Are you paying too much for your prescription drugs? Contact attorney Gretchen Obrist to learn more about whether you have been subject to unlawful “clawbacks.” Call 800-776-6044 or email [email protected].
It may seem counter-intuitive, but sometimes paying the out-of-pocket cost for a prescription drug and bypassing your health insurance plan is the cheaper route. When insured customers are charged a higher copay for a drug than its actual cost, it is often the result of a “clawback.” In these instances, using your insurance doesn’t save you money.
The University of Southern California Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics studied this practice. The study analyzed prices that 1.6 million people paid for 9.5 million prescriptions in the first half of 2013. It found that overpayments totaled $135 million during that period. Researchers compared the copay to what a patient’s insurer paid for a drug and found that customers overpaid for their prescriptions 23 percent of the time, with an average overpayment of $7.69. The drug with the most frequent clawbacks was zolpidem tartrate—generic Ambien.
Here’s what you need to know about this controversial yet common practice:
Please contact attorney Gretchen Obrist to learn more about whether you too have been subject to unlawful “clawbacks.” Call 800-776-6044 or email [email protected].
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