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Updated: May 14, 2026

How to Create and Use Binocular Rivalry
14:34

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Published on: November 10, 2010

New guise for an old feud?

Neil Versel

    Biotechnology Healthcare
    |February 12, 2013
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Physicians may avoid stocking biotech drugs, prompting health plans to explore specialty pharmacy for cost control. However, shifting drug distribution from physicians poses risks for health plans.

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    Area of Science:

    • Health Economics
    • Pharmaceutical Distribution
    • Managed Care

    Background:

    • Physicians' reluctance to stock high-cost biotech drugs presents challenges.
    • Health plans aim to manage expenses and distribution of injectable medications.
    • Specialty pharmacy emerges as a potential solution for managing these drugs.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To explore the implications of shifting biotech drug control from physicians to specialty pharmacies.
    • To assess the risks and benefits for health plans in this distribution model change.

    Main Methods:

    • Analysis of current physician and health plan practices regarding biotech drug management.
    • Review of historical payer-provider conflicts in drug distribution.
    • Evaluation of specialty pharmacy models for injectable medications.

    Main Results:

    • Physician unwillingness to manage biotech drug inventory is a key driver for change.
    • Health plans face potential risks when removing drugs from physician control.
    • Past conflicts highlight the complexities of altering established distribution channels.

    Conclusions:

    • Specialty pharmacy offers a potential solution for health plan cost and distribution control of biotech drugs.
    • Transitioning drug management requires careful consideration of risks and historical precedents.
    • The shift may reignite payer-provider tensions if not managed strategically.