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Sequestration ‘trickle-down’ closes in on community practices

The effects of sequestration-related cuts on oncology practices have kicked in. In early April, Sarah Kliff, a blogger at The Washington Post, reported that cancer clinics had already started turning away Medicare patients because the funding cuts would make it impossible for them to continue treating their chemotherapy patients and avoid financial ruin.1 In early May, a month after the April 1 cuts took effect, we already had 2 separate survey reports, one from the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), the other from the Community Oncology Alliance (COA), that showed that the 2% cut in Medicare reimbursement had caused oncology practices “to make signifi- cant shifts in how they do business and care for patients.”2 ASCO surveyed 500 of its members (41% in suburban settings; 41%, in urban; 16%, in rural). In all, 80% of respondents said sequestration was affecting their practices, and about 75% said they were having trouble paying for chemotherapy drugs. Half of the respondents said they could care only for patients who had other sources of income independent of Medicare, 14% had stopped seeing Medicare patients, and half said they were sending their Medicare patients to outpatient infusion centers for their chemotherapy. ASCO president Sandra Swain expressed concern that some patients’ care was being disrupted and compromised, which could be detrimental to the clinical outcomes and emotional well-being of these fragile individuals, and she warned in a statement that the society’s initial findings “may just be the tip of the iceberg.”3 The fact that a quarter of respondents reported that they were planning to close satellite clinics should also raise concerns about the impact such closures might have on research and participation in clinical trials.

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The effects of sequestration-related cuts on oncology practices have kicked in. In early April, Sarah Kliff, a blogger at The Washington Post, reported that cancer clinics had already started turning away Medicare patients because the funding cuts would make it impossible for them to continue treating their chemotherapy patients and avoid financial ruin.1 In early May, a month after the April 1 cuts took effect, we already had 2 separate survey reports, one from the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), the other from the Community Oncology Alliance (COA), that showed that the 2% cut in Medicare reimbursement had caused oncology practices “to make signifi- cant shifts in how they do business and care for patients.”2 ASCO surveyed 500 of its members (41% in suburban settings; 41%, in urban; 16%, in rural). In all, 80% of respondents said sequestration was affecting their practices, and about 75% said they were having trouble paying for chemotherapy drugs. Half of the respondents said they could care only for patients who had other sources of income independent of Medicare, 14% had stopped seeing Medicare patients, and half said they were sending their Medicare patients to outpatient infusion centers for their chemotherapy. ASCO president Sandra Swain expressed concern that some patients’ care was being disrupted and compromised, which could be detrimental to the clinical outcomes and emotional well-being of these fragile individuals, and she warned in a statement that the society’s initial findings “may just be the tip of the iceberg.”3 The fact that a quarter of respondents reported that they were planning to close satellite clinics should also raise concerns about the impact such closures might have on research and participation in clinical trials.

The effects of sequestration-related cuts on oncology practices have kicked in. In early April, Sarah Kliff, a blogger at The Washington Post, reported that cancer clinics had already started turning away Medicare patients because the funding cuts would make it impossible for them to continue treating their chemotherapy patients and avoid financial ruin.1 In early May, a month after the April 1 cuts took effect, we already had 2 separate survey reports, one from the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), the other from the Community Oncology Alliance (COA), that showed that the 2% cut in Medicare reimbursement had caused oncology practices “to make signifi- cant shifts in how they do business and care for patients.”2 ASCO surveyed 500 of its members (41% in suburban settings; 41%, in urban; 16%, in rural). In all, 80% of respondents said sequestration was affecting their practices, and about 75% said they were having trouble paying for chemotherapy drugs. Half of the respondents said they could care only for patients who had other sources of income independent of Medicare, 14% had stopped seeing Medicare patients, and half said they were sending their Medicare patients to outpatient infusion centers for their chemotherapy. ASCO president Sandra Swain expressed concern that some patients’ care was being disrupted and compromised, which could be detrimental to the clinical outcomes and emotional well-being of these fragile individuals, and she warned in a statement that the society’s initial findings “may just be the tip of the iceberg.”3 The fact that a quarter of respondents reported that they were planning to close satellite clinics should also raise concerns about the impact such closures might have on research and participation in clinical trials.

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Sequestration ‘trickle-down’ closes in on community practices
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Sequestration ‘trickle-down’ closes in on community practices
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