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Medical expenses of urban Chinese patients with stomach cancer during 2002–2011: a hospital-based multicenter retrospective study

Authors :
Xiao-Jie Sun
Ju-Fang Shi
Lan-Wei Guo
Hui-Yao Huang
Neng-Liang Yao
Ji-Yong Gong
Ya-Wen Sun
Guo-Xiang Liu
A-Yan Mao
Xian-Zhen Liao
Ya-Na Bai
Jian-Song Ren
Xin-Yu Zhu
Jin-Yi Zhou
Ling Mai
Bing-Bing Song
Yu-Qin Liu
Lin Zhu
Ling-Bin Du
Qi Zhou
Xiao-Jing Xing
Pei-An Lou
Xiao-Hua Sun
Xiao Qi
Yuanzheng Wang
Rong Cao
Ying Ren
Li Lan
Kai Zhang
Jie He
Jia-Lin Wang
Min Dai
The listed authors are on behalf of the Health Economic Evaluation Working Group, Cancer Screening Program in Urban China (CanSPUC)
Source :
BMC Cancer, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BMC, 2018.

Abstract

Abstract Background In China, stomach cancer is the third most common cancer and the third leading cause of cancer death. Few studies have examined Chinese stomach cancer patients’ medical expenses and their associated trends. The Cancer Screening Program in Urban China (CanSPUC) is a Major Public Health Project funded by the central government. Through this project, we have extracted patients’ medical expenses from hospital billing data to examine the costs of the first course treatments (which refers to 2 months before and 10 months after the date of cancer diagnosis) in Chinese patients with stomach cancer and the associated trends. Methods The expense data of 14,692 urban Chinese patients with stomach cancer were collected from 40 hospitals in 13 provinces. We estimated the inflation-adjusted medical expenses per patient during 2002–2011. We described the time trends of medical expenses at the country-level, and those trends by subgroup, and analyzed the compositions of medical expenses. We constructed the Generalized Linear Mixed (GLM) regression model with Poisson distribution to examine the factors that were associated with medical expenses per patient. Results The average medical expenses of the first course treatments were about 43,249 CNY (6851 USD) in 2011, more than twice of that in 2002. The expenses increased by an average annual rate of 7.4%. Longer stay during hospitalization and an increased number of episodes of care are the two main contributors to the expense increase. The upward trend of medical expenses was observed in almost all patient subgroups. Drug expenses accounted for over half of the medical expenses. Conclusions The average medical expenses of the first course (2 months before and 10 months after the date of cancer diagnosis) treatments per stomach cancer patient in urban China in 2011 were doubled during the previous 10 years, and about twice as high as the per capita disposable income of urban households in the same year. Such high expenses indicate that it makes economic sense to invest in cancer prevention and control in China.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712407
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2525fae6aff14816a12869e46147262a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-018-4357-y