By Brian L. Grant MD
The New York Times article “In Cancer Care, Cost Matters,” is written by oncologists who are attempting to engage in rational discourse about the cost-benefit of chemotherapy drugs. They note:
“Physician guideline-setting organizations likewise focus on whether or not a treatment is effective, and rarely factor in cost in their determinations. Ignoring the cost of care, though, is no longer tenable. Soaring spending has presented the medical community with a new obligation. When choosing treatments for a patient, we have to consider the financial strains they may cause alongside the benefits they might deliver.”
In the case of Medicare beneficiaries, they do share in the cost of medications, but generally insured individuals are frightfully blind to the cost of their care. Thus it falls upon payers and physicians to make rational decisions on behalf of patients, and the cost should be part of the equation. The cost may be relative to doing nothing, or as stated in this article, to an alternative treatment.
To suggest that price should not be part of the decision process in health care is naïve. A life is priceless, but the cost of maintaining life in a world of finite resources must include a realistic assessment of the impact of the intervention and the price associated with it. To do otherwise diverts these resources from other uses, that might include more impactful treatments for individuals and society.
And if and when companies devising such treatments understand that standards and judgment are being imposed, they may modify and adjust the costs of their products to gain more acceptance and access to the market. Read More…