CVS Health reported $2.3 billion in profit for the first quarter, which exceeded Wall Street's expectations.
I've read $CVS Q1 report & frankly, it's sickening to me as a patient who was denied access to my life-saving medication for purely profit-motivated reasons the same Q.🧵
2/ First the $CVS financials:
Total Q1 revenues ⬆️to $76.8 billion,⬆️11.2% compared to prior year
In PBM Caremark segment, total revenues⬆️8.6% to $39.4 billion
Q dividend ⬆️10%, $722 million shareholder return, first corp stock buy back since 2017.
Earnings forecast ⬆️
☀️💵
3/What drove $CVS PBM Caremark's revenue growth?
👉"improved purchasing economics"
What does this mean for patients?
Non-medical switching. Patients are forced to change drugs not based on their doctor's medical advice but ONLY because another drug provides higher profit.
4/ Here's the proof. Anticoagulants Eliquis & Xarelto retail for the same price. No clinical reason to drop Eliquis. None. In fact clinical data shows it is preferable in some patients. Yet the kickback on Xarelto to PBMs is higher than the one for Eliquis. So what does CVS do?
5/CVS Caremark who manages the prescription benefit for 1 in 3 Americans dropped Eliquis from their commercial formulary 1/1. They did NOT grandfather ~150,000 at-risk cardio patients already stable on it,forcing them to switch to warfarin or Xarelto. I was one of those patients.
6/ Eliquis is a top cardiovascular therapeutic. 3 million Americans take it. Even @POTUS takes it! This move was seen as so dangerously disruptive for patients at risk for stroke & DVT/PE that 16 (!!!!) nonprofits asked $CVS Caremark to reverse their decision.
7/ Here's what the American Society of Hematology @ASH_hematology told CVS PBM Caremark
"gravely concerned"
"serious impact" on patients
"ASH urges CVS to reconsider"
They cite data showing increased bleed risks & poor outcomes.
8/ Here's what @advcardiohealth co-signed by 14 (!!) additional non-profits told $CVS PBM Caremark
"this abrupt change will be dangerously disruptive for patients"
"unquestionably exacerbate health equity concerns that exist in cardiovascular care" static1.squarespace.com/static/56e6efd…
9/ CVS even ignored the expert clinicians w/ the guideline creating American College of Cardiology @ACCinTouch & American Society of Hematology @ASH_hematology who met twice w/ Caremark medical leaders to try to reverse the dangerous formulary decision. acc.org/Latest-in-Card…
10/ Now unsurprisingly the predicted adverse events--thromboembolic stroke & clinically significant bleed-- due to CVS's profit motivated non-medical switching are now occurring. I have documented events in 5 states, one in a 26 year old! fox13memphis.com/news/local/doc…
11/ So I truly feel sick when I see CVS posting 2 BILLION PROFIT in the very quarter they benefited from kicking previously stable patients at-risk for DVT & STROKE off their medication to squeeze out even more profit. Yet CEO @KarenSLynch says they are improving care ACCESS? 🤯
12/ To add insult to injury, yesterday CVS promoted its Caremark Chief Medical Officer who participated in this shameful care disruption to be the CMO over of all of CVS Health. Unbelievable reward. forbes.com/sites/brucejap…
13/ I initially felt the Eliquis drop was a mistake easily corrected. I once worked in insurance. Surely no one informed would take a heart patient at high risk for stroke doing well on a drug for YEARS & create sudden treatment instability over the objection of their physician?
14/ Yet once I understood Caremark leadership did fully understand the patient safety risks & THEY DID IT ANYWAYS & still even now won't reverse, I keep asking WHY? Putting patients thru hell & their health at risk merely for a few percentage points more rebate?? #StopTheSwitch
15/ Seriously for what reason? When HUNDREDS of clinicians literally beg a company to put a drug back on formulary for their patients--one they had on it for YEARS & the answer is no. What is the rationale? Not listening to doctors isn't quality care. It's greed. #MedTwitter
17/ To be clear, I have covered access again to the medication I had been stable on for 8 years when my plan @NCTreasurer overrode Caremark's formulary change on 2/9. I'm VERY grateful. I now want all patients to have the care decisions they make with their doctor respected.
