Guest guest Posted December 10, 2010 Report Share Posted December 10, 2010 http://watchdog.org/7495/thousands-of-medicaid-drugs-payments-unlawful/ Thousands of Medicaid drugs payments unlawful Posted on December 3, 2010 By Miltimore — More than one-third of Medicaid drug payments could be going to drugs not covered by Medicaid under federal law, according to a government report published this week. The Office of Inspector General for Health and Human Services found the government could verify only 62 percent of Medicaid payments had passed Food and Drug Administration approval. FDA approval is generally a prerequisite for a drug to be covered under Medicaid. The findings are part of a government inquest launched in 2008 after lawmakers expressed concerns that Medicaid drug payments were failing to meet government standards. Getting FDA approval Drugs cannot be legally marketed in the U.S. until they are approved by the FDA, which experts say can be an expensive and lengthy process. Information obtained from the application process is collected and maintained in the National Drug Code Directory. The directory contains, among other things, an approved application number for each listed drug. According to the IOG report, 38 percent of drugs paid for under Medicaid in 2008 were either not listed in the directory or were listed but not approved. Total payment for these drugs was approximately $6.2 billion in 2008, though authors of the report note not all of these payments lacked FDA approval. Manual reviews show some of these payments did have FDA approval but did not appear on the directory because much of the information in the directory was incomplete or inaccurate. “As a result, Medicaid could potentially pay for drugs that are not approved,” the report found. “This report highlights the fact that the NDC Directory cannot be used to verify the approval and listing status of drugs paid for under Medicaid.” FDA officials acknowledged that data quality “has suffered in the past,” but noted the department has begun implementing several initiatives to enhance data quality. The government considers drugs not approved by the FDA potentially hazardous. Officials at Community Catalyst, a national consumer health organization, said the distribution of non-approved drugs poses public risks. “Obviously we would be concerned if that was the case,” said Marcia Ham, director of prescription access and quality at Community Catalyst. Ham said the actual extent of non-approved drugs is difficult to know because of the inaccuracies in NDC Directory. “The bottom line is the data should be accurate,” she said. The report comes at a time when many states are cutting Medicaid services and reimbursement rates because of budget pressures. Medicaid, the means-tested health care program jointly funded by the federal and state governments, serves more than 50 million people and accounts for 20 percent to 25 percent of most state budgets. The program saw enrollment hit record highs in 2010 and is an area of growing concern for states facing upcoming budget shortfall estimated at $140 billion. Officials with the National Governor’s Association and the National Association of State Budget Officers identified Medicaid as a top concern heading into budget season. “The end of Recovery Act funding in 2012, along with the growing pension liability and the rise of Medicaid enrollment could further exacerbate the already tight fiscal conditions,” said NGA Executive Director C. Scheppach. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.