Express Scripts Will
Combine Coupons With Pharmacy Benefit
Express Scripts, the PBM
subsidiary of Cigna Corp., will allow members to combine prescription drug
coupons with their traditional pharmacy benefits. Pharmacy insiders tell AIS
Health that the new offering is likely meant to head off competition from GoodRx Inc.
and other upstarts.
Program Expands
on Cigna’s Amazon Partnership
- “Right Price alleviates the
need for a member to price shop, and allows for the medication purchase to
apply toward their deductible, if they have one,” writes Matt
Perlberg, Express Scripts’ senior vice president for supply chain, in a
November blog post about
the program.
- He adds that “the
claim is processed within the benefit” and “Right Price also allows
members to leverage discount card pricing at our industry leading Express
Scripts Pharmacy.”
- In addition, members using
Right Price have access to Amazon.com Inc.’s discount card as part of “our
newly expanded relationship with Amazon.”
Is the New Product Just
Branding?
- Elan Rubinstein, Pharm.D.,
principal of EB Rubinstein Associates, panned the concept. He suspects the
offering is simply a play to ward
off GoodRx.
- “It seems to be a branding
exercise,” Rubinstein wrote to AIS Health, a division of MMIT, in an
email. He suggested the reason for the product is “perhaps there would be
a cost to Express Scripts” if it created a formal arrangement
with GoodRx.
- “They’re losing customers
to GoodRx,” says Ge Bai, Ph.D., a professor at Johns
Hopkins University’s schools of business and public health. “Not just
Express Scripts — these PBMs are seeing some of their insured patients go
to GoodRx to use the cash price — the so-called cash
price.”
Express Scripts Seeks to Retain
Rebates
- “The problem [for Express
Scripts] is these patients….They’re bypassing their
PBM. So I think this is related to that concern,” Bai
explains.
- She also thinks the partnership
with Amazon is significant — in her view, Express Scripts would rather
split discount card revenue with Amazon than lose it altogether.
- Bai thinks this arrangement could
wind up costing plan sponsors. “If they go to GoodRx, the
employer doesn’t pay anything,” she says. However, by combining
coupon savings with a normal rebate arrangement, Express Scripts still
gets its normal cut of the rebate but slightly discounts the cost to the
consumer at the point of sale.
Subscribers may read the in-depth article online. Learn more about subscribing to AIS Health's publications.
No comments:
Post a Comment