How Should We Intervene on the Financial Toxicity of Cancer Care? One Shot, Four Perspectives

  • Zafar S
  • Newcomer L
  • McCarthy J
  • et al.
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Abstract

The median price of a month of chemotherapy has increased by an order of magnitude during the past 20 years, far exceeding inflation over the same period. Along with rising prices, increases in cost sharing have forced patients to directly shoulder a greater portion of those costs, resulting in undue financial burden and, in some cases, cost-related nonadherence to treatment. What can we do to intervene on treatment-related financial toxicity of patients? No one party can single-handedly solve the problem, and the solution must be multifaceted and creative. A productive discussion of the problem must avoid casting blame and, instead, must look inward for concrete starting points toward improvement in the affordability and value of cancer care. With these points in mind, the authors-representatives from the pharmaceutical industry, insurance providers, oncologists, and patient advocacy-have each been asked to respond with a practical answer to the provocative hypothetical question, "If you could propose one thing, and one thing only, in terms of an action or change by the constituency you represent in this discussion, what would that be?"

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APA

Zafar, S. Y., Newcomer, L. N., McCarthy, J., Fuld Nasso, S., & Saltz, L. B. (2017). How Should We Intervene on the Financial Toxicity of Cancer Care? One Shot, Four Perspectives. American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational Book, 37, 35–39. https://doi.org/10.14694/edbk_174893

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