Copay assistance presents challenges for plan sponsors
Employers take a great deal of care to design prescription drug plans that best meet the needs of their employees and their business. But in order to work, the benefit plans have to work the way they were intended. Copay assistance can significantly disrupt these plan designs.
Take a specialty drug that costs $4,000 per month. If the member has a $100 monthly copay, the copay card offsets that entire amount. That effectively reduces the monthly copay to zero, which is not the intention of the plan design.
The same is true for plan sponsors who utilize a high deductible health plan (HDHP). For example, if a plan has a $2,000 deductible, and a copay card pays the $2,000 cost share, the deductible would be met immediately. This effectively reverses the cost incentives built-in to the HDHP design.
All of this points to a basic question of fairness. If each plan member pays the same premium, they should get the same coverage. But copay assistance only applies to members who take specific drugs.
This puts plan sponsors in an uncomfortable position. It doesn’t seem right that one member can meet their deductible essentially ‘for free’ using a copay card, while their co-worker has to spend their own money to meet the same deductible.