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. 2023 Sep;14(7):101561.
doi: 10.1016/j.jgo.2023.101561. Epub 2023 Jun 29.

Associations between healthcare costs and care experiences among older adults with and without cancer

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Associations between healthcare costs and care experiences among older adults with and without cancer

Benjamin T Allaire et al. J Geriatr Oncol. 2023 Sep.

Abstract

Introduction: Care coordination and patient-provider communication are important for older adults with cancer, as they likely have additional, non-cancer chronic conditions requiring consultation across multiple providers. Suboptimal care coordination and patient-provider communication can lead to costly and preventable adverse outcomes. This study examines Medicare expenditures associated with patient-reported care coordination and patient-provider communication among older adults with and without cancer.

Materials and methods: We explore SEER-CAHPS® (Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results-Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) linked data for differences in health care expenditures by care coordination and patient-provider communication experiences for beneficiaries with and without cancer. The cancer cohort included beneficiaries with ten prevalent cancer types diagnosed 2011-2019 at least six months before completing a CAHPS survey. Medicare expenditures were abstracted from Medicare claims data. Care coordination and patient-provider communication composite scores (range 0-100, higher scores indicate better experiences) were patient-reported in the CAHPS® survey. We estimated expenditure differences per one-point change in composite scores for patients with and without cancer.

Results: Our analysis included 16,778 matched beneficiaries with and without a previously diagnosed cancer (N = 33,556). Higher care coordination and patient-provider communication scores were inversely associated with Medicare expenditures among beneficiaries with and without cancer in the six months prior to survey response, ranging from -$83 (standard error [SE] = $7) to -$90 (SE = $6) per month. Six months post-survey, expenditures estimates ranging -$88 (SE = $6) to -$106 (SE = $8) were found.

Discussion: We found that lower Medicare expenditures were associated with higher care coordination and patient-provider communication scores. As the number of survivors living longer both with and beyond their cancer grows, addressing their multifaceted care and improving outcomes will be critical.

Keywords: Care coordination; Health care costs; Physician communication; cancer.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Competing Interest The authors report no conflicts of interest with this manuscript. The views expressed here are those of the authors and do not represent any official position of the National Cancer Institute or the National Institutes of Health.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.. Study Timeline
Caption: This timeline represents how the analytic data files were constructed. For each individual in the dataset, their diagnosis of cancer occurred first, followed by a minimum of six months before their survey date. We also examined expenditures six months after the survey.

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