Study of physician and patient communication identifies missed opportunities to help reduce patients' out-of-pocket spending

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Abstract

Some experts contend that requiring patients to pay out of pocket for a portion of their care will bring consumer discipline to health care markets. But are physicians prepared to help patients factor out-ofpocket expenses into medical decisions? In this qualitative study of audiorecorded clinical encounters, we identified physician behaviors that stand in the way of helping patients navigate out-of-pocket spending. Some behaviors reflected a failure to fully engage with patients' financial concerns, from never acknowledging such concerns to dismissing them too quickly. Other behaviors reflected a failure to resolve uncertainty about out-of-pocket expenses or reliance on temporary solutions without making long-term plans to reduce spending. Many of these failures resulted from systemic barriers to health care spending conversations, such as a lack of price transparency. For consumer health care markets to work as intended, physicians need to be prepared to help patients navigate out-of-pocket expenses when financial concerns arise during clinical encounters.

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APA

Ubel, P. A., Zhang, C. J., Hesson, A., Kelly Davis, J., Kirby, C., Barnett, J., & Hunter, W. G. (2016). Study of physician and patient communication identifies missed opportunities to help reduce patients’ out-of-pocket spending. Health Affairs, 35(4), 654–661. https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2015.1280

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