
Is the cost of prescription medications taking a big part of your budget? We have a partial solution — generic drugs.
Before you make a decision to switch, you probably have some questions about generic drugs. Here are some of the most common questions we get about brand-name and generic drugs.
Like the rest of us, most physicians are more familiar with brand-name drugs that are advertised than with the generic names of the drugs. What's more, the cost of your medicines may not be your physician's number one concern when you go to his or her office. Normally, your physician is focused on your medical care. Further, it is difficult for a physician to know all the prices for various medications or all the different benefit plans of their patients. As a result, your physician may not know how much your prescription medications cost, or what potential savings there may be when you use a medication that is available as a generic, as compared to a brand-name drug.
Talk to your physician about switching your brand-name medications to drugs that are available as generics. If your physician agrees, he or she will need to write a new prescription for the generic drug, or ask your physician to allow a generic substitution when you get a prescription filled for a drug that has a generic equivalent.
There are not always generic equivalent drugs available to substitute for a brand-name drug. So you may want to ask your physician if there is a generic alternative drug that could treat your condition and be appropriate for you. A generic alternative is a therapeutic alternative that is a generic drug used to treat the same condition. It is a generic drug that has been approved for the treatment of your condition, but it is not the generic equivalent of the brand-name drug you are currently taking.
You can save money when you use generic drugs under both Standard and Basic Option.
Under Standard Option, when you use a Preferred retail pharmacy and purchase generic drugs, you pay 20 percent of the Plan Allowance. You pay 30 percent for brand-name drugs. This is a savings of 10 percent in your out-of-pocket costs. And the 10 percent co-insurance is calculated on the much lower cost of a generic drug, rather than a brand-name drug. And new for 2010, if you switch from certain brand-name drugs to specific generic drugs, your first four generic prescription fills or refills per drug per calendar year are free. The brand-name drugs and generic drug replacements are listed on page 94 of the 2010 Service Benefit Plan brochure.
You can also save if you have Standard Option and use the mail service pharmacy. You pay a $10 copayment for each generic drug verses a $65 copayment for the first 30 brand-name prescriptions filled each calendar year. That's a large out-of-pocket savings. In addition, if you use generic drugs, we waive the $10 copayment for the first four generic prescriptions filled or refilled each calendar year. That's at least a $40 savings.
Basic Option also provides savings when you use generic drugs. You pay a $10 copayment for generic drugs when you use a Preferred retail pharmacy. There is a $35 copayment for Preferred brand-name drugs and a 50 percent coinsurance, or minimum of a $45 copayment, if you purchase Non-preferred or non-formulary brand-name drugs. So your out-of-pocket savings are at least $25 when you use generic drugs. There are no mail service pharmacy benefits under Basic Option.
Talk to your physician about switching to generic drugs. Then enjoy the savings.