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It's Not Just Insulin: Diabetes Patients Struggle To Get Crucial Supplies

Ric Peralta and his wife Lisa are both able to check Ric's blood sugar levels at any time, using the Dexcom app and an arm patch that measures the levels and sends the information wirelessly.
Allison Zaucha for NPR
Ric Peralta and his wife Lisa are both able to check Ric's blood sugar levels at any time, using the Dexcom app and an arm patch that measures the levels and sends the information wirelessly.

In the first three months after getting his Dexcom continuous glucose monitor, Ric Peralta managed to reduce his average blood sugar level by three percentage points.

"It took me from not-very-well-managed blood sugar to something that was incredibly well managed," says Peralta, a 46-year-old optician in Whittier, Calif., who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes in 2008.

Peralta was so enthused that he became a "Dexcom Warrior," a sort of grassroots spokesman for the product. It became hard to imagine life without his new monitor, a device that lets him keep track the trends in his blood sugar 24 hours a day on his smart phone. And yet, he's spent weeks at a time without the device over the past year because of problems with insurance restrictions. Physician groups and patients consider those rules overly burdensome, but insurance groups defend them as necessary.

Diabetes activists and legislators have started to focus attention on the surging price of insulin, leading to legislative pushes, lawsuits and congressional hearings. But insulin isn't the only thing people with Type 1 diabetes are struggling to get. Managing the condition requires other essential, often life-saving medical supplies. And patients frequently face hurdles in getting access to those supplies — hurdles put in place by insurance companies.

A life changing device

Peralta learned about the Dexcom continuous glucose monitor from the mother of one of his patients. He visited the company's website and, within two weeks, the device had been shipped to his front door.

"I still didn't 100 percent appreciate exactly how it was going to change my life," Peralta says. "It was amazing."

In their home in Whittier, Calif., Lisa Peralta pats Ric's Dexcom sensor to make sure it's staying on his arm. Before he got the device, Ric had to check his blood glucose via multiple finger pricks and plastic test strips every few hours.
/ Allison Zaucha for NPR
/
Allison Zaucha for NPR
In their home in Whittier, Calif., Lisa Peralta pats Ric's Dexcom sensor to make sure it's staying on his arm. Before he got the device, Ric had to check his blood glucose via multiple finger pricks and plastic test strips every few hours.

Typically, people with Type 1 diabetes check their blood sugar by drawing a drop of blood from their finger and placing it on a disposable test strip that's read by a blood glucose meter. Doctors suggest checking blood sugar this way between four and 10 times per day. These readings are crucial for helping people with diabetes manage their blood sugar — keeping it from getting too low, which can lead to sudden seizures and loss of consciousness, as well as from getting too high, which can cause vision loss, nerve damage and can even, over time, lead to amputations.

Instead, Peralta's continuous glucose monitor gave accurate blood sugar readings every five minutes. That's 288 readings per day, or about 278 more readings than even the most conscientious patients get the old-fashioned way.

"When I had to do the old-fashioned finger prick test, I was only doing that right before I ate, so I could see how much [insulin] I was supposed to take," Peralta says. (People with Type 1 diabetes have to take multiple daily shots of insulin to keep their blood sugar within normal range because their bodies stop producing the naturally occurring hormone.)

"I didn't realize that I had rather severe [blood sugar] peaks and valleys in between my meal times," Peralta says.

Tighter control of blood sugar can reduce the risk of heart disease, kidney failure and nerve damage. For Peralta, it also offered peace of mind.

The monitor sounds an alarm when his blood sugar is getting dangerously low; Peralta says his coworkers have started bringing him sugary snacks when they hear the alarm, to help him raise his blood sugar back up to normal. When he takes his family on road trips — a favorite activity — he no longer has to worry about the possibility of passing out while he's driving.

"It even syncs with my car so I can just say, 'Siri, what's my blood sugar?' And it will come over the car stereo system," Peralta says. "I'm safe for my family."

Prior-authorization requirements

When common chronic conditions such as diabetes are well controlled, it prevents worsening disease and saves money for the health system and the patient.

But Peralta says his efforts to use this new tool consistently to manage his diabetes have been stymied by insurance problems that began about a year ago.

The newest Dexcom continuous glucose monitor has three parts: a sensor that measures glucose levels, a transmitter that sends out the sensor's readings wirelessly, and a receiver that displays those readings on a screen.

Testing blood sugar now involves three pieces of equipment, Ric Peralta says: (Left) Peralta holds the applicator that contains the Dexcom G6 sensor and transmitter he's about to affix to his arm. (Center) the Dexcom sensor and transmitter in place. (Right) Peralta checks the Dexcom app on his smart phone to see his glucose levels before he eats.
/ Allison Zaucha for NPR
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Allison Zaucha for NPR
Testing blood sugar now involves three pieces of equipment, Ric Peralta says: (Left) Peralta holds the applicator that contains the Dexcom G6 sensor and transmitter he's about to affix to his arm. (Center) the Dexcom sensor and transmitter in place. (Right) Peralta checks the Dexcom app on his smart phone to see his glucose levels before he eats.

For each of these parts, Peralta needs something called a "prior authorization" from his insurer — a requirement from his insurance company that necessitates his physician seeking approval from the insurance company before prescribing the device.

The Dexcom sensors last about 10 days each and Peralta's insurance allows him to buy a three-month supply at a time. But he also has to get prior authorization for each supply, meaning every three months his doctor needs to reconfirm with his insurance company that the sensors are medically necessary. Same goes for the device's transmitters — which last about six months each.

"I have to jump through hoops and they have to jump through hoops to get information from my insurance to get authorization," Peralta says in frustration, adding, "for the last year, basically every time there's been something that's gone wrong."

"Prior authorizations are in place to protect patients, to improve safety and to try to make sure that the care they receive is as safe as possible and also as affordable as possible," says Kate Berry of the trade group America's Health Insurance Programs.

But to Ric Peralta, the requirement is a burden.

The most recent snafu happened in March. Peralta ordered a new supply of sensors directly from Dexcom but says the company submitted a request for approval of a new transmitter, as well. And because his insurance approves the sensors and transmitters on different authorization timelines, the whole claim was denied. Peralta estimates he spent four hours on the phone with Dexcom and his insurer over the next month and a half to sort it all out. During that time he had to revert to finger stick tests.

"It's maddening," Peralta says. "If I do not have my proper management of this disease I'm going to die from it. And they're making it as difficult as possible."

Peralta says he's so enthusiastic about the benefits of closely monitoring his glucose levels he's become a "Dexcom Warrior" — a sort of grassroots spokesman for patients with diabetes who use the company's continuous glucose monitoring system.
/ Allison Zaucha for NPR
/
Allison Zaucha for NPR
Peralta says he's so enthusiastic about the benefits of closely monitoring his glucose levels he's become a "Dexcom Warrior" — a sort of grassroots spokesman for patients with diabetes who use the company's continuous glucose monitoring system.

A burden on doctors, too

Prior authorizations have become a major concern of physicians across the U.S. health care system, as evidenced by a December 2018 survey by the American Medical Association.

Of the 1,000 physicians surveyed, 91 percent said prior authorizations "have a negative impact on patient clinical outcomes;" 75 percent said the requirements "can at least sometimes lead to patients abandoning a recommended course of treatment;" and 28 percent said the prior authorization process had "led to serious or life-threatening events" for their patients.

"In my practice we have five individual physicians, and we hired five full-time employees whose primary duty is obtaining prior authorization and dealing with insurance companies," says Dr. Bruce Scott, an otolaryngologist from Kentucky and Vice Speaker of the AMA House of Delegates.

"Prior authorization is a burden on providers and diverts valuable resources," Scott says. "That's a problem."

The AMA has even created a website that catalogs stories of patients and providers who say they've struggled to gain access to important medical products and procedures because of problems getting prior authorizations from insurers — everything from pain medication for a cancer patient to X-rays in the ER. Scott says the AMA doesn't expect insurers to completely do away with requirements for prior authorization, "but we believe that it should be focused and that it should be better planned."

The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists — an organization of the physicians whose specialty is often associated with diabetes treatment — goes even further.

"We feel that physicians that are specialists in endocrine disease should not be required to fill out prior authorizations for endocrine treatments," says Dr. Scott Isaacs, an endocrinologist from Atlanta and member of the board of directors of AACE.

"It's a huge burden for the patients trying to get this sorted out. Sometimes it's red tape; sometimes it's a true denial," Isaacs says. "It's a huge burden for the doctors as well, and the doctors resent it."

Berry, of the insurance group AHIP, acknowledges that there's room for improvement in the prior authorization process. In fact, in January 2018, the AMA and AHIP signed a consensus statement identifying five areas for improvement. It was cosigned by the American Hospital Association, the American Pharmacists Association, the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association and the Medical Group Management Association.

Who bears the greatest burden?

For Ric Peralta, the ultimate burden of getting all these prescriptions filled falls on him and patients like him.

After his latest mix-up with the sensors in March, he discovered the battery in his transmitter had died.

Peralta made another frustrated call to Dexcom, and recently got a complimentary transmitter to get him back on the system while his formal order goes through the approval process.

"I'm quite nervous about what's going to happen again in two months when I am needing to call in orders again," Peralta says.

"Am I going to have to go through this whole thing over again?"

This story is part of NPR's reporting partnership with Kaiser Health News. Bram Sable-Smith is a freelance reporter based in Madison, Wisc., who often covers health care. Reach him on Twitter: @besables.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Bram Sable-Smith
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