helping smokers on medicaid quit september 16, 2014 paul g. billings senior vp, advocacy &...

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Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

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Page 1: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Helping Smokers on Medicaid QuitSeptember 16, 2014

Paul G. BillingsSenior VP, Advocacy & Education

Page 2: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Questions to Answer

• Why?• What is a comprehensive cessation benefit?• How has ACA changed things?• What are states doing?• What should my state do?

Page 3: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Background

Page 4: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education
Lyndsay Moseley
Brevity - highlight the themes and 1 or 2 examples?
Page 5: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Toll of Tobacco• 43.6 million Americans smoke • 273 billion cigarettes sold• 480,000 premature deaths• $333 billion in annual health costs• 5.6 million of today’s children under age 18 will

die prematurely

Page 6: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Quit Attempts

• The American Lung Association conducted research to better understand motivators to quit smoking and the number of attempts it typically takes American adults to quit.

• The survey found that 6 out of 10 former smokers were not able to successfully quit on their first try and required multiple attempts to quit smoking for good.

Page 7: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education
Page 8: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Why Help Smokers on Medicaid Quit?

People on Medicaid smoke at higher rates than the general population

Smoking Rate of Population Ages 18-65, 2012

National Health Interview Survey, 2012. Data analyzed by American Lung Association

General Population

Enrolled in Medicaid

Uninsured

18.1 percent 30.1 percent 29.6 percent

Page 9: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

• Low-income Medicaid beneficiaries are less able to pay for treatments on their own

• Other factors that make it harder to access treatment:

Why Help Smokers on Medicaid Quit?

• Lack of extra time• Lack of transportation• Shortage of doctors that take

Medicaid• Other complicating health

factors• Low literacy levels/English as a

second language

Page 10: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Helping smokers on Medicaid quit saves lives

Why Help Smokers on Medicaid Quit?

Short-Term Reductions•Pregnancy & childbirth complications (low birth weight, SIDS)•Heart attacks•Asthma attacks•ER visits

Long-Term Reductions•Lung cancer•COPD•Heart Disease•Other cancers

Page 11: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Helping smokers on Medicaid quit saves money

–Smoking-related disease costs Medicaid programs an average of $833 million per state per year–Return-on-investment as high as 3-to-1 has been shown

Why Help Smokers on Medicaid Quit?

Page 12: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Massachusetts

• Implemented a model benefit in 2006

• Within the first two years:– 40 percent (75,000 people)

Medicaid enrollees used the benefit

– 26 percent reduction in Medicaid smoking rate

Page 13: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Massachusetts

Cost savings:•Risk of heart attack hospitalizations dropped 46 percent•Risk of hospitalization for other acute coronary heart disease diagnoses dropped 49 percent•For every dollar spent on the benefit, the state saved $3

Page 14: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Comprehensive Benefit

• 7 medications– 5 NRTs– Bupropion– Varenicline

• 3 types of counseling– Individual (face-to-face)– Group– Phone

• Easy to access/no limits

Page 15: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Barriers to Access

• Cost-sharing• Prior authorization• Duration limits• Yearly or lifetime limits• Dollar limits• Stepped care therapy• Required counseling

Page 16: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Affordable Care Act

Page 17: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Traditional Medicaid – Tobacco Cessation

• September 2010: comprehensive tobacco cessation benefit required for pregnant women with no cost sharing

• January 1, 2014: States are no longer able to exclude tobacco cessation medications– What will this mean in implementation?– Watch barriers, preferred drug

lists/formularies

Page 18: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Requirements for Medicaid Expansion

Plans offered to expansion population must cover the Essential Health Benefit

Preventive services with no cost-sharing

Tobacco Cessation FAQ Guidance

Page 19: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Tobacco Cessation FAQ*

• 4 sessions of individual, group and phone counseling

• 90 days of 1 of the FDA-approved smoking cessation medications, when proscribed

• No cost-sharing• No prior authorization• At least 2 quit attempts per year

* HHS, Labor and Treasury

Page 20: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

What are States Doing?

Page 21: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Barriers-Traditional Medicaid

Page 22: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education
Page 23: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

What Should My State Do?

• Cover all treatments• Remove as many barriers as possible

– Copays!

• Promote cessation benefits and encourage smoking cessation

• Adequately fund state quitline

Page 24: Helping Smokers on Medicaid Quit September 16, 2014 Paul G. Billings Senior VP, Advocacy & Education

Resources

Toolkit on Cessation Coverage:

www.lung.org/acatoolkit

– Helping Smokers Quit – state by state information– Factsheets– Additional Resources