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High Cancer Drug Prices in the United States: Reasons and Proposed Solutions
111
Citations
11
References
2014
Year
Cancer ManagementHealth Care FinanceUnited StatesCancer DisparityPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchCancer ResearchHealth PolicyMedicineHealth InsurancePharmacoeconomicsCost EffectivenessCancer TreatmentEconomic EvaluationCancer Drug PricesCancer EpidemiologyHealth EconomicsHealth Care CostCancer DoctorsOncology
The increase in cancer drug prices in the last 15 years has many contributing factors and is harming our patients and our health care system. It represents to many cancer experts a crossing of a moral line between reasonable profits and profiteering, in a situation involving a human catastrophe: patients who have developed cancer, and who may die because they cannot afford the treatment. With typical out-of-pocket expenses of 20% to 30%, the financial burden of cancer treatment would be $20,000 to 30,000 a year, nearly half of the average annual household income in the United States. Many patients (estimated 10% to 20%) may decide not to take the treatment or may compromise significantly on the treatment plan. This difficult situation poses three relevant questions: (1) Are cancer drug prices too high? (2) Are they hurting patients and our health care system? and (3) Can we do something about it? The answer to each is affirmative. It is also our obligation as cancer doctors to keep patients from "harm and injustice." If high prices make drugs unaffordable and inaccessible, thus causing harm, then we should voice our concerns and advocate for solutions.
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