On a per-capita basis, prescription drug use in the U.S. is generally highest in the South and Midwest, and lowest in four states with high managed care penetration — California, Massachusetts, Colorado, and New York. These per-member, per-year utilization averages are based on an analysis by Express Scripts, the pharmacy benefit manager, of its commercial population in 2000.
Express Scripts found wide regional variation not only in overall utilization, but in specific classes of medications. Among four classes, the top and bottom five states — in terms of per-member, per-year number of prescriptions filled for each class — are shown in the tables.
Cardiovascular agents | |||
---|---|---|---|
Top 5 states | Bottom 5 states | ||
State | Utilization | State | Utilization |
West Virginia | 1.63 | Colorado | 0.77 |
Kentucky | 1.47 | California | 0.81 |
Tennessee | 1.47 | Montana | 0.87 |
South Carolina | 1.47 | Idaho | 0.87 |
Mississippi | 1.44 | Vermont | 0.90 |
Antihyperlipidemic medications | |||
Top 5 states | Bottom 5 states | ||
State | Utilization | State | Utilization |
Kentucky | 0.55 | New Mexico | 0.28 |
Rhode Island | 0.55 | Colorado | 0.29 |
Maine | 0.53 | Idaho | 0.29 |
Ohio | 0.51 | Alabama | 0.32 |
West Virginia | 0.51 | Montana | 0.32 |
Antiasthmatic drugs | |||
Top 5 states | Bottom 5 states | ||
State | Utilization | State | Utilization |
Rhode Island | 0.50 | Mississippi | 0.16 |
New Hampshire | 0.37 | Arkansas | 0.17 |
Maine | 0.34 | Louisiana | 0.19 |
Michigan | 0.33 | South Carolina | 0.19 |
Ohio | 0.33 | Florida | 0.19 |
Antidepressants | |||
Top 5 states | Bottom 5 states | ||
State | Utilization | State | Utilization |
Utah | 1.11 | New Jersey | 0.39 |
Maine | 1.03 | New York | 0.44 |
Oregon | 0.86 | California | 0.47 |
Washington | 0.83 | Florida | 0.50 |
Kentucky | 0.79 | Alabama | 0.54 |