College of Medicine, Graduate School of Health Science Business Convergence, Chungbuk National University, 1, Chungdae-ro, Seowon-gu, Cheongju, Chungcheongbuk-do, 28644, Republic of Korea.
Chungbuk National University Hospital, Cheongju, Republic of Korea.
Support Care Cancer. 2018 Oct;26(10):3517-3526. doi: 10.1007/s00520-018-4201-6. Epub 2018 Apr 25.
We assessed cost communication between cancer patients, caregivers, and oncologists and identified factors associated with communication concordance.
A national, multicenter, cross-sectional survey of patient-caregiver-oncologist triads was performed, and 725 patient-caregiver pairs, recruited by 134 oncologists in 13 cancer centers, were studied. Discordance in preferences and experiences regarding cost communication between patients, caregivers, and oncologists were assessed. Hierarchical generalized linear models were used to identify predictors of concordance and to identity the possible association of concordance with patient satisfaction and degree of trust in the physician.
Although the oncologists thought that patients would be affected by the cost of care, only half of them were aware of the subjective burden experienced by their patients, and the degree of concordance for this parameter was very low (weighted kappa coefficient = 0.06). Caregivers consistently showed similar preferences to those of the patients. After controlling for covariates, the education level of patients [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) for > 12 vs. < 9 years, 2.92; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.87-4.56], actual out-of-pocket costs [aOR for ≥ 8 million vs. < 2 million Korean Won, 0.56; 95% CI, 0.34-0.89], and physician age (aOR for ≥ 55 vs. < 45 years, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.04-3.21) were significant.
The results show underestimation by oncologists regarding the subjective financial burden on a patient, and poor patient-physician concordance in cost communication. Oncologists should be more cognizant of patient OOP costs that are not indexed by objective criteria, but instead involve individual patient perceptions.
我们评估了癌症患者、护理人员和肿瘤医生之间的成本沟通情况,并确定了与沟通一致性相关的因素。
我们开展了一项全国性、多中心、横断面的患者-护理人员-肿瘤医生三人小组调查,研究了 134 名肿瘤医生在 13 个癌症中心招募的 725 对患者-护理人员对。评估了患者、护理人员和肿瘤医生之间在成本沟通方面偏好和经验的差异。使用层次广义线性模型来确定一致性的预测因素,并确定一致性与患者满意度和对医生信任程度的可能关联。
尽管肿瘤医生认为患者会受到治疗费用的影响,但只有一半的医生了解患者的主观负担,并且这一参数的一致性程度非常低(加权 Kappa 系数=0.06)。护理人员的偏好始终与患者相似。在控制了混杂因素后,患者的教育程度[>12 年 vs. <9 年的调整优势比(aOR),2.92;95%置信区间(CI),1.87-4.56]、实际自付费用[aOR 为≥800 万韩元 vs. <200 万韩元,0.56;95%CI,0.34-0.89]和医生年龄[aOR 为≥55 岁 vs. <45 岁,1.83;95%CI,1.04-3.21]是显著的。
结果表明,肿瘤医生低估了患者的主观经济负担,并且在成本沟通方面患者与医生之间的一致性较差。肿瘤医生应该更加意识到那些不以客观标准为指标、但涉及到个体患者感知的自付费用。