Abstract
267 Background: Complications of therapy, such as infection, pain, or dehydration, may cause financial stress for childhood cancer patients due to unexpected hospitalizations. Treatment for childhood cancer is typically provided at tertiary health care centers, requiring rural patients to travel long distances for care. We evaluated the perceived financial burden of unanticipated hospitalizations, insurance, and rurality on childhood cancer patients and their families. Methods: A single-site, cross-sectional survey of primary caretakers of childhood cancer patients was performed from July 2010-July 2012. Eligible patients were treated at a pediatric cancer hospital, diagnosed age ≤21 years and were ≤5 years from diagnosis (N=310). Financial burden was rated on a visual analog scale of 0-100. Multivariable linear regression models were used to calculate coefficients and 95% Confidence Intervals (CI) of financial burden by number of unexpected hospitalizations (0, 1-4, ≥5) and time since diagnosis. Results: The average age at diagnosis was 7.0 (SD 5.6) years. The most common diagnosis was leukemia (47.4%). The mean number of unexpected hospitalizations was 4.2 (SD 7.3). Patients did not differ on number of unexpected hospitalizations by current age, gender, race/ethnicity, or household income. In multivariable analyses, patients 1-5 years past diagnosis with ≥5 unexpected hospitalizations reported financial burden was 22.6 (95% CI 6.2-39.1, p=0.007) points higher than those with no hospitalization and 13.7 (95% CI 2.8-23.6 p=0.007) points higher than those with 1-4 hospitalizations. Patients <1 year from diagnosis did not differ. While type of insurance (public vs. private) did not impact burden, rural patients reported 15.0 (95% CI 6.8-23.2, p<0.001) points higher financial burden than urban patients. Conclusions: A high number of unexpected hospitalizations and rural residence were associated with greater financial burden for families of childhood cancer patients. Efforts to reduce unexpected admissions by managing side effects in outpatient visits, utilizing home health nurses and collaborating with local primary care physicians for remote patients could help ease the financial burden.
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