Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Wal-Mart's PBM Game Plan

Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that “Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is stepping into the lucrative pharmacy-benefits arena…” (See Wal-Mart Targets Pharmacy Benefits) Most Wall Street analysts pointed out that the move was not an immediate threat to pharmacy benefits managers (PBMs.) (See Wal-Mart Drug-Benefit Move Isn't Raising Big Alarms.)

In the absence of specific details from Wal-Mart, I’ll use the economics of today’s pharmacy industry to speculate on Wal-Mart’s possible future direction.

As I explain in this post, Wal-Mart could shake up the retail pharmacy market by offering a low-cost alternative that links the PBM operation to fulfillment at a Wal-Mart pharmacy. Wal-Mart could easily deliver the $100 million in savings cited by CEO Lee Scott without a direct frontal assault on PBMs such as Express Scripts (ESRX) or Medco Health Solutions (MHS) or the big chain pharmacies such as Walgreens (WAG) or Rite-Aid (RAD). I also see a link to a possible future strategy for CVS Caremark (CVS).

FREEDOM OF PHARMACY CHOICE

Right now, those of us with third-party coverage generally pay an identical co-payment regardless of our pharmacy’s efficiency or cost structure. In my house, we typically choose where to fill a prescription based on whether it’s easier for my wife or me to pick it up.

PBMs usually provide a financial incentive to get prescriptions by mail, such as 1 or 2 co-pays for a 90 day script. But there are few, if any, financial incentives for consumers to choose one store-based pharmacy over another.

As a result, chains can blithely tell consumers with insurance to ignore the price of their prescriptions, an argument that seems curiously at odds with the trend toward consumer-driven health care decision making. Check out this Walgreens press release, which was issued when Wal-Mart launched its $4 generics program in 2006. Walgreens (WAG) advises customers to focus on “convenient locations, close-in parking and unique pharmacy services,” but ignore price.

CHOICE IS NOT FREE

As a card-carrying free-market economist, I am now required to inform you that this freedom of choice is not really cost free.

Since I have third-party coverage, I have no incentive to shop at the pharmacy with the lowest cost per prescription. All else equal, I’ll always just go where it’s convenient because my co-pay won’t change.

However, there are wide variations in costs between pharmacies. As I pointed out in Pharmacy Profits & Part D, the cost of dispensing (COD) can vary wildly between pharmacies. For example, the cost of dispensing per prescription ranged from $9 for the busiest pharmacies to $25 for the lowest volume pharmacies. (See page 18 of the complete Cost of Dispensing (COD) study.).

Yes, you read correctly – the variance in cost was $16 per prescription.

This variation is not surprising (at least to an economist). Put aside the cost of the drug (ingredient cost) for a minute and just think about the operating costs. Pharmacies have high fixed costs relative to the incremental (marginal) costs of dispensing because certain factors are required regardless of volume – a pharmacy license, pharmacists, insurance, rent, etc. In other words, filling the first prescription is very expensive, while filling the second prescription is not. A pharmacy that fills more prescriptions will see average cost per prescription go down, even if marginal cost remains constant.

Basically, both the marginal cost of dispensing and the ingredient costs were relatively low.

WAL-MART'S GAME PLAN?

I don’t think that Wal-Mart will go after the mainstream PBM business. Instead, they could offer a low-cost alternative that links the PBM operations to fulfillment at a Wal-Mart pharmacy. Such an approach would present a familiar trade-off for the employer:

  • Give your beneficiaries freedom of pharmacy choice and pay $X.
  • Restrict choice to our more efficient (Wal-Mart) pharmacies and pay less than $X.
Note that the price of drugs does not have to change to make the math work here! Wal-Mart’s plan would only need to migrate a small percentage of scripts from pharmacies with higher CODs to Wal-Mart to reach Mr. Scott’s $100 million figure.

