Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Section of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2021 Jun 15;27(7):1068-1078. doi: 10.1093/ibd/izaa266.
Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) are associated with substantial health care needs. We estimated the national burden and patterns of financial toxicity and its association with unplanned health care utilization in adults with IBD in the United States.
Using the National Health Interview survey (2015), we identified individuals with self-reported IBD and assessed national estimates of financial toxicity across domains of financial hardship due to medical bills, cost-related medication nonadherence (CRN) and adoption of cost-reducing strategies, personal and health-related financial distress (worry about expenses), and health care affordability. We also evaluated the association of financial toxicity with emergency department (ED) utilization.
Of the estimated 3.1 million adults with IBD in the United States, 23% reported financial hardships due to medical bills, 16% of patients reported CRN, and 31% reported cost-reducing behaviors. Approximately 62% of patients reported personal and/or health-related financial distress, and 10% of patients deemed health care unaffordable. Prevalence of financial toxicity was substantial even in participants with higher education, with private insurance, and belonging to middle/high-income families, highlighting underinsurance. Inflammatory bowel disease was associated with 1.6 to 2.6 times higher odds of financial toxicity across domains compared with patients without IBD. Presence of any marker of financial toxicity was associated with higher ED utilization.
One in 4 adults with IBD experiences financial hardship due to medical bills, and 1 in 6 adults reports cost-related medication nonadherence. These financial determinates of health-especially underinsurance-have important implications in the context of value-based care.
炎症性肠病(IBD)与大量医疗保健需求相关。我们评估了美国成年人 IBD 的全国负担和财务毒性模式及其与无计划医疗保健利用的关系。
我们使用国家健康访谈调查(2015 年)识别出自我报告患有 IBD 的个体,并评估了因医疗费用导致的经济困难、与费用相关的药物不依从性(CRN)和采用降低成本策略、个人和健康相关的经济困扰(担心费用)以及医疗保健负担能力等方面的财务毒性的全国估计。我们还评估了财务毒性与急诊部(ED)利用之间的关系。
在美国估计的 310 万成年人 IBD 中,有 23%的人因医疗费用而面临经济困难,16%的患者报告存在 CRN,31%的患者报告采取了降低成本的行为。约 62%的患者报告个人和/或健康相关的经济困扰,10%的患者认为医疗保健负担不起。即使在受教育程度较高、拥有私人保险和属于中/高收入家庭的参与者中,财务毒性的患病率也相当高,突显了保险不足的问题。与没有 IBD 的患者相比,IBD 患者在所有领域发生财务毒性的可能性要高出 1.6 到 2.6 倍。任何财务毒性标志物的存在都与更高的 ED 利用率相关。
每 4 个成年人 IBD 中就有 1 个因医疗费用而面临经济困难,每 6 个成年人中就有 1 个报告与费用相关的药物不依从。这些健康的财务决定因素——尤其是保险不足——在基于价值的护理背景下具有重要意义。