

In addition to Choe, the study’s authors are senior author John Piette, Ph.D., an associate professor of internal medicine at the U-M Medical School and member of the Center for Practice Management and Outcomes Research at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare Center; James Stevenson, PharmD, FASHP, director of the UMHS Pharmacy Services Department and an associate dean at the U-M College of Pharmacy; Daniel Streetman, PharmD, former Researcher at the College of Pharmacy and UMHS clinical pharmacist; and U-M internal medicine faculty Michele Heisler, M.D. and Connie Standiford, M.D.

Reference: American Journal of Managed Care, Vol. 13, No. 6, pp. 71-77

Original article written by: Kara Gavin

>> Click here for instructions on pill splitting provided by the University of Michigan to its employees.

Links:

University of Michigan
U-M Health System
U-M College of Pharmacy
American Journal of Managed Care

 

Search for more about this topic on SeniorJournal.com

Google Web SeniorJournal.com

Click to More Senior News on the Front Page

Copyright: SeniorJournal.com

    

 

Published by New Tech Media - www.NewTechMedia.com

Other New Tech Media sites include CaroleSutherland.com, BethJanicek.com, www.DeweySquare.com, SASeniors.com, DrugDanger.com, etc.

E-mail - editor@SeniorJournal.com