Here’s some illustrative math:

  • Store-based (non-mail order) retail pharmacies – chains, independents, supermarkets, and mass merchants -- filled about 3.2 billion scripts in 2006. Aggregate Gross Profits on Prescriptions (Revenues minus Costs of Goods) at store-based pharmacies were about $47 billion in 2006. Thus, Average Gross Per Script in 2006 ~ $14.30.
  • Let’s say Wal-Mart uses its PBM to redirect 1 percent of these prescriptions (32 million) to its stores. That’s $455.4 million in gross profits ($14.30 x 32 million).
  • If Wal-Mart is willing to accept $11.00 in gross profit per script, then total savings to the employer are $105 million.
Wal-Mart can make this deal because their marginal COD is lower than the average pharmacy. For example, I showed how Wal-Mart makes money from the $4 generic program in Sloppy reporting about Wal-Mart (Dec. 2006) and Wal-Mart's Gain is not Walgreen's Pain (Oct. 2007). I also presume that there will be some processing costs saved because everything is staying within the WMT family.

Now here’s the real question: Will CVS Caremark (CVS) try to roll out something similar to link PBMs and retail fulfillment?

9 comments:

  1. Intersting idea Alan, however most states have Freedom of Choice laws on the books that prohibit exclusive arrangement such as you suggest Walmart would pursue. Also when you say costs vary, you are misleading readers. The "cost" is to the pharmacy, which must be made up in other areas, rather than the reimbursement received, which is dictated by the pbm, really doesn't care what the pharmacy's cost to dispense is. Also your comment that you decide where to fill your rx where ever it is more convenient to pick up, do you not value the services of a pharmacist?

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  2. Matt -

    Your comment about reimbursement supports my speculations. Right now, the PBM establishes the reimbursement level without direct consideration of the pharmacy's costs. I'm speculating that Wal-Mart could gain an advantage (with certain employers in certain regions) by linking PBM and pharmacy. Let me reiterate that this option would not be appropriate for many employers.

    I am not familiar with the state-level laws that you mention nor do I know about the prevalence of those laws. However, it does seem that the use of "preferred networks" is very common in the managed health care world, so I stand by statement as a logical extrapolation.

    As for my own pharmacy experience: I am thinking about a routine, monthly script for my wife, so there is no real interaction with the pharmacist in this situation. And in credit to the pharmacy profession, we have access to many top-flight pharmacists in my area.

    A

    P.S. The "A" stands for Adam.

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  3. Hello Dr. Fein,

    First, it's generally a good idea to pick one pharmacy and get everything there. That pharmacy's computer software and pharmacist can do a better job of tracking potential interactions and so on if everything is being done in one place. Some PBMs do some DUR checking, but that doesn't always trickle down to the patient level like the in-store records do.

    Second, the WalMart plan isn't really new. Various chains have tried establishing their own PBMs over the years--Rite Aid had Eagle Managed Care which they eventually folded into another PBM--and wholesaler programs like ABC's Good Neighbor Pharmacy network have some programs that member pharmacies can attempt to market to local businesses.

    WalMart's plan will probably succeed where these others haven't if they're aggressive about pursuing groups and employers that are self-paying--buying the prescriptions themselves rather than paying a flat rate for a prescription plan.

    Also this plan is probably in part a response to stepped up efforts by PBMs to make sure they're getting the $4 generic price for the people they're covering. We got another fax this morning from Coventry reminding us that "Your contract with Coventry requires that all covered drugs be submitted to us via the POS claims system." and "Please note that Coventry is monitoring all of the currently established Generic Drug Discount programs to ensure that the appropriate U&C is being submitted with your claims. Please inform your pharmacies and appropriate staff regarding this requirement to avoid future adjustments."

    As disruptive as PBM audits are I would suspect that the labor costs that WalMart could save just by avoiding them--even if there weren't any chargebacks--would be substantial.

    Thanks again for your analysis of the industry--I don't always agree with your conclusions, but your homework and prep are terrific.

    Tom Connelly, RPh
    Sun Pharmacy
    Rising Sun, MD

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  4. Adam, your understanding of the health care field is incomplete. You are either uninformed or are biased. Probably biased, since you get payments advising PBMs and Drug companies.

