By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Health Works CollectiveHealth Works CollectiveHealth Works Collective
  • Health
    • Mental Health
    Health
    Healthcare organizations are operating on slimmer profit margins than ever. One report in August showed that they are even lower than the beginning of the…
    Show More
    Top News
    improving patient experience
    6 Ways to Improve Patient Satisfaction Within Hospitals
    December 1, 2021
    degree for healthcare job
    What Are The Health Benefits Of Having A Degree?
    March 9, 2022
    custom software development is changing healthcare
    Digital Customer Journey Mapping and its Importance for Healthcare
    July 21, 2022
    Latest News
    The Wide-Ranging Benefits of Magnesium Supplements
    June 11, 2025
    The Best Home Remedies for Migraines
    June 5, 2025
    The Hidden Impact Of Stress On Your Body’s Alignment And Balance
    May 22, 2025
    Chewing Matters More Than You Think: Why Proper Chewing Supports Better Health
    May 22, 2025
  • Policy and Law
    • Global Healthcare
    • Medical Ethics
    Policy and Law
    Get the latest updates about Insurance policies and Laws in the Healthcare industry for different geographical locations.
    Show More
    Top News
    Obesity Devices Gain From Drug Woes
    August 23, 2017
    A Good Place to Find Information on Clinical Trials
    September 9, 2017
    How to Measure Happiness
    April 20, 2011
    Latest News
    Streamlining Healthcare Operations: How Our Consultants Drive Efficiency and Overall Improvement
    June 11, 2025
    Building Smarter Care Teams: Aligning Roles, Structure, and Clinical Expertise
    May 18, 2025
    The Critical Role of Healthcare in Personal Injury Recovery: A Comprehensive Guide for Victims
    May 14, 2025
    The Backbone of Successful Trials: Clinical Data Management
    April 28, 2025
  • Medical Innovations
  • News
  • Wellness
  • Tech
Search
© 2023 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: How to Curb the Cost of Cancer Care
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Health Works CollectiveHealth Works Collective
Font ResizerAa
Search
Follow US
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
© 2023 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Health Works Collective > Policy & Law > Health Reform > How to Curb the Cost of Cancer Care
Health ReformPolicy & Law

How to Curb the Cost of Cancer Care

gooznews
Last updated: October 15, 2012 4:14 am
gooznews
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE

Top health care experts meeting at the Institute of Medicine last week delivered a stern message to the nation’s 15,000 oncologists and their patients: Either learn to deliver care at lower costs or watch the government and insurance companies impose limits.

“If you think this is a tough reimbursement environment, just wait a year or two,” said Mark McClellan, who headed the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services during the George W. Bush administration. “Leadership is needed to show how to get to better care on a more sustainable fiscal path.”

Top health care experts meeting at the Institute of Medicine last week delivered a stern message to the nation’s 15,000 oncologists and their patients: Either learn to deliver care at lower costs or watch the government and insurance companies impose limits.

“If you think this is a tough reimbursement environment, just wait a year or two,” said Mark McClellan, who headed the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services during the George W. Bush administration. “Leadership is needed to show how to get to better care on a more sustainable fiscal path.”

More Read

Thermalin Diabetes Follows the “Coulter Process” And Addresses Significant Needs in the Insulin Market
3 Ways to Keep Your Mental Health in Check
Healthcare Patient Payment Liability Just Ain’t What it Used to Be
Alzheimer’s Rate to Triple by 2050
Jumping into Health Care Social Media

The sentiment was echoed by Ezekiel Emanuel, an oncologist and top adviser to the Obama administration during the battle to enact the Affordable Care Act, which imposed a first round of payment restrictions on Medicare providers. “We can never get too much cost control,” he said. “There’s $700 to $800 billion of waste in the health care system. We have a long way to go.”

Oncology has become a focal point in the health care cost control debate because its claims are rising faster than other specialties. New drugs coming on the market, many of which only extend life for a month or two, now cost $100,000 a year or more. They have become a major driver of rising cancer care costs, especially when used in terminally-ill patients nearing the end of life.

A top official from UnitedHealthcare, the nation’s largest insurer, told the forum reimbursement for cancer care now accounts for 12 percent of all payments for patients not on Medicare and Medicaid. That’s up from 10 percent five years ago. Cancer care has now pulled even with cardiovascular care as the insurer’s biggest expense.

