Public health researcher Lisa Lines of the consulting firm Boston Health Economics in Waltham , Mass. , and her colleagues analyzed expenditures made by 806 breast cancer patients from 1996 to 2005. Out-of-pocket costs included insurance premiums, payments to meet deductibles, co-pays and any other payments made to meet medical or drug costs associated with treatment.
“Breast cancer is actually not the most expensive cancer for out-of-pocket expenditures,” Lines says. This and other data suggest that breast cancer costs patients more than colon or prostate cancer, but less than lung cancer, she says.
But breast cancer has a large proportion of people with a “high burden,” she says. The researchers classified patients as having a high burden when their out-of-pocket costs for coping with the cancer exceeded 10 percent of the family’s income. Roughly 70 percent of low-income breast cancer patients fell into the high-burden category in this analysis, compared with about 15 percent of middle-income and less than 5 percent of high-income breast cancer patients — apparently the result of better insurance, she says.
Source: Science News By Nathan Seppa
This is a rather unsurprising result. For any fixed price item, low income people pay higher precentage of their income than high income people. The insured's portion of medical costs are either a fixed amount or a percentage of the cost, not a percentage of the insured's income, so low income people obviously pay a higher proportion of income on medical costs. They also tend to spend a higher proportion on food and housing.
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