Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Nothing is Free: The Problem with Free Drug Samples

Many altruistic doctors give patient drug samples to uninsured patients; thereby, helping the patient to receive the proper medication and save the patient money. Doctors may not be aware that they are actually causing the cost of prescriptions to rise for the uninsured by having a plethora of prescriptions at hand in the office.

This problem does not affect Medicaid directly, as its common practice for Medicaid patients to receive generic prescriptions.

David P. Miller, M.D., lead researcher and internal medicine physician at Wake Forest Baptist said, that "One possible explanation, Miller said, is that because Medicaid patients rarely receive samples, doctors' prescribing decisions for these patients were based purely on what drug they thought was best and not on what samples happened to be available in the closet."

For the uninsured or those that receive free samples; they can be doing wonderfully on the prescribed drug given to them in sample form. But what happens when the samples at the doctor's office run out? Filling the prescription at the pharmacy would crash their budget and may cause health problems.

Overall, patients need to speak with their doctor about their financial and insurance situations. Doctors can then prescribe patients with low-cost/generic drugs for treatment; instead of what is readily available in the office supply closet.

How do you feel about free samples at the doctor's office? How do you think this will affect Medicare patients?

Sources:
News-Medical.Net
CNN
US News & World Report

No comments: