If your plan includes Lowest Cost Alternative pricing, it means your plan has adopted a cost-effective approach that encourages the use of equally effective drugs that are more affordable. In this approach, if a brand name drug is dispensed, it will be reimbursed at the cost of the lowest cost generic equivalent.
This saves your plan money, helping to keep it affordable into the future.
Pacific Blue Cross has developed a list of medications where brand patents have expired and equivalent generic versions of the same drug are available. Based on available pricing data, we set a benchmark price for each drug that is eligible under your plan.
If your doctor prescribes you a brand name drug and there is a generic version available, your plan will only pay up to the cost of the generic product. Generic drugs are almost always less expensive than the brand name drugs but are just as effective.
Our value based pricing approach also follows BC PharmaCare’s Reference Drug Program (RDP) which selects the most cost-effective drug treatment within a therapeutic class and designates it as the “reference drug” In this case, if a doctor prescribes a drug for you and it is more expensive than the reference drug, then the plan will only reimburse you up to the price of the reference drug.
There are eight classes where reference pricing is applied. Within these classes, there are about 50 drugs (including all of their strengths and combinations that are included in the program.
The therapeutic classes of drugs are:
Even with a plan that covers 100% of eligible costs with no deductible, you as the plan member, might still be out of pocket under the Lowest Cost Alternative approach. Pharmacies are private businesses and there can be considerable variation in what they charge.
For example:
Drug plans can be difficult to understand. Learning about the breakdown of drug costs and finding out how to save on health care costs can help you get the most out of your benefit plan