Jen Laws, President & CEO Jen Laws, President & CEO

Painting Roses in the Desert: Despite Medicaid Expansion, Gaps Remain in Arizona

[Editor’s Note: This blog is, in part, a replication of a blog hosted by the ADAP Advocacy Association. Supplementary policy analysis on hepatitis treatments continues in this blog]

It shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone that many AIDS Drug Assistance Program advocates are in favor of Medicaid expansion. Indeed, as noted here, those same advocates view Medicaid expansion as an opportunity to strengthen health care access for the most vulnerable people living with HIV, meet needs unaddressed by a state’s ADAP coverage, and help ADAPs remain financially stable. For ambitious advocates (I’m talking about myself), when sufficient support exists to support those at or below the expanded Medicaid eligibility threshold of 138% of the federal poverty level, state ADAPs could consider expanding income eligibility above 400% of the federal poverty level. Indeed, Louisiana is one such state.

However, like all health care policy, the details matter.

In Arizona, the state’s Medicaid formulary is restrictive and slow to adapt to the needs of qualified people living with HIV, shifting financial pressure to the state’s ADAP and requiring the most impoverished clients to manage interacting programs in order to achieve coverage of certain medications. As the payer of last resort, when ADAP clients have other coverage (ie. Medicaid), conflicting payment processes are most often felt at the point of medication delivery or when a client gets told, inadvertently, their medication is not paid for. The process of correcting this mistake can take a matter of days or weeks, depending on a pharmacy’s experience with co-occurring payers.

In that time, patients can fall out of care, drastically reducing their likelihood of achieving an undetectable viral load.

For ADAP formulary advisory committees, for states that have them, the process of adding and adjusting formularies is sometimes relatively expedient. Relatively, in part, because those medical experts and community experts understand the need and nature for ensuring access to an expansive list of antiretroviral medications and modern advancements. Arizona’s Medicaid formulary lacks several single tablet regimens and, in the opinion of Glen Spencer, executive director of Aunt Rita’s Foundation, favor outdated “cocktails” (or multi-tablet regimens), complicating daily care for people living with HIV and accessing Medicaid, often subjecting clients to greater experiences of toxicity, and ultimately interjects an unnecessary interruption in both patient choice and provider care.

In aiming to impress the need of Arizona’s Medicaid formulary to expand in both supporting the sustainability of the state’s ADAP and meeting national initiatives Mr. Spencer stated, “It is critically important that Arizona’s Medicaid program include all single-tablet regimens on its formulary to offer patients the right medication for them, and to provide medical providers with the flexibility they need to prescribe the right medication for each patient.”

To this end, Aunt Rita’s advocacy efforts are also expanding with proposed legislation addressing the failure of Arizona’s Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) to take up the issue. According to Mr. Spencer, the bill is not likely to make it out of committee this year and lacks any great deal of interest for legislators battling over other budgetary and policy concerns and does not currently have a companion bill in the state Senate. On the other hand, the bill is sponsored in the Arizona House by a bipartisan coalition of 9 legislators.

“In order to end the HIV epidemic, both the patient and provider community will need all therapies available to them to support persons living with HIV, save lives, and get patients to an undetectable viral load.” Mr. Spencer added, “This policy not only promotes patients’ ability to lead a robust life, but also prevents new infections given the science behind U=U.”

The state’s ADAP and Medicaid formularies also present a similar situation for medications used to treat Hepatitis C, leaving a critical gap in available health care services and treatment for those at risk of contracting Hepatitis C. While the state’s ADAP coverage includes most direct acting agents, Arizona’s Medicaid formulary only covers Epclusa, Mavyret, Ribovirin, and Peginterferon.

Arizona’s situation offers a critical reminder that even with the value of Medicaid expansion, in order to achieve the greatest reach of ADAPs, tackle the absolutely critical inclusion of treatment and retention in prevention efforts, and to eliminate viral hepatitis, the details matter and advocates will need to adapt old fights to new environments.

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