    Why not look at the economics of the PBM's? They are probably the most non-market driven entity in our entire economy. They are supposed to lower costs and improve care but they do just the opposite. Steering people into high cost name brand drugs that are not more effective benefits the PBM since they pass the cost to the consumer/employer yet they reap a reward in terms of rebates.

    Look at ulcer drugs. Instead of steering people to generic and inexpensive Pepcid, they make Prevacid covered without a prior authorization. The difference in effect for the patient is minimal, but the cost to our health care system is substantial. Pepcid may cost a few dollars for a month supply, while Prevacid will cost over $120. The patient is prescribed Prevacid by the MD (who also gets his kick back)and doesn't question the difference in price because his co-pay may be $5 for a generic and $10 for a brand. Because the patient only pays a $5 difference upfront, they don't perform a cost/benefit analysis. The consumer/employer is still on the hook for this more expensive drug, but they don't see the cost of this drug upfront. Why not make PBM's return all of their rebate money back to their consumers?

    Secondly, why should your insurer be able to dictate where you get your drugs filled? It is a conflict of interest to allow PBMs to own their own pharmacy for the same reason why it is illegal for Dr's to own pharmacies. The entity deciding on what is covered should not have a profit opportunity on what is being filled. Mail order is only cheaper because they unfairly tax people who do not want to use mail order. That is why no other country in the world utilizes mail order, because it provides no tangible benefit.

    If you want to apply free market principles, then why don't you apply them to the entire health care sector. Not just to those who your corporate masters choose to target.

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  5. Hi anonymous #2, I have to suggest you listen to Dr. Fein a little more closely. His understanding of this field far exceeds mine or that of nearly anyone else I've met in the industry. Furthermore, his consulting activities do not inappopriately affect his judgment or opinions -- but you may just have to take my word on this.

    I would also suggest a little humility in your discussion of economics because you are on the wrong track. The existence of PBMs makes perfect sense in our semi-market health care economy. PBMs serve much the same role as wholesalers. An economics 101 student will often question the logic of the wholesaler since it shouldn't exist in a "perfect" free market. However, in practice there are too many manufacturers and retailers of any product, too much diversity of demand, and too much need for retail or service providers to focus on the customer -- intermediation is necessary. Now consider that a wholesaler of (say) tomato paste can't stock all 600 varieties produced in Sicily. It is only logical to reach agreement with manufacturers on incentives to stock a certain variety. The incentive can be shared with the consumer. PBMs intermediate in healthcare payment in much the same way as grocery wholesalers intermediate in tomato paste. Of course they probably wouldn't exist in a truly free market since they would be mere functions of larger vertical product supply/insurance businesses.

    I must admit, the real reason I'm laying into you is your choice of example. You are exactly wrong that the difference between Pepcid and Prevacid is "minimal". I could not control my own GERD using 2-3 times the daily recommended dose of Pepcid. On the other hand, Prevacid 30mg controls my symptoms perfectly. I would pay $140 at retail for Prevacid every month even if I were not insured. Granted my finances are less constrained than many consumers -- a $5/month difference is small but matters for some consumers. If the incentives driven by this difference did not properly balance costs with patient outcomes, then a PBM with better cost/benefit analytics would come along. If you are a whiz quant, perhaps we can start one together...

    SLF
    Chicago, IL

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  6. SLF,

    Thanks very much for coming to my defense. The anonymous blogger apparently confused my "could happen" analysis with a "should happen" recommendation.

    Adam

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  7. Word on the street is that Wal-Mart's PBM is being serviced by WellPoint's NextRx PBM and we have seen the numbers of members in Wal-Mart's PBM increase significantly from 2007 to 2008, so the trend appears to be established that Wal-Mart is here to stay in the PBM industry.

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  8. AnonymousJune 06, 2008

    You are confused anonymous. Wellpoint NextRx PBM services the Wal-Mart EMPLOYEE drug benefit plan, not the new Wal-Mart PBM which will manage (probably)plans offered by self-insured corporations or state and local government.

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