Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Medical Technology Assessment, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht, Netherlands.
Lancet Glob Health. 2022 Mar;10(3):e416-e428. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(21)00595-7.
Complementary medicine, which refers to therapies that are not part of conventional medicine, comprising both evidence-based and non-evidence-based interventions, is increasingly used following a diagnosis of cancer. We aimed to investigate out-of-pocket spending patterns on complementary medicine and its association with adverse financial outcomes following cancer in middle-income countries in southeast Asia.
In this prospective cohort study, data on newly diagnosed patients with cancer were derived from the ASEAN Costs in Oncology (ACTION) cohort study, a prospective longitudinal study in 47 centres located in eight countries in southeast Asia. The ACTION study measured household expenditures on complementary medicine in the immediate year after cancer diagnosis. Participants were given cost diaries at baseline to record illness-related payments that were directly incurred and not reimbursed by insurance over the 12-month period after study recruitment. We assessed incidence of financial catastrophe (out-of-pocket cancer-related costs ≥30% of annual household income), medical impoverishment (reduction in annual household income to below poverty line following subtraction of out-of-pocket cancer-related costs), and economic hardship (inability to make necessary household payments) at 1 year.
Between March, 2012, and September, 2013, 9513 participants were recruited into the ACTION cohort study, of whom 4754 (50·0%) participants were included in this analysis. Out-of-pocket expenditures on complementary medicine were reported by 1233 households. These payments constituted 8·6% of the annual total out-of-pocket health costs in lower-middle-income countries and 42·9% in upper-middle-income countries. Expenditures on complementary medicine significantly increased risks of financial catastrophe (adjusted odds ratio 1·52 [95% CI 1·23-1·88]) and medical impoverishment (1·75 [1·36-2·24]) at 12 months in upper-middle-income countries only. However, the risks were significantly higher for economically disadvantaged households, irrespective of country income group.
Integration of evidence-supported complementary therapies into mainstream cancer care, along with interventions to address use of non-evidence-based complementary medicine, might help alleviate any associated adverse financial impacts.
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补充医学是指不属于常规医学的疗法,包括基于证据和非基于证据的干预措施,在癌症诊断后越来越多地被使用。我们旨在调查中低收入国家癌症患者对补充医学的自费支出模式及其与癌症后不良财务结果的关系。
在这项前瞻性队列研究中,癌症新诊断患者的数据来自东盟肿瘤学成本(ACTION)队列研究,这是一项在东南亚八个国家的 47 个中心进行的前瞻性纵向研究。ACTION 研究测量了癌症诊断后一年内家庭对补充医学的支出。参与者在基线时获得了成本日记,以记录在研究招募后 12 个月内直接发生且未通过保险报销的与疾病相关的付款。我们评估了 1 年内发生财务灾难(自费癌症相关费用≥年收入的 30%)、医疗贫困(扣除自费癌症相关费用后家庭年收入降至贫困线以下)和经济困难(无法支付必要的家庭费用)的发生率。
2012 年 3 月至 2013 年 9 月期间,ACTION 队列研究共招募了 9513 名参与者,其中 4754 名(50.0%)参与者纳入了本分析。有 1233 户家庭报告了补充医学的自费支出。这些支出占中低收入国家年自费总卫生费用的 8.6%,占中上收入国家的 42.9%。仅在上中等收入国家,补充医学的支出显著增加了 12 个月时发生财务灾难(调整后的优势比 1.52[95%CI 1.23-1.88])和医疗贫困(1.75[1.36-2.24])的风险。然而,无论国家收入组如何,经济弱势家庭的风险显著更高。
将证据支持的补充疗法整合到主流癌症护理中,并采取干预措施解决非基于证据的补充医学的使用,可能有助于减轻任何相关的不良财务影响。
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