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东南亚地区与可手术癌症相关的经济灾难、治疗中断及死亡:ACTION研究结果

Financial catastrophe, treatment discontinuation and death associated with surgically operable cancer in South-East Asia: Results from the ACTION Study.

作者信息

Jan Stephen, Kimman Merel, Peters Sanne A E, Woodward Mark

出版信息

Surgery. 2015 Jun;157(6):971-82. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2015.02.012. Epub 2015 Apr 28.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

This study assessed the extent to which individuals with surgically operable cancer in Southeast Asia experience financially catastrophic out-of-pocket costs, discontinuation of treatment, or death.

METHODS

The ACTION study is a prospective, 8-country, cohort study of adult patients recruited consecutively with an initial diagnosis of cancer from public and private hospitals. Participants were interviewed at baseline and 3 months. In this paper, we identified 4,584 participants in whom surgery was indicated in initial treatment plans and assessed the following competing outcomes: death, financial catastrophe (out-of-pocket costs of >30% of annual household income), treatment discontinuation, and hospitalization without financial catastrophe incurred. We then analyzed a range of predictors using a multinomial regression model.

RESULTS

Of the participants, 72% were female and 44% had health insurance at baseline. At 3 months, 31% of participants incurred financial catastrophe, 8% had died, 23% had discontinued treatment, and 38% were hospitalized but avoided financial catastrophe. Health insurance status was found to be associated with lower odds of treatment discontinuation (odds ratio [OR], 0.60; 95% CI, 0.47-0.77) relative to hospitalization without financial catastrophe. Women had greater odds of financial catastrophe than men (OR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.05-1.74), whereas lower socioeconomic status (range of indicators) was generally found to be associated with higher odds of death, treatment discontinuation, and financial catastrophe.

CONCLUSION

Priority should be given to measures such as programs to extend social health insurance to offset the out-of-pocket costs associated with surgery for cancer faced in particular by women, the uninsured, and individuals of low socioeconomic status in Southeast Asia.

摘要

背景

本研究评估了东南亚地区患有可手术治疗癌症的个体在多大程度上经历了灾难性的自付费用、治疗中断或死亡。

方法

ACTION研究是一项前瞻性、涉及8个国家的队列研究,连续招募来自公立和私立医院的成年癌症患者。在基线和3个月时对参与者进行访谈。在本文中,我们确定了4584名在初始治疗计划中需要进行手术的参与者,并评估了以下相互竞争的结果:死亡、经济灾难(自付费用超过家庭年收入的30%)、治疗中断以及无经济灾难发生的住院情况。然后我们使用多项回归模型分析了一系列预测因素。

结果

参与者中,72%为女性,44%在基线时拥有医疗保险。在3个月时,31%的参与者遭遇了经济灾难,8%的参与者死亡,23%的参与者中断了治疗,38%的参与者住院但避免了经济灾难。相对于无经济灾难的住院情况,医疗保险状况与治疗中断几率较低相关(比值比[OR],0.60;95%置信区间,0.47 - 0.77)。女性遭遇经济灾难的几率高于男性(OR,1.35;95%置信区间,1.05 - 1.74),而较低的社会经济地位(一系列指标)通常与死亡、治疗中断和经济灾难的较高几率相关。

结论

应优先采取措施,如扩大社会医疗保险计划,以抵消东南亚地区女性、未参保者和社会经济地位较低个体在癌症手术方面面临的自付费用。

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