%0 Journal Article %T State Medicaid Coverage and Reimbursement of Adult Vaccines Administered by Physicians and Pharmacists. %A Polaris JJZ %A Eiden AL %A DiFranzo AP %A Pfister HR %A Itzkowitz MC %A Bhatti AA %J AJPM Focus %V 3 %N 4 %D 2024 Aug %M 39070136 暂无%R 10.1016/j.focus.2024.100252 %X UNASSIGNED: Effective from October 2023, federal law requires Medicaid programs to cover all recommended adult vaccines administered by physicians with no cost sharing for all eligibility groups. However, uniform coverage does not always translate to optimal uptake. Rather, other factors such as Medicaid reimbursement rates influence vaccine access and ultimately patient uptake. This study reviewed Medicaid policies to understand vaccine coverage and reimbursement, for both physicians and pharmacists, in all 50 U.S. states; Washington, DC; and Puerto Rico (collectively referred to as states).
UNASSIGNED: Between March and September 2022, the researchers reviewed states' public Medicaid policies regarding adult vaccines, focusing on the service of injectable vaccine administration and 3 products: hepatitis A, 9-valent human papilloma virus, and 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide.
UNASSIGNED: Among 50 states with available data, 7 (14%) restricted Medicaid coverage for hepatitis A, 9-valent human papilloma virus, and/or 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide administered by physicians, and 15 (30%) did so for pharmacists. Median physician reimbursement rate was below the private sector rate for hepatitis A (89%) and 9-valent human papilloma virus (94%) but above the rate for 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide (108%). Median physician reimbursement for vaccine administration during an office visit was $11.86; the median pharmacist administration fee was $10.67.
UNASSIGNED: Although federal law now requires all state Medicaid programs to cover, without cost sharing, all recommended adult vaccines administered by physicians, equitable vaccine access may be hindered by state coverage restrictions for pharmacists and by relatively low reimbursement rates relative to Medicare and commercial coverage for both physicians and pharmacists.