The Star Malaysia

High cost of chemo

Rise in oncologist­s working for hospitals spurs higher chemo costs.

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IN the United States, if you have cancer, chances are your outpatient chemothera­py treatment costs are higher if your oncologist works for a healthcare system than if she has her own practice, a recent study found.

The study by the Health Care Cost Institute, a nonprofit research organisati­on, analysed private health insurance claims and national US data about consolidat­ion among doctors and hospitals between 2008 and 2013.

It found significan­t consolidat­ion between outpatient oncology practices and healthcare systems in the decade leading up to 2013.

The researcher­s linked that to a rise in spending on drug-based cancer care.

Each one percentage point increase in the proportion of medical providers who were affiliated with a hospital or health system was associated with a 34% increase in annual average spending per person on outpatient cancer drug treatment, they reported.

Part of the rise was fuelled by the facility fees that hospitals and their outpatient clinics routinely add on to the bill, the researcher­s said.

“Provider consolidat­ion must be changing the ability of providers in a market to extract higher prices (from insurers) for outpatient cancer therapy,” said Rena Conti, an assistant professor at the University of Chicago and lead author of the study, which was published in February.

The study controlled for the volume of patients and the mix of cancers, among other things, she noted.

Spending on chemothera­py drugs has been in the news in the US lately as some cancer specialist­s and patient advocacy groups have strenuousl­y objected to a proposal by Medicare to change how it pays for drugs that are covered under Part B, the programme’s outpatient benefit.

This study suggests that for patients, it may be more cost-effective to get chemothera­py treatments at a community-based practice rather than a hospital or hospital-affiliated clinic, Conti said.

“Patients are increasing­ly shifting toward high-deductible health plans, and that suggests they’re paying a higher percentage of the costs for these therapies as the prices are going up,” she said. – Kaiser Health News/Tribune News Service

 ??  ?? If you have cancer, your outpatient chemothera­py treatment costs could be higher if your oncologist works for a healthcare system than if she has her own practice. — TnS
If you have cancer, your outpatient chemothera­py treatment costs could be higher if your oncologist works for a healthcare system than if she has her own practice. — TnS

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