An estimated 21,472 patients in South Dakota are not receiving guideline-appropriate preventive migraine care from their primary care provider
How South Dakota compares
South Dakota's gap rate of 94.4% is consistent with the national pattern of 90.4%. Of the 36 primary care physicians in South Dakota actively treating Medicare patients with migraine, 34 have never written a CGRP prescription. This is not a South Dakota-specific failure — it is a national crisis that South Dakota is experiencing alongside 47 other states.
What this means for patients
A patient with frequent migraine who sees their primary care physician in South Dakota has a 94.4% chance that their doctor has never prescribed a CGRP-targeting therapy. This is not a reflection of physician knowledge or intent — it is the predictable consequence of prior authorization requirements that make CGRP prescribing administratively prohibitive in primary care.
About the data
Based on CMS Medicare Part D prescribing data — the only publicly available provider-level prescribing dataset in the United States. Active prescriber = 20+ triptan claims in the observation period. Medicare patients represent a subset of the total migraine population; the true gap is likely larger. Full methodology →
Getting CGRPs approved in South Dakota
Prior authorization burden is the primary structural explanation for this gap. The Headache Vault PA Engine navigates South Dakota payer requirements — covering all major commercial insurers and Medicare Advantage plans. Free for all clinicians, no account required.
Run a PA — free →South Dakota Medical Society members: this data and tool are free to share with your members. All data on this page is CC BY 4.0.
Citation
Doty A. Migraine Prescribing Gap in South Dakota. The Headache Vault; June 2026. Available at: https://headachevault.com/research/prescribing-gap/south-dakota/ Licensed CC BY 4.0. Data: CMS Medicare Part D Prescriber Public Use Files, 2022-2023.