“These findings are particularly relevant now, when we are
considering how to best help the communities in territories that
have been ravaged by hurricanes, and how to rebuild the healthcare
infrastructure,” Dr. Cary Gross of Yale School of Medicine in New
Haven, Connecticut told Reuters Health in an email.
“We need to make it even better than it was - because even before
the hurricanes, the quality of care in the territories was not
equitable. We need to do better,” said Gross, who is the senior
author of the study.
Home to almost five million people, the U.S. territories include
American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands,
Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
While they do not share the same status as states, they are under
the jurisdiction of the U.S. government.
Gross and colleagues mined data collected by the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services between 2008 and 2014 on women age 66
and older who were diagnosed with breast cancer and received
surgical treatment.
Overall, roughly 570 study subjects were residents of the U.S.
territories and 259,000 lived in the continental U.S., according to
the report in Health Affairs.
The study looked at whether women underwent needle biopsy (as
opposed to only surgical biopsy), how much time passed between the
initial breast cancer diagnosis and treatment, and whether radiation
therapy was prescribed in addition to breast-conserving surgery.
The study found that breast cancer patients in the territories were
24 percent less likely to receive needle biopsy and 34 percent less
likely to receive radiation treatment, compared to patients in the
continental U.S.
They were also significantly less likely to receive timely care: 45
percent less likely to receive surgical treatment within three
months and 82 percent less likely to receive timely radiation
therapy.
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“The implication for these women is that they are at higher risk of
recurrence due to delayed surgeries, delayed radiation, and in some
cases no radiation even when indicated,” Dr. Ben Smith told Reuters
Health in an email.
“Paradoxically, they are also over-treated in the sense that they
are more likely to undergo open surgical biopsy as opposed to
minimally invasive needle biopsy,” added Smith, an Associate
Professor of Radiation Oncology and Health Services Research at The
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston who was not
involved in the study.
The study has some limitations. For example, researchers did not
have information on women’s cancer stage. Also, the small number of
breast cancer cases in the territories didn’t allow for comparisons
of care within and between the territories themselves.
Still, the authors believe, the “results likely underestimated the
disparities between the territories and the continental U.S. in
breast cancer care.”
They point out that Medicare payments to doctors are lower in the
territories than in the states, and caps on federal spending further
deplete financial resources. Previous studies have revealed
disparities in care for other medical conditions in the U.S.
territories.
“We still have a long way to go to ensure equitable breast cancer
care for women who live in U.S. territories,” said Smith.
“Our findings that breast cancer care in the territories may be
lower quality than in the rest of the U.S. is really a call to
action,” said Gross in an email. “One can only hope that our policy
makers are listening.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2Fk2vuF Health Affairs, online March 8, 2018.
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