Measuring the value of solidarity: The abem financial assistance program for out-of-pocket payments on pharmacy medicines in Portugal

Author:

Gouveia Miguel1,Borges Margarida2,Costa João2,Lourenço Francisco3,Fiorentino Francesca3,Rodrigues António Teixeira4,Teixeira Inês5ORCID,Guerreiro José Pedro5,Caetano Patrícia6,Carneiro António Vaz7

Affiliation:

1. Associate Professor, Catolica Lisbon School of Business and Economics, Lisbon, Portugal

2. Director, Center for Evidence-Based Medicine, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal

3. Researcher, Center for Evidence-Based Medicine, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal

4. Director, Centre for Health Evaluation & Research, National Association of Pharmacies, Lisbon, Portugal

5. Senior Researcher, Centre for Health Evaluation & Research, National Association of Pharmacies, Lisbon, Portugal

6. Researcher, Centre for Health Evaluation & Research, National Association of Pharmacies, Lisbon, Portugal

7. Director, Institute for Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Lisbon, Portugal

Abstract

Objective Out-of-pocket payments for prescribed medicines are still comparatively high in Portugal. The abem program was launched in Portugal in May 2016 to aid vulnerable groups by completely covering out-of-pocket costs of prescribed medicines in community pharmacies. This study assesses the impact of the program on poverty and catastrophic health expenditures. Methods A longitudinal study was carried out with the analysis of several program databases (from the beginning of the program in May 2016 to September 2018) covering the cohorts of beneficiaries, daily data on medicines dispensed, social referencing entities, and solidarity pharmacies. The study provides estimates of standard poverty measures (intensity and severity) as well as the incidence of catastrophic health expenditures. Results More than 6000 beneficiaries were supported (56.8% female, 34.7% aged 65 or over), encompassing 127,510 medicines (mainly nervous system and cardiovascular system) with an average 26.9% co-payment (payments totalling €1.5 million). The program achieved substantial reductions in poverty (3.4% in intensity, 5.6% in severity), and eliminated cases with catastrophic health expenditures in medicines that would have affected 7.5% of the beneficiaries. Conclusions Findings confirm a continuous increase in the number of beneficiaries, enabling access to medicines especially for the vulnerable elderly, and a sizable impact on eliminating out-of-pocket payments for medicines in the target population.

Funder

The Private Institution of Social Solidarity Dignitude

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

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