Table 1.
Summary of recommendations for addressing medical financial hardship
Audience | Recommendation |
---|---|
Cancer care providers | Conduct routine screening with validated instruments at all visits |
Document referrals for financial hardship and social needs and whether and how they are addressed | |
Cancer centers | Require comprehensive screening throughout cancer treatment and connecting patients to services |
Enhance partnerships with community safety net organizations | |
Advocate for health policies that benefit patients and their families | |
Record reasons eligible patients decline clinical trial participation and drop out prematurely | |
Collect information about financial hardship in clinical trials and consider inclusion in adverse event reporting | |
Health policy | Increase options for comprehensive health insurance coverage |
Implement caps on patient out-of-pocket expenses | |
Include financial hardship screening and connection with services as quality measures | |
Require assessment of patient financial hardship and social needs as part of evaluation of value-based payment models | |
Research and surveillance | Develop validated financial hardship instruments for use at the point of care and integration in electronic health records |
Collect financial information prior to diagnosis, potentially through data linkages | |
Evaluate interrelationship of financial hardship and social needs | |
Assess associations of medical financial hardship and quality of cancer care, including diagnostic and treatment delays and completion of all recommended treatment and survivorship care | |
Evaluate short- and long-term health effects of medical financial hardship, including health-related quality of life, cancer recurrence, and survival following diagnosis | |
Evaluate the economic, social, and health effects of patient medical financial hardship on family and informal caregivers | |
Conduct rigorous evaluation of value-based payment models to inform care delivery and health policy |