How government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in China – a retrospective analysis of hospital clinical data

Abstract Background China started to cover novel medicines for the treatment of major cancers, such as trastuzumab for breast cancer by the government health insurance programs since 2016. Limited data have been published on the use of cancer medications and little is known about how government heal...

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Main Authors: Yifan Diao, Mengbo Lin, Kai Xu, Ji Huang, Xiongwei Wu, Mingshuang Li, Jing Sun, Hong Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-08-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-06840-3
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spelling doaj-746aead1285346d89ef961b54218bc4a2021-08-22T11:11:09ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632021-08-012111910.1186/s12913-021-06840-3How government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in China – a retrospective analysis of hospital clinical dataYifan Diao0Mengbo Lin1Kai Xu2Ji Huang3Xiongwei Wu4Mingshuang Li5Jing Sun6Hong Li7School of Health Policy and Management, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical CollegeFujian Provincial HospitalFujian Provincial HospitalFujian Provincial HospitalFujian Provincial HospitalSchool of Health Policy and Management, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical CollegeSchool of Health Policy and Management, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical CollegeFujian Provincial HospitalAbstract Background China started to cover novel medicines for the treatment of major cancers, such as trastuzumab for breast cancer by the government health insurance programs since 2016. Limited data have been published on the use of cancer medications and little is known about how government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in the real world. This study aimed to generate evidence to inform the health security authorities to optimize the government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines as a more inclusive and equal policy, through which each of the needed patient can get access to the novel anti-cancer medicines regardless of the ability to pay. Methods The study targeted one of the government health insurance newly covered novel medicines for breast cancer and the breast cancer patients. The analyses were based on the data collected from one tertiary public hospital in Fujian province of China. We conducted interrupted time series analysis with a segmented regression model and multivariate analyses with a binary logistic regression model to analyze the impact of the government health insurance coverage on medicines utilization and the determinants of patient’s medication choice. Results The average proportion of patients who initiated medication with novel medicines increased from 37.4% before the government health insurance coverage to 69.2% afterwards. Such an increase was observed in all patient sub-groups. The monthly proportion of patients who initiated medication with novel medicines increased sharply by 18.3 % (95 %CI,10.4-34.0 %, p = 0.01) in September 2017, the afterwards trend continuously increased (95 %CI,1.03–3.60, p = 0.02). The critical determinants of patient's medication choice were mostly connected with the patient's health insurance benefits packages. Conclusions The government health insurance coverage of novel anti-breast-cancer medicines benefited the patients generally. The utilization of novel medicines such as trastuzumab continuously increased. The insurance coverage benefited well the patients in the high-risk age groups. However, rural patients, patients enrolled in the “resident program”, and patients from low-income residential areas and non-local patients benefited less from this policy. Improving the benefits package of the low-income patients and the “resident program” beneficiary would be of considerable significance for a more inclusive and equal health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-06840-3Novel anti-cancer medicinesAffordabilityBenefits packageInterrupted time series studyBinary logistic regression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yifan Diao
Mengbo Lin
Kai Xu
Ji Huang
Xiongwei Wu
Mingshuang Li
Jing Sun
Hong Li
spellingShingle Yifan Diao
Mengbo Lin
Kai Xu
Ji Huang
Xiongwei Wu
Mingshuang Li
Jing Sun
Hong Li
How government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in China – a retrospective analysis of hospital clinical data
BMC Health Services Research
Novel anti-cancer medicines
Affordability
Benefits package
Interrupted time series study
Binary logistic regression
author_facet Yifan Diao
Mengbo Lin
Kai Xu
Ji Huang
Xiongwei Wu
Mingshuang Li
Jing Sun
Hong Li
author_sort Yifan Diao
title How government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in China – a retrospective analysis of hospital clinical data
title_short How government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in China – a retrospective analysis of hospital clinical data
title_full How government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in China – a retrospective analysis of hospital clinical data
title_fullStr How government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in China – a retrospective analysis of hospital clinical data
title_full_unstemmed How government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in China – a retrospective analysis of hospital clinical data
title_sort how government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in china – a retrospective analysis of hospital clinical data
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Background China started to cover novel medicines for the treatment of major cancers, such as trastuzumab for breast cancer by the government health insurance programs since 2016. Limited data have been published on the use of cancer medications and little is known about how government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines benefited patients in the real world. This study aimed to generate evidence to inform the health security authorities to optimize the government health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines as a more inclusive and equal policy, through which each of the needed patient can get access to the novel anti-cancer medicines regardless of the ability to pay. Methods The study targeted one of the government health insurance newly covered novel medicines for breast cancer and the breast cancer patients. The analyses were based on the data collected from one tertiary public hospital in Fujian province of China. We conducted interrupted time series analysis with a segmented regression model and multivariate analyses with a binary logistic regression model to analyze the impact of the government health insurance coverage on medicines utilization and the determinants of patient’s medication choice. Results The average proportion of patients who initiated medication with novel medicines increased from 37.4% before the government health insurance coverage to 69.2% afterwards. Such an increase was observed in all patient sub-groups. The monthly proportion of patients who initiated medication with novel medicines increased sharply by 18.3 % (95 %CI,10.4-34.0 %, p = 0.01) in September 2017, the afterwards trend continuously increased (95 %CI,1.03–3.60, p = 0.02). The critical determinants of patient's medication choice were mostly connected with the patient's health insurance benefits packages. Conclusions The government health insurance coverage of novel anti-breast-cancer medicines benefited the patients generally. The utilization of novel medicines such as trastuzumab continuously increased. The insurance coverage benefited well the patients in the high-risk age groups. However, rural patients, patients enrolled in the “resident program”, and patients from low-income residential areas and non-local patients benefited less from this policy. Improving the benefits package of the low-income patients and the “resident program” beneficiary would be of considerable significance for a more inclusive and equal health insurance coverage of novel anti-cancer medicines.
topic Novel anti-cancer medicines
Affordability
Benefits package
Interrupted time series study
Binary logistic regression
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-021-06840-3
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