|
CA
Officials Will Tighten Controls on Serostim (human growth hormone)
Due to High Costs of Unauthorized Use of the Drug
In
order to curb abuses - including a black market among bodybuilders
- California officials say they will tighten controls on Serostim
(recombinant human growth hormone), an expensive AIDS drug that
cost the state's health program for the poor more than $175 million
during the past four years.
Starting
June 1, new prescriptions for the anti-AIDS wasting drug Serostim
must be state-approved prior to being filled. Initial prescriptions
for the drug, which costs up to $7,000 a month, will be limited
to four weeks. The move is expected to save around $7.5 million
a year from the state's steadily increasing $3 billion drug tab.
State
restrictions on Serostim, a human growth hormone that helps build
muscle mass, were so lax that last year Medi-Cal spent more on it
than did New York, Florida and Texas combined. Patients currently
can receive up to three months worth of Serostim with only a doctor's
prescription and no state approval.
The
Los Angeles Times in February reported that California's
Department of Health Services does not maintain the same tight grip
on Serostim as other large states do. The state's smaller AIDS Drug
Assistance Program (ADAP)- for those who do not qualify for Medi-Cal
- already requires prior approval. "Certainly the article got
our attention," said Stan Rosenstein, state deputy health director
for medical care services. Rosenstein said concerns about fraud,
budgetary considerations and a desire for consistent state regulations
all contributed to the decision.
State
officials began slowly adding controls a few years ago but resisted
a prior-authorization requirement out of fear that it would hinder
patient access to the drug. AIDS Health Care Foundation Executive
Director Michael Weinstein lauded the administration of Governor
Gray Davis for its response in an era of threatened health care
cuts.
David
Pieribone, associate director for education at AIDS Project LA,
said that while tighter controls were necessary to stop abuse, close
monitoring by the state is needed to ensure that patients who need
the drug will receive it.
04/09/03
Source
-
T Reiterman. Tighter Controls Set for AIDS Drug. Los Angeles
Times. April 4, 2003.
- CDC
HIV/STD/TB Prevention News Update. April 8, 2003.
|