Medical Care Costs Hard for Young Cancer Survivors
Medical Care Costs Hard for Young Cancer Survivors
Sept. 24, 2012 -- Young cancer survivors often skip needed follow-up care because of cost, a new study shows.
The study, which is published in the journal Cancer, found that cancer survivors between the ages of 20 and 39 were 67% more likely than young adults without a previous cancer diagnosis to forgo medical care because of cost. That was true even if they had health insurance.
Children and young adults who survive cancer often need years of follow-up care because they’re at risk of their cancer coming back. They may also need to be monitored for side effects from cancer treatments like radiation and chemotherapy.
“The level of medical care that’s required is much greater than for your typical 20- or 30-year-old who may go to the doctor once a year and have a few lab tests done,” says Anna Franklin, MD, a pediatrician with MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. Franklin directs the center’s adolescent and young adult program, but she was not involved in the research.
She says the research describes the kind of struggles her patients face. Many of them have health insurance, but their plans require high deductibles or co-pays that effectively put the frequent medical care they need out of reach.
“Just because you have insurance doesn’t mean you have out-of-pocket costs,” Franklin says, adding that those costs can quickly add up if patients need multiple tests and doctor’s visits.
“Even if the co-pay is $20, I remember when I was a college student, $20 was a lot of money. You may have to spend that on rent. You may have to spend that on Ramen noodles to get you to the end of the week,” she says.
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For the study, researchers used data from a large government survey of health behaviors. The study included 979 adults between the ages of 20 and 39 who had survived cancer by more than five years. They were compared to more than 67,000 adults of the same age who hadn't been diagnosed with cancer. All study participants responded to several questions about health care access and use.