Exclusive: U.S. medical testing, cancer screenings plunge during
coronavirus outbreak - data firm analysis
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[April 28, 2020]
By Robin Respaut and Deborah J. Nelson
(Reuters) - Routine medical tests critical
for detecting and monitoring cancer and other conditions plummeted in
the United States since mid-March, as the coronavirus spread and public
officials urged residents to stay home, according to a new report by
Komodo Health.
Diagnostic panels and cancer screenings typically performed during
annual physician visits fell by as much as 68% nationally, and by even
more in coronavirus hotspots.
These tests, office visits, surgeries and other medical care tied to
them, are key sources of revenue for hospitals and healthcare systems
that had to curb lucrative elective procedures to assure room for a
crush of patients with COVID-19, the illness caused by the new
coronavirus.
Millions of patients postponed tests considered crucial for detecting
early signs of disease, monitoring its progression and improving patient
outcomes, according to Komodo, which has one of the nation's largest
medical claims data bases and provided its new findings exclusively to
Reuters.
Cervical cancer screenings were down 68%, cholesterol panels fell by 67%
and the blood sugar test to detect diabetes were off 65% nationally.
This could all prove very costly down the road.
“We're seeing a tremendous impact on preventative care, as well as on
chronic conditions with massive implications for the healthcare system,”
said Komodo Health Chief Executive Dr. Arif Nathoo. “It speaks volumes
to just how much COVID is impacting everyone's health and wellness.”
San Francisco-based Komodo reviewed billing records of 320 million
patients across the country from March 19 to April 20 and compared it to
the preceding 11 weeks and a similar period last year.
It found the sharpest decline of tests and screenings in areas hardest
hit by the epidemic, such as New York's Manhattan, where A1c blood tests
for diabetes dropped by more than 90%. In Massachusetts, cholesterol
testing fell 80.5%, while in California, screening to detect cervical
cancer before it spreads and becomes difficult to treat were off 76.3%.
"A lot of these tests are run infrequently, but they are run when a
patient visits their doctor," Nathoo said.
Data from Komodo and others have begun to shine light on the gaps in
care created by an epidemic that has infected close 1 million people in
the United States, and could have a lasting impact on the U.S.
healthcare system beyond COVID-19.
“There are millions of patients that have deferred care. And a lot of
these patients are chronically ill patients with all kinds of
complications,” said David Linetsky, head of life sciences at Phreesia,
a New York-based patient intake technology company. “There are going to
be tremendous health repercussions.”
Linetsky co-authored an analysis with researchers at Harvard University
released last week that found outpatient office visits fell nearly 60%
in mid-March and remained low through mid-April.
Dr. David Tom Cooke, head of general thoracic surgery at UC-Davis
Health, said his cancer patients are getting treatment. But he worries
new cancers will go undetected until they are more advanced and less
survivable.
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A person receives a test for diabetes during Care Harbor LA free
medical clinic in Los Angeles, California September 11, 2014.
REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni/File Photo
“We're not doing cancer screenings, such as mammography for breast
cancer, and lung cancer screening,” he said. “There is concern that
we are delaying standard of care treatment for patients with
potentially curable cancers.”
HOUSE CALL
The growing backlog has created new challenges for hospitals,
physicians and clinics. Some practices estimate a four- to six-month
delay for each month of lockdown that prevents routine visits and
screening.
Business is down 75% at Family Medicine Associates in Attleboro,
Massachusetts, a typically bustling practice with more than 10,000
patients.
Last week, the practice closed one of two offices and furloughed
half the staff. They hope to re-open in June or sooner, if they get
a Small Business Administration loan, said Dr. Jennifer Souza, one
of the eight physicians there.
The practice had initially limited appointments so no more than two
patients sat in the waiting room at a time. More recently, patients
have stayed away on their own, fearing they might contract the
virus. Physicians, too, worry about putting their sicker patients at
risk by scheduling office visits.
On Monday, Souza visited the home of a legally blind patient with
diabetes who had fallen, likely from worsening neuropathy, she said.
Normally, the patient would have taken a dial-a-ride service for an
exam and A1c test. “But his risk for complications is so high that I
would be nervous for him to get that extra exposure,” she said.
Diagnostic screenings may not be as lucrative for hospitals and
physicians as elective procedures, like knee replacements and
cataract surgeries, but they play a crucial role in detecting
problems that can lead to more expansive care, said Mallory
Caldwell, principal at Ernest & Young.
The sheer volume of routine office visits and diagnostic exams also
sustains many medical practices, especially in low-income
communities and rural areas that were already struggling before the
outbreak. Last year, 19 rural hospitals shuttered, the highest spike
of closures in a decade.
If patients continue to stay away, healthcare policy experts worry
these hospitals and clinics may not have the financial cushion to
survive.
“If those practices shut down," said Ateev Mehrotra, healthcare
policy associate professor at Harvard Medical School, "then the
access problems that already exist in those communities, and the
disparity in care, could be exacerbated.”
(Reporting by Robin Respaut in San Francisco and Deborah J. Nelson
in Maryland; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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