Division of Hematology and Oncology, Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA.
Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
J Cancer Surviv. 2024 Apr;18(2):385-397. doi: 10.1007/s11764-022-01201-3. Epub 2022 Mar 22.
Innovative treatments have improved cancer survival but also increased financial hardship for patients. While demographic factors associated with financial hardship among cancer survivors are known in the USA, the role of geography is less clear.
We evaluated prevalence of forgoing care due to cost within 12 months by US Census region (Northeast, North Central/Midwest [NCMW], South, West) by demographic factors (age, sex, race/ethnicity) among 217,981 cancer survivors aged 18 to 82 years from the 2015-2019 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System survey. We summarized region- and group-specific prevalence of forgoing physician visits due to cost and used multilevel logistic regression models to compare regions.
The prevalence of forgoing physician visits due to cost was highest in the South (aged < 65 years: 19-38%; aged ≥ 65: 4-21%; adjusted odds ratios [OR], NCMW versus South, OR: 0.63 [0.56-0.71]; Northeast versus South, OR: 0.63 [0.55-0.73]; West versus South, OR: 0.73 [0.64-0.84]). Across the USA, including regions with broad Medicaid expansion, younger, female, and persons of color most often reported cost-related forgoing physician visits.
Forgoing physician visits due to cost among cancer survivors is regionally clustered, raising concerns for concentrated poor long-term cancer outcomes. Underlying factors likely include variation in regional population compositions and contextual factors, such as Medicaid expansion and social policies. Disproportionate cost burden among survivors of color in all regions highlight systemic barriers, underscoring the need to improve access to the entire spectrum of care for cancer survivors, and especially for those most vulnerable.
创新疗法提高了癌症患者的生存率,但也增加了患者的经济负担。虽然在美国,人们已经了解了与癌症幸存者经济困难相关的人口统计学因素,但地理因素的作用尚不明确。
我们通过美国人口普查区域(东北部、中北部/中西部[NCMW]、南部、西部),评估了 2015-2019 年行为风险因素监测系统调查中 217981 名年龄在 18 至 82 岁的癌症幸存者在 12 个月内因费用而放弃治疗的情况,并按人口统计学因素(年龄、性别、种族/民族)进行了分类。我们总结了因费用而放弃看医生的特定区域和群体的流行率,并使用多水平逻辑回归模型进行了区域间比较。
因费用而放弃看医生的比例在南部最高(年龄<65 岁:19-38%;年龄≥65 岁:4-21%;调整后的优势比[NCMW 与南部相比,OR:0.63[0.56-0.71];东北部与南部相比,OR:0.63[0.55-0.73];西部与南部相比,OR:0.73[0.64-0.84])。在美国各地,包括扩大医疗补助计划的地区,年轻、女性和有色人种的人最常报告因费用而放弃看医生。
癌症幸存者因费用而放弃看医生的情况在区域上呈聚集性,这令人担忧,因为这可能会导致癌症长期预后不佳。潜在因素可能包括区域人口构成和环境因素的差异,如医疗补助计划的扩大和社会政策。所有地区的有色人种幸存者的不成比例的费用负担突出了系统性障碍,这突显了需要改善癌症幸存者获得全面医疗服务的机会,特别是对那些最脆弱的人群。