Measuring the Impact of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 on Shortages of Sterile Injectable Oncology Drugs

dc.contributor.advisor

Taylor, Donald Hugh

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Krasomil, Evan

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2012-04-26T06:27:29Z

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2012-04-26T06:27:29Z

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2012-04-26

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The Sanford School of Public Policy

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The problem of U.S. pharmaceutical drug shortages is one that has steadily grown in severity over the course of the past decade, particularly in the years since 2006. Some types of drugs have proven to be more susceptible to shortage than others, particularly sterile injectable drugs. Many oncology drugs are sterile injectables, and an increasing number of sterile injectable oncology drugs have been subject to shortage in recent years. Shortages can led to delayed treatments, errors stemming from the use of alternative drugs, increased costs, and negative patient outcomes including death. While shortages occur for a number of different reasons, some have blamed changes contained within the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act (MMA) of 2003 that changed the way that Medicare reimbursement rates for drugs were calculated. Contrary to assertions that MMA is capping the growth rates of reimbursements for drugs and thus causing shortages to occur, the new MMA rate formula does not appear to be limiting the rate at which reimbursements can grow. This report does recommend, however, that the current reimbursement formula be adjusted so that rates are based on data gathered monthly rather than quarterly, reducing the length of the delay between price signals from the drug market and the adjustment of reimbursement rates.

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/5236

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en_US

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Health

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Medicare

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Drug Shortages

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Measuring the Impact of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 on Shortages of Sterile Injectable Oncology Drugs

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Master's project

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