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abstract
BACKGROUND
The
authors examine trends in spending on cancer from 1998 through 2012,
including cancer care costs, prevalence, and cases by payer, and discuss
the results within the context of a prior analysis and recent health
policy and programmatic changes.
METHODS
Condition-specific
distribution of expenditures from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey,
supplemented with results from the National Nursing Home Survey and
other data sources, was used as the basis for allocating the Personal
Health Care components of the National Health Expenditure Accounts among
conditions.
RESULTS
Cancer
care expenditures grew at an annualized rate of 2.9% from 1998 to 2012.
The share of expenditures for hospital-based care declined to a low of
48% during 2007 through 2009. Professional and clinical services' shares
declined substantially between 2007 to 2009 and 2010 to 2012 when the
hospital share increased. Treated prevalence decreased for all payers
between the first and last study periods with the exception of private
payers (11.2% increase). Out-of-pocket expenditures declined to 4.7%,
whereas Medicare's share increased slightly. Medication expenditures
increased, notably within retail and mail order settings.
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