For over 25 years, the pharmaceutical industry has relied on marketing-mix (MMx) analyses to measure the effectiveness of their promotional activity and to optimize marketing budgets [1]. A typical MMx study uses statistical methods to estimate the effect of independent variables such as promotional activity, prior month sales, and control variables (e.g., seasonality, market events, and market trend) on the dependent variable, which is typically a measure of sales (Rx, units, or revenue). Over the years, as the marketing landscape became more complex with the proliferation of digital channels, the MMx methodology evolved to account for complex interactions between various promotion types [2].
However, in all these analyses, the managed care dynamics are frequently assumed to be a constant. Although managed care does not directly impact how a sales rep influences a healthcare professional (HCP) to want to prescribe a specific product, it does impact whether the prescription happens or not. For the prescription to go through, the entire managed care ecosystem needs to work like a well-oiled machine to ensure that the patient gets timely and affordable access to the drug [3]. At the very least, that same machinery needs not to place an impossible-to-overcome barrier.
For this blog, managed care refers to the organized ecosystem that aims to deliver high-quality and affordable healthcare services to patients. The stakeholders include pharma companies, healthcare providers, managed care organizations (MCOs, or payers), and Integrated Delivery Networks (IDNs). Figure 1 below depicts key interactions among these stakeholders that enable drug prescriptions.
Figure 1: Interactions Among Managed Care Stakeholders
Source: Axtria Inc.
Pharma companies enter into contracts with MCOs, to ensure a competitive presence of their drug in the MCOs’ insurance plans. MCOs, in turn, influence the writing behavior of HCPs at hospitals with which they have an agreement to reimburse some or all the cost of the drug. A favorable contract also prompts HCPs to prescribe the drug since it makes the drug more affordable.
At the same time, healthcare providers are coalescing into healthcare ecosystems centered around IDNs to provide holistic care to patients [4]. The Affordable Care Act of 2010 was aimed to provide cost-effective healthcare to more people and thus prompted the shift from volume to value in healthcare delivery. As a result, IDNs emerged to offer a continuum of healthcare services and started promoting specific treatment protocols that (ideally) should demonstrate evidence of better patient outcomes. These IDNs can influence, even compel, in some circumstances, affiliated HCPs to follow these treatment protocols. Large IDNs have centralized control over HCPs through employment, common branding, and clinical integration through a common Electronic Health Record (EHR) system that is monitored to track patient outcomes and protocol adherence. The level of influence that an IDN enjoys over HCPs has an impact on their prescribing behavior.
The discussion above shows two strong factors that positively impact HCP prescribing behavior – favorable managed care contracts and a strong IDN control. These factors, in turn, make the job of drug promotion easier. Consider this – it is easier to convince a doctor to prescribe a drug and for the patient to receive it if it enjoys unrestricted access than if it needs prior authorization.
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Managed care dynamics diverge across geographical areas and with time. A drug might have a more favorable formulary coverage in New York than in California. The IDNs in the Midwest might be more controlling than those on the East Coast. And these divergences cause promotion effectiveness to vary. Hence, in order to better measure the promotion effectiveness, it is important that these dynamics are accounted for in MMx models. This is because it would not be prudent to construct the promotion effectiveness variable to have the same parameters for different regions or different customers with different coverages and different IDN control levels. For example, both the maximum possible effect of rep calls on sales and the slope reaching that point, will be different for a geography with better insurance coverage than otherwise.
Having established the need to incorporate managed care dynamics in MMx models, we need to find a way to codify them. How do we measure the plan favorability? How do we measure the level of control exerted by an IDN?
At Axtria, we have deployed various analytical techniques to measure these dynamics.
Contract Plan Favorability
This can be quantified in terms of a plan favorability index/score, (i.e., a relative numeric representation of all the qualitative and quantitative characteristics of a plan for the brand). This score takes the following into account:
The favorability indices for all the plans for an HCP can be weighted by number of lives covered and then combined to arrive at a composite plan favorability index for an HCP. To make the analysis more robust, we can also introduce a temporal component to the index by calculating this index on a timely basis, say, once every six months, or on a rolling-period basis, if there is evidence of high volatility in the data.
IDN Control
IDN control can be inferred from various characteristics of the IDN:
An IDN can be considered high control based on any of the above specified control metrics. Therefore, a single index needs to be created which encompasses all the dimensions of control. Overall control for these IDNs is a combination of these metrics as a continuous variable. Since each metric is different, percentiles of individual metrics are obtained so that all the metrics are on a similar scale. Weightages for individual metrics are given as input, allowing the analyst to account for which factors are most important or most accurately measured. Overall control is a weighted average of each metric. The control metric calculated for each IDN can be assigned to the affiliated hospitals/HCPs to be used as a modeling metric. Like contract plan favorability, a temporal component can be added to the index by calculating this index on a timely basis, say, once every six months.
Both contract plan favorability index and IDN control index can be classified into a high-low or a high-medium-low flag (essentially, rendering the continuous variables into two- or three-part ordered categorical variables) if needed. This structure may lend simplicity to interpretation and use in MMx models.
The flags created above are meant to differentiate HCPs/accounts/geographies in terms of their managed care characteristics. These characteristics have a bearing on the promotion effect and hence on the construct/parameters of the promotion effectiveness variable. There are two fundamental ways of representing the effectiveness variable based on managed care characteristics:
Measuring promotion effectiveness in the backdrop of the managed care ecosystem will allow for better estimation and offer insights into how managed care dynamics play in enabling promotion channels to do their job. With the managed care ecosystem undergoing a change under the current COVID scenario, incorporating managed care dynamics into MMx models becomes even more relevant. Loss of jobs means fewer enrollees under commercial plans and more enrollees under Medicaid plans. Increased emphasis on telemedicine, home infusions, and self-administration rather than in-office infusions will likely affect formulary status changes [5]. Moreover, uncertainty over the future means that some of these changes are likely to be transient, although their evolution is uncertain [6]. This further underlines the need to adjust MMx approaches to account for managed care dynamics. These approaches can help pharmaceutical companies make better-informed decisions on their marketing strategy.