Health care costs of depression in patients diagnosed with cancer

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Abstract

Objective: Depression is common among patients diagnosed with cancer. Patients with cancer and depression use more health care services compared with nondepressed cancer patients. The current study seeks to estimate the added cost of depression in cancer patients in the first year after cancer diagnosis. Methods: Health care charges were obtained for 2051 depressed and 11 182 nondepressed patients with an International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, diagnosis of cancer in the 2014 calendar year from the University of California San Diego Healthcare System. The annual health care charges for cancer patients with and without depression were analyzed using generalized linear models with a log-link function and gamma distribution, covarying for age, sex, race/ethnicity, comorbid diseases, and presence of metastatic disease. Total cost data were broken down into several categories including ambulatory care, emergency department visits, and hospital visits. Results: Depressed cancer patients had total annual health care charges that were 113% higher than nondepressed cancer patients (B = 0.76; P

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Mausbach, B. T., Yeung, P., Bos, T., & Irwin, S. A. (2018). Health care costs of depression in patients diagnosed with cancer. Psycho-Oncology, 27(7), 1735–1741. https://doi.org/10.1002/pon.4716

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