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Excerpts from: State draws line on aid to smokers
By Frank Phillips, Globe Staff Boston
Globe Online [05/31/01]
New directives mean the poor won't be given drugs to quit
State Medicaid officials are implementing regulations that will deny
smoking cessation drugs to
welfare recipients and the working poor - populations with the state's
highest smoking rates.
This month, the Division of Medical Assistance introduced a policy
that seems to undercut the $46
million-a-year antismoking program, which has reduced Massachusetts
smoking rates to the
second-lowest in the country over eight years, after Utah's.
''That's absolutely shocking,'' said Nancy Kaufman, a vice president
of the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, the health philanthropy, when told of the Division
of Medical Assistance regulations. ''It
is particularly amazing considering how progressive Massachusetts
has been with its tobacco
control programs.''
Kaufman said that the national trend has been for Medicaid to cover smoking cessation services.
A spokesman for the division said the decision was based on the program's limited budget.
''We have never paid for smoking cessation drugs,'' said Richard
McGreal, the Division of Medical
Assistance spokesman.
The division had an informal policy of not covering the cost of
smoking cessation drugs for the
working poor and those on welfare, arguing that there was no
proof that the drugs were effective.
The division adopted the more formal regulation after some physicians
began prescribing Zyban for
smoking cessation when the division itself had approved it only
as an antidepressant, an
administration source said.
Four years ago, Governor Paul Cellucci blocked the division from
adopting a similar regulation. At
the time, the state had just settled with the tobacco industry,
seeking to recover billions of dollars in
Medicaid expenditures for smoking-related diseases.
(Massachusetts is getting about $8 billion over 25 years from
the national settlement of the lawsuits
alleging that tobacco corporations had covered up smoking's risks.)
This time, the division has the support of Acting Governor Jane
Swift. She and House Speaker
Thomas M. Finneran have been pushing for Medicaid coverage for
uninsured women who have
breast or cervical cancer.
Division of Medical Assistance officials, trying to curb rising
costs, said the cost for that program
was one reason for breaking ranks with the national antismoking
efforts and for formalizing its
policy against covering nicotine drugs.
Massachusetts Medicaid is a $4.4 billion program that serves 900,000
clients. It is reimbursed 50
percent by the federal government. Working poor and welfare recipients,
who rely on Medicaid for
their health care, have a smoking rate more than double that
of the general population.
The division has been under pressure from health advocacy groups
and antismoking groups to
include smoking cessation drugs in its MassHealth program, which
administers Medicaid.
The advocates argue that smoking-related diseases cost the state
Medicaid program $250 million a
year. They also argue that other states' Medicaid programs pay
for Zyban pills, nicotine patches,
gum, inhalers or smoking cessation counseling. And private insurers,
they say, are increasingly
covering antismoking therapies and drugs for their clients.
''Smoking is a phenomenon and an addiction that particularly afflicts
the lower social classes and
low-income populations,'' Kaufman said. ''How a program that
is geared to provide medical
services to that population cannot make such a service available
is quite surprising.''
McGreal, of the Division of Medical Assistance, said the division
has expanded other coverages
under Medicaid, including drugs for HIV patients, along with
treatment for uninsured women with
breast and cervical cancer. He said the result was an 18 percent
jump in the division's
pharmaceutical budget last year. That increase precluded possible
coverage for smoking cessation.
The new regulation could become a political problem for Swift,
who, because of her antitax
position, has vowed to veto a proposed 50 cent increase in the
tax on a pack of cigarettes to fund
health care and community hospitals.
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