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Barriers to improving cost transparency in cancer care identified by Penn Medicine

Barriers to conversations on cost transparency included patients' fear of being "profiled" based on their socioeconomic status or ability to pay.

Jeff Lagasse, Editor

Being transparent about the cost of cancer treatments with patients has been increasingly recommended to help minimize financial harm and improve care, but what's preventing or derailing those conversations is less understood. New findings from Penn Medicine identified several barriers and key facilitators that may help providers foster more successful discussions with their patients.

Several themes emerged in an analysis of interviews, which were conducted between 22 cancer patients and 19 providers at Penn's Abramson Cancer Center and three of its affiliated community practices over the period of a year.

Barriers to conversations on cost transparency included patients' fear of being "profiled" based on their socioeconomic status or ability to pay. On the other hand, providers feared that cost transparency might threaten the doctor-patient relationship by exposing personal or institutional financial conflicts of interest.

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Importantly, both physicians and patients expressed an aversion to having to make tradeoffs between financial and physical health outcomes, the authors reported.

"As financial burdens shift more and more toward the patient, we do see that such tradeoffs are happening," said first author Erin Aakhus, MD, an instructor in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, in a statement. "High out-of-pocket costs can lead to non-adherence and early discontinuation of treatment. Meanwhile, few oncologists discuss these costs routinely with their patients."

In recent years, many have called for more cost transparency in an effort to control the rising costs of healthcare that are falling back on the patient. More specifically, oncologists have been encouraged to discuss patients' out-of-pocket costs, in terms of co-pays, coinsurance and deductibles, based on their insurance plan, to help them avoid financial hardships or waste and choose higher-value care.

Other barriers to cost transparency discussions, the authors found, included time constraints and difficulty in providing accurate cost estimates.

[Also: Massachusetts hospitals still struggling with price transparency, survey shows]

Patient preferences about whether to engage in such discussions varied, as well. While some wanted to discuss costs with their provider, others feared it would "distract" providers from their primary roles as health advocates.

Researchers also found that strong doctor-patient relationships and availability of support staff with financial expertise were important facilitators of cost transparency discussions.

Oncology practices will need to consider patient and provider aversion to financial-health tradeoffs, patients' sensitivity to socioeconomic "profiling," financial conflicts of interest, time constraints, accuracy of cost estimates, and variability in patient preferences, the authors wrote.

Twitter: @JELagasse