California Healthline December 6, 2022
Julie Appleby

Anna Sutton was shocked when she received a letter from her husband’s job-based health plan stating that Humira, an expensive drug used to treat her daughter’s juvenile arthritis, was now on a long list of medications considered “nonessential benefits.”

The July 2021 letter said the family could either participate in a new effort overseen by a company called SaveOnSP and get the drug free of charge or be saddled with a monthly copayment that could top $1,000.

“It really gave us no choice,” said Sutton, of Woodinville, Washington. She added that “every single FDA-approved medication for juvenile arthritis” was on the list of nonessential benefits.

Sutton had unwittingly become part of a strategy that employers are using to deal with...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Employer, Patient / Consumer
Health savings accounts have mixed effects on healthcare spending, use
The Top U.S. Corporations by Number of Employees
Health Care’s Debt Problem
Food Is Medicine: The Road To Universal Coverage
Commonwealth Fund creates employer-based health insurance task force

Share This Article