Month: November 2016

Preliminary Findings in Project to Grade Medicaid Access to Hepatitis C Treatment

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Caryn Benisch, 202-429-4940, carynbenisch@rational360.com

Harvard Law School & National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable Announce Preliminary Findings in Project to Grade Medicaid Access to Hepatitis C Treatment
Analysis from ‘Hepatitis C: The State of Medicaid Access’ Reveals Some Improvement, But Discrimination Persists in Many States; Medicaid Directors Put on Notice to Confirm Restrictions & Any Plans to Comply with CMS Guidance

SAN FRANCISCO, CA & BOSTON, MA (Nov. 14, 2016) – The National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable (NVHR) and the Center for Health Law and Policy Innovation of Harvard Law School (CHLPI) today announced the preliminary findings of Hepatitis C: The State of Medicaid Access – a comprehensive assessment of state Medicaid programs’ discriminatory restrictions on curative treatments for hepatitis C, the nation’s deadliest blood-borne disease. The full report, with accompanying rankings and state-by-state report cards, will be released in early 2017.

Preliminary analysis from Hepatitis C: The State of Medicaid Access – announced today at The Liver Meeting® in Boston – shows some improvements in both state Medicaid program transparency and access since 2014, yet also demonstrates that most states continue to impose discriminatory restrictions which contradict guidance from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), as well as guidance from AASLD and the Infectious Disease Society of America.  Also concerning is that nearly half of states may not be making all restrictions publicly available. To read the preliminary findings in full, visit http://www.chlpi.org/stateofhepc. (NOTE: Colorado data is not up-to-date.

This report does not reflect Oct. 1 prior authorization criteria.)

The Hepatitis C: The State of Medicaid Access final report will grade and rank each state, as well as the District of Columbia, according to overall “state of access,” as determined by curative treatment restrictions related to three areas: 1) liver disease progression (fibrosis) requirements, 2) sobriety requirements, and 3) provider limitations. The report will also provide the first-ever national assessment of Medicaid Managed Care Organization (MCO) coverage of curative HCV treatments.

“With this announcement, we are officially putting state Medicaid programs on notice,” said Ryan Clary, executive director of NVHR. “State Medicaid directors need to make all treatment criteria publicly available and detail any plans to comply with CMS guidance, which clearly states that coverage policies cannot block hepatitis C patients’ access to effective, clinically appropriate and medically necessary treatments. It is unacceptable to have discriminatory restrictions that conflict with the CMS guidance or with established hepatitis C treatment standards. Our final report will grade and rank each state’s access criteria, and states that continue to discriminate will be called out.”

Robert Greenwald, clinical professor of Law at Harvard Law School and the faculty director of CHLPI, commented, “There is some good news and some bad news here.  In comparing our current findings to a 2014  hepatitis C treatment access report I published with a team of researchers in the Annals of Internal Medicine, we find that many states have reduced discriminatory practices.  Disappointingly, we also find that restrictions persist in many states, despite our hope that with established treatment guidelines, clear guidance from CMS, and successful litigation, we would see far more progress in eliminating discriminatory hepatitis C treatment restrictions.”
Greenwald continued, “While I think there is a general consensus emerging that discriminatory hepatitis C treatment restrictions will eventually be removed, voluntarily or by courts, we must hold state Medicaid programs accountable now, as some states still see a budgetary incentive in dragging their feet as long as possible.”

Key preliminary findings of the Hepatitis C: The State of Medicaid Access project include:
•      Transparency surrounding state Medicaid program hepatitis C treatment access restrictions has increased overall since 2014;
•      Access to hepatitis C treatment has improved since 2014 – primarily in the reduction/elimination of liver disease or fibrosis restrictions, while access restrictions related to sobriety and prescriber limitations have decreased to a far lesser extent; and
•      While there are some MCOs with low levels of restrictions, many follow their states’ fee-for-service (FFS) Medicaid restrictions, while others impose more onerous restrictions in violation of federal law.

NVHR and CHLPI are asking state Medicaid directors to confirm all current treatment restrictions for curative hepatitis C treatments, and to detail any plans to broaden access and comply with CMS guidance. Medicaid officials may contact Ryan Clary (rclary@nvhr.org) and Robert Greenwald (rgreenwa@law.harvard.edu).

States for which fibrosis, sobriety, and/or provider requirements remain unknown include: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, California, Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, hepatitis C affects approximately 3.5 million Americans. For the past several decades, hepatitis C treatment regimens revolved around painful interferon injections, which are vastly ineffective at managing the disease on an individual level and the epidemic on a public health level. In contrast, the new generation of treatments offer cure rates of near 100 percent with minimal side effects, providing hepatitis C patients with an unprecedented chance to live virus-free – and avoid liver failure, cancer-causing cirrhosis, liver transplants, and other health complications.

