Pfizer supported the event through a $10,000 grant to LACMA.
The Los Angeles County Medical Association hosted a seminar on May
16 at its downtown headquarters publicizing three prescription
assistance programs for helping the uninsured and underinsured obtain
medicines at reduced prices. Pfizer supported the event through a
$10,000 grant to LACMA.
The seminar featured: the Partnership for
Prescription Assistance, which directs uninsured and underinsured
patients to more than 475 public and private patient assistance
programs; the TogetherRx Access program, a collaborative project of ten
major pharmaceutical companies; and the Pfizer Helpful Answers program,
which helps the uninsured get prescription Pfizer medicines. To qualify
for most of these programs, patients must generally meet eligibility
requirements, such as income guidelines, a U.S. home address and a lack
of prescription insurance coverage.
The event kicked off with an
overview of the uninsured delivered by Hector Flores, MD, who is a
LACMA member, chairman of the White Memorial Medical Center Family
Practice Department, and a family practitioner in Montebello.
Prescription assistance programs can allow doctors to continue seeing
patients who are uninsured and may otherwise be forced by circumstances
to stop visiting, says Dr. Flores. "We get into situations where we
have a lot of patients who lose their coverage, and then we have
nothing to offer them, except maybe discounting their own fees, but
here's a way for those who are chronically ill to get plugged into
continuing therapy until they get their feet back on the ground and get
employment-based insurance," he says. "For physicians who work in
community clinics, it's a great way to meet the needs of the patients
who are uninsured."
TogetherRx Access Director of Government
Affairs and Community Outreach Vince Frakes spoke about the particulars
of the program's forgiving membership requirements and other
participation details. "The pharmaceutical companies have come together
as a consortium-they're all interested in helping the uninsured," says
Amy Niles, TogetherRx's chair of medical relations and advocacy. Its
participating companies are: Bristol-Myers Squibb; Pfizer; Johnson
& Johnson; Abbott; Takeda; TAP; GlaxoSmithKline; Sanofi-Aventis;
King Pharmaceuticals; and Novartis.
Beginning in 2005, TogetherRx
has signed up more than 1.5 million cardholders, with 10,000 added
every week, says Niles. "On average, most of our cardholders are saving
between 25 and 40 percent on more than 300 brand-name medicines, and
they're saving on thousands of generic products as well," she says.
Next,
Gary Pelletier, director of Pfizer Helpful Answers, detailed how his
program directs patients to one of the company's seven prescription
assistance initiatives. For example, Connection to Care provides free
medications for about 500,000 qualifying members through doctors'
offices, and Pfizer Pfriends helps needy patients save on the company's
medicines at 95 percent of U.S. pharmacies. Since 2007, Helpful Answers
has aided about 1.1 million people.
Sabrina Ross, a
representative from the Partnership for Prescription Assistance,
provided an overview of its patient-assistance matching program.
Primarily a pharmaceutical company project, it also includes other
organizations, such as the American Academy of Family Physicians, the
American Autoimmune Related Diseases Association and the National
Alliance for Hispanic Health. The PPA has found prescription assistance
for about 5 million patients since it began in 2005, and its member
programs currently offer more than 2,500 medicines according to a
statement.