Posts Tagged ‘chemotherapy’

Why Health Insurance Reform? “We’re in This Together”

Monday, January 10th, 2011

We’re in this together, and the cost to taxpayers of treating anyone who seeks emergency care, with or without insurance, is far greater than the cost of requiring coverage for everyone,” writes David Lazarus, a business columnist for the Los Angeles Times.  As proof of the foolishness of opposing healthcare reform, Lazarus cites the case of a California woman who underwent several rounds of chemotherapy after being diagnosed with ovarian cancer.  The woman, who had been a Disney executive, is currently unemployed and is being financially squeezed in the same way as other people who carry individual insurance policies.

Shortly after her diagnosis, the woman’s insurer increased her monthly premiums by $91 because she had just celebrated her 55th birthday.  In October, they rose an additional $83 because of “the growing cost of healthcare services.”  The premium goes up an additional $44 in January because of “the new healthcare reform law,” according to the insurer.

According to Lazarus, “There rate hikes represent a 55 percent increase in premiums over just a few months – and not one of them is attributable to her cancer.  As of January, she’ll be paying $613 a month for healthcare coverage and that is with a $5,000 deductible.  In other words, the woman will be paying more than $7,000 a year for insurance and will still be responsible for the first $5,000 in annual costs.”  As the woman says, “If I don’t get work, I don’t know how I’ll afford that.  But I’m now uninsurable for individual coverage.  I can’t switch to a different policy.”

Unless the courts overturn President Obama’s healthcare reform law, the woman will be able to shop for what potentially could be affordable coverage through the insurance exchanges where companies will not be able to turn down patients because of their medical histories.  Lazarus notes that “Without the mandate, many healthcare experts say, premiums probably would skyrocket because most people would simply wait until they got sick before buying coverage.  Health insurers, in turn, would probably stop offering individual policies because the marketplace would be rigged against them.  If you believe that healthcare is a right and not a privilege, and that the mark of a decent and civilized society is how it looks after those in need, then it shouldn’t make any difference who’s knocking at a doctor’s or an insurer’s door.  Healthcare should be there for all of us when we need it.”

Healthcare Reform Promotes Breast Cancer Awareness Among Younger Women

Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

New healthcare law provides grants to help breast cancer patients aged 15 to 44. One little-discussed provision in the healthcare reform law is designed to increase awareness of breast cancer risk in young women aged 15 to 44.   Under the law, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will create educational campaigns to focus on breast cancer risk in young women and to promote prevention and early detection  Additionally, the law provides grants to groups that help young women with breast cancer, and directs the National Institutes of Health to develop new screening tests aimed at enhancing early detection.  The law provides $9 million for these efforts on a yearly basis between 2010 and 2014.

Just 10 percent of the approximately 250,000 women who are diagnosed with breast cancer annually are aged 45 or younger, according to the American Cancer Society.  Breast cancer tends to be more aggressive in younger women, with an 83 percent five-year survival rate, compared with 90 percent for women older than 45.  The lower survival rate for younger breast cancer patients is partly due to deferred diagnoses and a lack of screening because of the low incidence.  Mammograms of younger women’s breasts can be hard to read because the tissue is often too dense to be evaluated effectively by X-ray.

The advocacy group Young Survival Coalition encourages women to act quickly if they notice a change in their breasts.  “Be familiar with the look, feel and shape of your breasts, so that if something develops you’re aware of it,” said Stacy Lewis, the group’s vice president of programming.  “If you see a change, go see a doctor, and if you’re told that it’s probably nothing, go to another provider.”

The healthcare reform law’s most significant provisions related to breast cancer in younger women may be those that encourage research.  Because screening women before age 40 isn’t always practical, identifying young women who are at risk is vital, said Dr. Therese Bevers, medical director of the cancer prevention center at the MD Anderson Cancer Center at the University of Texas in Houston.  “We’ve got to have a way of picking out the right young women,” she said. “Otherwise we’ll miss cases.”

Healthcare: Saving Lives or Prolonging Suffering?

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

There is a cacophony of voices in the media talking about healthcare reform, but it’s more heat than light.  That why Atul Gawande’s most recent article in The New Yorker is so important. Boston-based Brigham and Women’s Hospital general and endocrine surgeon Gawande examines how the trend to prolonging life is one of the reasons behind soaring healthcare costs.Is healthcare saving lives or prolonging suffering?  Everyone needs to read this.

According to Dr. Gawande in Letting Go, “Twenty-five percent of all Medicare spending is for the five percent of patients who are in the final year of life, and most of that money goes for care in their last couple of months which is of little apparent benefit.  Medical spending for a breast-cancer survivor, for example, averaged an estimated $54,000 in 2003, the vast majority of it for the initial diagnostic testing, surgery, and, where necessary, radiation and chemotherapy.  For a patient with a fatal version of the disease, though, the cost curve is U-shaped, rising again toward the end – to an average of $63,000 during the last six months of life with incurable breast cancer.

The big question Gawande poses is thus:  What are we getting in return?  “Patients who were put on a mechanical ventilator,” Dr. Gawande continues, “given electrical defibrillation or chest compressions, or admitted, near death, to intensive care, had a substantially worse quality of life in their last week than those who received no such interventions.  And, six months after their death, their caregivers were three times as likely to suffer major depression.”

Dr. Gawande notes that in one study, “Researchers followed 4,493 Medicare patients with either terminal cancer or congestive heart failure.  Surprisingly, they found no difference in survival time between hospice and non-hospice patients with breast cancer, prostate cancer, and colon cancer.  Curiously, hospice care seemed to extend survival for some patients; those with pancreatic cancer gained an average of three weeks, those with lung cancer gained six weeks, and those with congestive heart failure gained three months.  The lesson seems almost Zen:  you live longer only when you stop trying to live longer.”

In one case Dr. Gawande describes, “Aetna decided to let a group of policy-holders with a life expectancy of less than one year receive hospice services without forgoing other treatments.  A patient like Sara Monopoli (who was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer at the age of 34) could continue to try chemotherapy and radiation, and go to the hospital when she wished – but also have a hospice team at home focusing on what she needed for the best possible life now and for that morning when she might wake up unable to breathe.  A two-year study of this ‘concurrent care’ program found that enrolled patients were more likely to use hospice:  the figure leaped from 26 percent to 70 percent.  That was no surprise, since they weren’t forced to give up anything.  The surprising result was that they did give up things.  They visited the emergency room almost half as often as the control patients did.  Their use of hospitals and I.C.U.s dropped by more than two-thirds.  Overall costs fell by almost a quarter.”