Study
also finds perceived social isolation affects health care utilization
Newswise, February 19,
2016—The majority of patients with locally advanced head and neck cancers
(LAHNC) rely on cost-coping strategies that alter their lifestyle in order to
manage the financial burden of their care, according to research presented at
the 2016 Multidisciplinary Head and Neck Cancer Symposium.
Researchers also
identified perceived social isolation, or a lack of social support coupled with
increased loneliness, as a risk factor for sub-optimal medication adherence and
health care utilization during treatment for LAHNC.
Treatment for locally
advanced head and neck cancers -- diseases marked by high morbidity and high
treatment costs -- is very intense, often combining surgery, radiation therapy
and chemotherapy.
Moreover, treatment
often causes social side effects, such as an increased financial toxicity or
financial burden, in addition to physical side effects.
This study examined
factors associated with these social side effects by following patients
diagnosed with head and neck cancer over six months to assess how they coped
with the cost of their cancer treatment as well as whether perceived social
isolation, or the lack of social support, was a barrier to their care.
This prospective
longitudinal study collected six monthly lifestyle surveys from 73 patients
with treatment-naive LAHNC who were diagnosed at a single, high volume
institution between May 2013 and November 2014.
The survey assessed the
use of several lifestyle-altering financial coping strategies, as well as out-of-pocket
costs, loss of productivity, compliance with their medication regimen, and
health care utilization (specifically, inpatient length of hospital stays and
number of missed appointments).
Researchers also
measured patients’ demographics, health insurance status, wealth, household
income and type of tumor. Perceived social isolation was evaluated prior to
treatment for each patient.
Most patients in the
study were male (78 percent), Caucasian (74 percent) and covered by private
health insurance (54.8 percent).
Multivariable regression
modeling was used to assess the influence of patient characteristics on the use
of cost-coping strategies and perceived social isolation.
More than two thirds (69
percent) of the LAHNC patients reported relying on one or more
lifestyle-altering cost-coping strategy while managing their cancer.
The most common strategy
was spending savings (62 percent), followed by borrowing money (42 percent),
selling possessions (25 percent) and having family members work more hours (23
percent).
Socioeconomic factors
were associated with reliance on cost-coping strategies. Patients with Medicaid
used more financial coping strategies compared to patients with private
insurance (Odds Ratio (OR), 42.3; p = 0.005).
In addition, increased
out-of-pocket costs and decreased wealth were independently associated with the
use of cost-coping strategies (p < 0.01).
“Physical side effects
are not the only ones our patients endure,” said Sunny Kung, a second-year
medical student at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine and
lead author on the study.
”Our findings indicate that the majority of
our patients have adopted or will adopt strategies to cope with the financial
side effects of their care.”
The study also examined
prevalence of perceived social isolation among LAHNC patients and its
association with socioeconomic factors and health care utilization.
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