‘Somebody is gonna die’: Medi-Cal patients struggle to fill prescriptions

‘Somebody is gonna die’: Medi-Cal patients struggle to fill prescriptions

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A month into its debut, California’s new Medicaid prescription drug program is riddled with problems, leaving thousands of patients without medications — often after languishing on hold for up to eight hours on call center phone lines.

On Jan. 1, the state handed control of its Medicaid drug program, known as Medi-Cal Rxto Magellan Health, which is administering prescription drug coverage for California’s 14 million Medicaid patients, most of whom previously got their medications from about two dozen managed-care plans.

But Magellan has tripped up implementation. It didn’t anticipate that calls to its help center would take so long, and a large number of its call center workers have been sickened during the omicron surge — with 100 of 220 absent during the first two weeks of January, state officials said. Magellan also didn’t get some data it needed from managed-care plans.

This has left Californians from Redding to Oceanside without their medications for days, sometimes weeks.

“We’ve had many, many patients who are sort of in this limbo,” said Dr. James Schultz, chief medical officer of Neighborhood Healthcare, which operates 17 clinics in Riverside and San Diego counties.

“Somebody is gonna die if they haven’t already,” added Schultz, who said some of his clinics’ patients have experienced delays getting life-saving medications such as antibiotics or those used to prevent seizures and blood clots. “That’s why we’ re fighting so hard.”

Officials from the California Department of Health Care Services, which administers Medi-Cal, California’s Medicaid program for low-income people, called the problems “unacceptable.” The department and Magellan Health are scrambling to find missing patient data, fix improper claim denials, add call center staffers, and provide pharmacists with codes to override prescription denials.

Handing over Medi-Cal’s drug program to a single pharmacy benefit manager is one of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s big healthcare initiatives. His administration estimates it will save the state $414 million in the 2022-23 budget year alone, in part by getting bigger discounts on drugs than the managed-care insurance plans did.

But the massive transfer has been rocky for many providers, pharmacists, and patients, especially patients who use medications their doctors consider medically necessary but require prior authorizations from Medi-Cal Rx and are generally not on the state’s approved drug list. Magellan has received more than 95,000 prior authorization requests since it took over, state officials said.

In the months leading up to the switch, patients and doctors were told all their medications would be grandfathered into the new system for 180 days, but that hasn’t always been the case.

Marilyn Bloomer of Oceanside had gone nearly a week without a specialty histamine prescription that she takes to regulate an overactive allergic response in her body, a condition known as mast cell activation syndromebecause her pharmacist and Magellan said it was no longer covered. When she finally reached someone at the Magellan call center last week — six hours after she placed the call — a supervisor gave her a code the pharmacist could use to override the denial.

But the pharmacy wouldn’t accept it.

On Monday, Bloomer’s health plan secured an emergency five-day supply for her, but she doesn’t know what will happen when it runs out. Without the medication, called ketotifen, Bloomer gets bright red, patchy hives all over her face.

“I’m getting the runaround, and I’m getting confused,” said Bloomer, 57, who said her face had been beginning to swell. “It’s beyond frustrating.”

State officials said Magellan representatives had answered more than 81,000 calls at the 24-hour, 7-day-a-week call center as of Feb. 1 and paid 11 million prescription claims totaling approximately $1.3 billion as of Feb. 4.

“As we sit here, clearly five weeks into operations, Magellan, our contractor, has really struggled with some service operations,” Jacey Cooper, the state’s Medicaid director, told lawmakers at an Assembly budget subcommittee hearing Monday.

She said that the Department of Health Care Services is holding daily meetings with Magellan to discuss its management of the program and that the state has provided staffers to help answer calls at the Medi-Cal Rx call center. The immediate goal, Cooper added, is to ensure medications that require prior authorization are approved within 24 hours. In the meantime, she said, the state has given pharmacies the go-ahead to fill emergency prescriptions for up to two weeks. It also has removed prior authorization requirements for some medications.

Magellan referred media questions to the Department of Health Care Services.

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