The company’s fastest growing expense within cancer care is drugs, which continue to rise at about 10 percent a year. While drug costs are about 10 percent of all health care costs, according to CMS, they account for about a quarter of all cancer care costs.

“There is no market. It is sellers dictating the price when a new drug comes out,” said Lee Newcomer, chief oncologist at UnitedHealthcare. “I don’t have a substitution effect I can enforce because just about every state in the nation requires that I pay for the latest drugs.”

With 80 to 85 percent of the 1.64 million Americans who get diagnosed with cancer every year receiving their treatment at community-based oncology practices, the IOM meeting focused on potential changes in those settings that might lower costs. Most practices pay the bills by selling chemotherapy treatments and charging Medicare and insurers a mark-up on the wholesale cost of the drugs – 6 percent in the case of Medicare and 20 to 40 percent for private insurers, according to one community oncologist at the meeting.

UnitedHealthcare has an experiment underway that would get rid of the cost-plus model because it provides a powerful incentive for oncologists to use not only more drugs, but the most expensive drugs. It has signed contracts with five community practices where the insurer now pays for drugs directly while the oncologists get paid extra for adhering to agreed-upon treatment strategies and drug regimens that clinical practice guidelines say will deliver the best outcomes. The approach not only eliminates the incentive to prescribe more drugs, it eliminates variations in care that provide no benefit or, in some cases, cause harm.

“We need standard approaches,” Newcomer said. “Where we can shift to the less expensive therapies that have no difference in outcomes, we should do that.”

Peter Bach, an oncologist at Memorial-Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York and former CMS official, offered an alternative model. He suggested Medicare and insurers could shift to a system where oncologists are paid for episodes of care – a bundled payment – rather than fees for the various services. Besides eliminating the incentive to order duplicative or unnecessary tests, imaging and office visits, it encourages physicians to use the most cost-effective chemotherapy regimens that deliver comparable results.

Bach cited the example of the initial chemotherapy regimen for patients diagnosed with lung cancer, which will account for 226,000 or 14 percent of all new cancer cases this year. Lung cancer, which is caused by smoking in about 80 percent of cases, is still America’s number one cancer killer.

There are seven approved chemotherapy regimens for the first round of treatment, which range in price from less than $1,500 to over $7,000. The guidelines produced by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, which brings together experts from across the country to evaluate best practices, say there is no material difference in outcomes between the various regimens, although they do have different side effect profiles.

By having the bundled price for the episode include the average price of the different possible regimens, oncologists will be incentivized to use the lower-priced drugs. “Episode-based payment is all about shifting risk,” Bach said. “It puts the provider – the oncologist – at risk for performance. This is very different from fee-for-service, where the only risk is if someone doesn’t pay you.”

In his keynote address, McClellan lauded the growth of accountable care organizations (ACOs) and bundled payment pilot projects set up under the ACA. He expressed hope that they would be rapidly expanded after the election.

“We don’t have five years to see if these work,” he said. When asked what would happen if Obamacare is repealed because Republicans win the White House and both houses of Congress, he said “I don’t see that going away. There has been past Republican support for ACOs and bundled payments.”


TAGGED:healthcare costs
Share This Article
Facebook Copy Link Print
Share

Stay Connected

1.5kFollowersLike
4.5kFollowersFollow
2.8kFollowersPin
136kSubscribersSubscribe

Latest News

Streamlining Healthcare Operations: How Our Consultants Drive Efficiency and Overall Improvement
Global Healthcare Policy & Law
June 11, 2025
magnesium supplements
The Wide-Ranging Benefits of Magnesium Supplements
Health
June 11, 2025
Preparing for the Next Pandemic: How Technology is Changing the Game
Technology
June 6, 2025
migraine home remedies and-devices
The Best Home Remedies for Migraines
Health Mental Health
June 5, 2025

You Might also Like

Congressman James Lankford
BusinessHealth ReformPolicy & Law

Lankford Introduces Legislation Giving Congressional Authority to Interstate Health Care Compact

March 13, 2014

Mass. Proposes Plan to Cut Acute Healthcare Costs

May 8, 2012

HIPAA Marketing Rule Guidance: Better Than Nothing

April 28, 2014
fixing healthcare
BusinessHealth ReformPublic Health

Are Epiphanies the Key to Fixing Healthcare?

March 2, 2015
Subscribe
Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
Follow US
© 2008-2025 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?