About the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable (NVHR)
The National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable is a broad coalition working to fight, and ultimately end, the hepatitis B and hepatitis C epidemics. We seek an aggressive response from policymakers, public health officials, medical and health care providers, the media, and the general public through our advocacy, education, and technical assistance. NVHR believes an end to the hepatitis B and C epidemics is within our reach and can be achieved through addressing stigma and health disparities, removing barriers to prevention, care and treatment, and ensuring respect and compassion for all affected communities. For more information, visit www.nvhr.org.

About the Center for Health Law and Policy Innovation of Harvard Law School (CHLPI)
The Center for Health Law and Policy Innovation of Harvard Law School (CHLPI) advocates for legal, regulatory, and policy reforms to improve the health of underserved populations, with a focus on the needs of low-income people living with chronic illnesses. CHLPI works to expand access to high-quality healthcare; to reduce health disparities; and to promote more equitable and effective healthcare systems. CHLPI is a clinical teaching program of Harvard Law School and mentors students to become skilled, innovative, and thoughtful practitioners as well as leaders in health and public health law and policy. For more information, visit http://www.chlpi.org.

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Liver Meeting 2016 engages clinicians in advocacy

The American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) Liver Meeting took place in Boston, Massachusetts. The Liver Meeting is attended by more than 9,000 clinicians and researchers working to address liver diseases – including hepatitis B and C. This is a wonderful opportunity to encourage this important group of stakeholders to engage in national advocacy efforts. Denver-based Liver Health Connection is attending for Team HepC.

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CLD offers Board Prep Practice Questions for liver disease care

Board Prep Practice Questions | Clinical Liver Disease

cdl-tweet-boardprep

Clinical Liver Disease (CLD) is an official digital learning resource of The American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. This interactive, up-to-date source of education is designed for physicians and healthcare providers caring for the patient with liver disease.CLD offers a series of board-style question banks designed to help you determine which articles, videos, audiocasts, and issues are most useful to your practice.

Visit their site to access resources. MORE

HHS: Viral Hepatitis Action Plan Updates & Request for Support

Dear Colleagues,
 
We write for two reasons, to update you on our progress in developing and releasing the National Viral Hepatitis Action Plan for 2017 – 2020 and to ask for you to help us raise awareness of the HHS.gov/hepatitis website.
 
As you may recall, last April our federal partners met and agreed to develop an updated National Viral Hepatitis Action Plan (NVHAP). Since that time, we have worked with the 23 federal partners that compose the Viral Hepatitis Implementation Group. We have also worked diligently to capture key issues identified by our nonfederal partners. Although the process has been time intensive, the result will be an evidence-based, responsive road map for the nation to combat hepatitis B and hepatitis C for 2017 – 2020. The new NVHAP will identify measurable, aspirational 2020 goals and annual targets that will need to be met or exceeded if we are to achieve our goals.
 
Finalizing the Action Plan and preparing it for release has taken longer than anticipated. It is now in clearance and we hope to release the document in early 2017. We’ll follow up with you when a release date is established.
 
Last May, on National Hepatitis Testing Day, HHS launched our new viral hepatitis website, http://www.hhs.gov/hepatitis/. We write to ask for your help to raise awareness about these viral hepatitis pages by linking to them on your webpages. These dedicated viral hepatitis pages include resources such as:
 
· The Viral Hepatitis Action Plan and information about the federal agencies involved in its implementation and progress in achieving its goals
 
· Links to federal policies and guidelines that help advance our work to achieve national viral hepatitis goals
 
· The latest blog posts from HHS and community leaders on key viral hepatitis topics.
 
· Facts, data, tools, and training that individuals and community partners can use to help win the battle against viral hepatitis
 
· Online federal tools for assessing hepatitis risk and locating viral hepatitis testing and vaccine providers
 
The new HHS web pages provide easy access to viral hepatitis resources from across the federal government. The Viral Hepatitis Action Plan recognizes that achieving its goals will require active involvement of and by a broad mix of stakeholders from various sectors, including federal, state and local; both public and private. We are committed to continuing to expand the site and have plans for doing so in 2017. That is why we are asking you to help to raise awareness about these viral hepatitis pages and resources by placing a link to them on your webpages.
 
We’re also now on Twitter at: @HHS_ViralHep. Please join the viral hepatitis conversation online by following us. We share updated website content, upcoming Twitter chats, and other current opportunities to join efforts to implement the Viral Hepatitis Action Plan and to learn more about what others are doing in communities across the country.
 
Please check out this new resource in our fight against viral hepatitis and help us spread the word about the Viral Hepatitis Action Plan and advances in our national efforts to your communities.
 
Sincerely,

Rich Wolitski
Director
Office of HIV/AIDS and Infectious Disease Policy
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health
Department of Health and Human Services
 
Corinna Dan
Viral Hepatitis Policy Advisor