Reuters Health Information: Lack of insurance bars some from hepatitis C treatment
Lack of insurance bars some from hepatitis C treatment
Last Updated: 2015-03-24
By Kathryn Doyle
NEW YORK(Reuters Health) - Survey data from 2001 to 2010
show that lack of insurance kept some people with hepatitis C
virus from getting treatment.
Recently, more effective and well-tolerated drugs have been
developed to treat hepatitis C, removing many of the
discouraging side effects of older drugs. The infection is
curable and transmission can be prevented, researchers write in
an article published online March 10 in the American Journal of
Gastroenterology.
But for the more than three million people in the U.S. who
have chronic liver disease from hepatitis C, there are still two
important barriers to getting treatment, said lead author Dr.
Ivo Ditah from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.
First, many people with the disease do not know they have
it, because they feel no symptoms. Once they've been screened
and tested positive, those without health insurance or with poor
health insurance likely cannot afford the $250,000 to $350,000
price tag for medications and facility fees, Ditah said.
For the new study, he and his coauthors used National Health
and Nutrition Examination Survey data from 2001 to 2010.
Of 38,025 people sampled, 502 tested positive for hepatitis
C and 205 were available six months later for follow-up testing.
The rest, who tended to be less educated, injecting drugs, or
not have health insurance, could not be reached.
Half of those 205 patients said they were not aware of their
infection until the surveys were done, and 166 pursued further
testing or evaluation, but only 18 received therapy. Lack of
health insurance coverage was the only predicting factor for who
did not receive treatment.
"I think the message remains very strong that a lack of
health insurance is going to be a major stumbling block," Ditah
told Reuters Health by phone. "We see a lot of denials from
insurance companies not to cover these medications. It's a huge
problem."
As newer versions of the best treatments are developed,
those in use now will gradually become less expensive, and
insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act has expanded
since 2010, Ditah said.
As more people get health insurance, the proportion of
people with the infection who cannot be reached will continue to
go down, he said.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends
that all people of the "baby boomer" generation, born between
1945 and 1965, be screened for hepatitis C.
"Those recommendations should be followed. If they are found
to have the infection then a good chunk will get treatment,"
unless they don't have good health insurance, Ditah said.
"It is important to keep in mind that this study was not
designed to evaluate provider decision following a positive test
result but rather on the action of an asymptomatic individual
who screens positive for HCV," the researchers wrote.
The authors reported no external funding or disclosures.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1BDtym6
Am J Gastroenterol 2015
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