18/ Other NC patients like me are not as fortunate. Protections from such non-medical switching practices by far off corporations is needed. Prescribing decisions should be between a patient & their doctor. @NCHouseSpeaker@SenatorBerger@JoshStein_@NC_Governor@NCInsuranceDept
CVS Caremark forced 150,000 stable heart patients off their long-time medication over the objection of 16 non-profits putting patients at risk. Adverse stroke & bleed events are now happening. Simply because the PBM got a larger rebate/kickback from 1 drug company over another.
Please see for yourself @SenBlumenthal Here's what the American Society of Hematology @ASH_hematology told PBM Caremark
"gravely concerned"
"serious impact" on patients
"ASH urges CVS to reconsider"
They cite data showing bleed risks & poor outcomes. hematology.org/-/media/hemato…
2) Shared decision making necessitates that no one stand between a patient & clinician making decisions based upon the clinical evidence.
yet
Non-medical drug switching= the insurance PBM knows better than patient & doctor. #MedTwitter#CardioTwitter#TwitterRx#StopTheSwitch
3) If clinical evidence cannot be acted upon at the point of care at the dictates of a profit-motivated third party, can clinicians really be said to be practicing evidenced-based medicine?
🚨Clinical decisions MUST be between a patient & physician only.#MedTwitter#CardioTwitter
Why prior authorization is NOT the answer to helping patients stay on their long-time effective medications due to PBM formulary coverage drops & non-medical switching:
2) Prior authorization (under my insurance plan) increases the patient's costs, moving the drug from co-pay status to one of co-insurance & deductible. Example: When Caremark dropped Eliquis as a Tier 2 covered drug & I got a PA, it increased my cost by $2,400 annually.
3) Applying for a prior authorization does NOT guarantee approval. Only ~60% of Eliquis PAs for switched patients in surveyed clinics were approved by Caremark. I've talked to patients who had been stable on Eliquis for YEARS who had second level appeals DENIED by Caremark.
I've been asked 'why am I such a vocal patient advocate?' None of us escapes sickness. Many of us will face a serious illness. I've walked in those shoes as both patient & caregiver. Years ago I worked in health admin, but I choose to VOLUNTEER now because helping feels good.
2) I think of my Dad. I watched him bleed to death on anticoagulation. I want my doctor who knows me to be the one to make the evidenced based care decisions about my own anticoagulation & not my insurer. Would Dad have understood a non-medical drug switch letter from a PBM? No.
3) So when I hear of patients having clinically significant bleeds & thromboembolic stroke events due to the non-medical switching of anticoagulants, how can I possibly be silent? No one is paying me to advocate. It's simply the right thing to do to help patients.
I filed a formal complaint w/ @HHSOCR@lisajpino re CVS Caremark Office of President @KarenSLynch use of my medical info to silence my tweets sounding 🚨 on adverse stroke & bleeds in multiple states as a result of their non-medical switching of anticoagulants in at-risk pts. 🧵
2) Caremark (who covers 1 in 3 Americans) admitted it is standard corporate practice to ACCESS AN INSURED PATIENT's PRESCRIPTION RECORD & cold contact the patient based BASED SOLEY ON A SOCIAL MEDIA POST about the company or tagging of an exec--a clear HIPAA violation.
3) I have a life-threatening condition & depend on medications PBM Caremark controls my access to. When a man "working on behalf of the Office of The President" in the same call references both a specific drug prior authorization I have & my advocacy Tweets, I feel threatened.
A man "working on behalf of the Office of The President" @CVSHealth called me outta the blue 2x last week wanting me to explain my TWEETS.
Listen as I'm told execs & @KarenSLynch herself review recordings & the 'case' they compile on me & other PBM Caremark insured patients.🧵
2) I do hope @KarenSLynch gets involved to get Eliquis back on Caremark national base formulary. As @FortuneMagazine 'Most Powerful Woman in Health Care' I haven't understood why her company couldn't negotiate a favorable deal with @bmsnews so patients have covered access.
3) Eliquis & Xarelto retail for about the same price.
My local Walgreens: Eliquis $617, Xarelto $620.Data below from @P4AD_ It's always a bit odd when 1 company raises their price within days of the other to match. 🤔 @bmsnews@JanssenUS Point is, note the retail costs.