Elimination of insurance-mandated step therapy and allowing the Medicare beneficiaries to use copay assistance programs are among the changes the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) wants to see.
The goal of treatment for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including ulcerative colitis (UC), is to achieve and sustain remission. This requires coordinated efforts between a multidisciplinary team of experts, including gastroenterologists, surgeons, nurses, mental health professionals, dietitians and pharmacists.
The past two decades have afforded advances in IBD treatments that can slow or stop disease progression and minimize complications, such as the need for surgery, organ damage, and an increased risk of developing colorectal cancer. However, many new therapies come with a hefty price tag, and numerous barriers exist, rendering the most effective IBD treatments inaccessible to some patients.
In a white paper, which was recently published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology and to appear in the May 2024 print issue, the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) highlights current barriers to care for people living with IBD and provides a 12-point plan to address these barriers and improve access to effective IBD therapies.
AGA delineates the following barriers to IBD care:
With improved patient health and well-being as a guiding principle to develop policies that embrace high-value, multidisciplinary IBD care, AGA announced the following 12-step plan to improve access to care:
AGA emphasizes that changes in the current healthcare system could improve patient care effectiveness, efficiency, and equity.
“Unaffordable drug costs, step therapy, and other insurer-mandated barriers are fixable problems. Every day, we see people that have been harmed by delayed and inadequate care. Solving these barriers would lift an unimaginable weight off our patient’s shoulders and allow them to lead healthier lives,” said M. Anthony Sofia, M.D., co-first author of the white paper and IBD specialist at Oregon Health and Science University, in a press release.
AGA Publishes Clinical Practice Update on Management of Pregnancy-Related GI and Liver Disease
December 18th 2024It is known that patients with active IBD have an increased risk of preterm birth, slowed fetal growth, low birth weight, hypertensive disease of pregnancy, and cesarean birth. On the other hand, conception during disease remission results in similar relapse rates as for people with IBD who are not pregnant.
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