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Patients Rising Releases New Survey Showing That Hikes in Insurance Premiums, Higher Co-Pays and Health Plan Restrictions Keep Many Cancer Patients from Getting Prescribed TreatmentsPatients Rising, in partnership with CancerConnect, released the findings from a new survey showing the extent to which insurance practices interfere with medical treatments of patients with cancer, despite rising costs of policies and higher deductibles. The national survey of patients with hard-to-treat cancers finds health plans routinely deny claims, drop drugs from the formulary after the plan-year has begun, and employ practices such as step-therapy or "fail first" to force patients to take less effective treatments despite the best advice from their physicians. At the same time, most patients (61%) report higher monthly premiums for their health coverage than a year ago, and a dramatic hike in their out-of-pocket payments. The findings of the survey were made public at a forum hosted by Patients Rising during the 2016 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting in Chicago and timed to coincide with the 2016 international convention of the Biotechnology Innovation Organization (BIO) in San Francisco. The survey is entitled Health Insurance Barriers to Quality Cancer Care: The Real Life Experiences of Patients Undergoing Treatment. It puts a human face on the struggles that leave many patients feeling overwhelmed by the steps required to get their health plan to pay for the therapeutics or the diagnostic tests they need. Half of all respondents (47%) and a greater majority (73%) of those aged 18-44 say that dealing with insurance problems is time-consuming and stressful and 61% agree that cancer patients who have trouble affording co-insurance payments will often take a different drug or no drug at all. Jonathan Wilcox, Patients Rising policy director and co-founder stated, "This comprehensive survey shows that because of many insurance practices, too often patients don't receive the type of care they pay for and deserve. The insurance industry needs to listen to tese constructive complaints and improve the overall quality of its service." The survey was commissioned by CancerConnect, an online community for cancer patients, survivors and caregivers that regularly polls patients on their struggles and concerns. This survey involved over 400 insured patients, 18 and older, who are undergoing treatment for three hard-to-treat cancers: melanoma, multiple myeloma and non-small cell lung cancer. Charles Weaver (News - Alert), MD, founder and executive editor of CancerConnect.com, a nationwide community of cancer patients, who conducted the poll added, "We see that a large majority of patients not only have negative experiences with insurance companies when it comes to the cost of and access to their treatment, but they experience unacceptable delays and unauthorized changes in their treatment when the insurance companies interfere with the doctor-patient relationship." Highlights of the poll regarding the cost of cancer treatment include:
Highlights of the poll regarding patients' concerns about access to new treatments:
Dr. Weaver concludes, ""Cancer patients and their families deserve better. They deserve to be treated with dignity and respect." ABOUT THIS POLL The CancerConnect survey was conducted by the Clarus Research Group of Washington, DC, between May 24 and 31, 2016. 418 cancer patients, all with health insurance, completed by poll online. The results were released in Chicago, concurrent with the ASCO Cancer Conference.
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