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" Some 45 million people are about to lose a key tax break in health care. Starting in January, they'll have to get what amounts to a prescription from a doctor in order to get reimbursed for over-the-counter medications such as cold and flu remedies or allergy medicines.
Robert Zirkelbach of America's Health Plans, an industry group, says, "The changes are going to add an unnecessary cost to the system and make it more difficult for patients to obtain medication they currently rely on."
Those millions of Americans are getting notices that, beginning with the new year, pre-tax money they set aside for flexible spending or health savings accounts can no longer be used for over-the-counter drugs. That is, unless a doctor writes what amounts to a prescription.
Chris Krese of the Association of Chain Drug Stores says, "We are talking about 15 thousand over-the-counter products that are now subject to this new policy."
Items that fall under the new law include Tylenol, remedies for stomach ailments, cold and cough medicines, allergy medications and many, many others.The drugstore association is asking the federal government to delay the rules for at least two years "in order to carry this out in a way that minimizes consumer confusion."
One of the complications of this policy is that the only way people can get reimbursed for over-the-counter drugs will be to make an appointment with their doctor and get a sort of prescription for the drugs in question in order to qualify for flexible spending money. "
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