(Ever wonder why there are more cancer hospital commercials on TV than 
there are for detergents. Answer: it a huge money-making enterprise.)

NY Times, Nov. 24 2014
Private Oncologists Being Forced Out, Leaving Patients to Face Higher Bills
By GINA KOLATA

When Dr. Jeffery Ward, a cancer specialist, and his partners sold their 
private practice to the Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, the hospital 
built them a new office suite 50 yards from the old place. The practice 
was bigger, but Dr. Ward saw the same patients and provided chemotherapy 
just like before. On the surface, nothing had changed but the setting.

But there was one big difference. Treatments suddenly cost more, with 
higher co-payments for patients and higher bills for insurers. Because 
of quirks in the payment system, patients and their insurers pay 
hospitals and their doctors about twice what they pay independent 
oncologists for administering cancer treatments.

There also was a hidden difference — the money made from the drugs 
themselves. Cancer patients and their insurers buy chemotherapy drugs 
from their medical providers. Swedish Medical Center, like many other 
others, participates in a federal program that lets it purchase these 
drugs for about half what private practice doctors pay, greatly 
increasing profits.

Oncologists like Dr. Ward say the reason they are being forced to sell 
or close their practices is because insurers have severely reduced 
payments to them and because the drugs they buy and sell to patients are 
now so expensive. Payments had gotten so low, Dr. Ward said, that they 
only way he and his partners could have stayed independent was to work 
for free. When he sold his practice, Dr. Ward said, “The hospital was a 
refuge, not the culprit.”

When a doctor is affiliated with a hospital, though, patients end up 
paying, out of pocket, an average $134 more per dose for the most 
commonly used cancer drugs, according to a report by IMS Health, a 
health care information company. And, the report notes, many cancer 
patients receive multiple drugs.

“Say there was a Costco that had very good things at reasonable prices,” 
said Dr. Barry Brooks, a Dallas oncologist in private practice. “Then a 
Neiman Marcus comes in and changes the sign on the door and starts 
billing twice as much for the same things.” That, he said, is what is 
happening in oncology.

The situation is part of the unusual world of cancer medicine, where 
payment systems are unique and drive not just the price of care but what 
drugs patients may get and where they are treated. It raises questions 
about whether independent doctors, squeezed by finances, might be swayed 
to use drugs that give them greater profits or treat poorer patients 
differently than those who are better insured.

But one thing is clear: The private practice oncologist is becoming a 
vanishing breed, driven away by the changing economics of cancer medicine.

Practices are making the move across the nation. Reporting on the 
nation’s 1,447 independent oncology practices, the Community Oncology 
Alliance, an advocacy group for independent practices, said that since 
2008, 544 were purchased by or entered contractual relationships with 
hospitals, another 313 closed and 395 reported they were in tough 
financial straits. In western Washington, just one independent oncology 
group is left.

Christian Downs, executive director of the Association of Community 
Cancer Centers, said that although there are no good data yet, he 
expected the Affordable Care Act was accelerating the trend. Many people 
bought inadequate insurance for the expensive cancer care they require. 
Community doctors have to buy the drugs ahead of time, placing a burden 
on them when patients cannot pay. The act also requires documentation of 
efficiencies in medical care which can be expensive for doctors in 
private practice to provide. And it encourages the consolidation of 
medical practices.

The American Hospital Association cites advantages for patients being 
treated by hospital doctors. “The hassle factor is reduced,” said Erik 
Rasmussen, the association’s vice president of legislative affairs. 
Patients can have scans, like CT and M.R.I., use a pharmacy and get lab 
tests all in one place instead of going from facility to facility, he said.

And, he added, there is a reason hospitals get higher fees for their 
services — it compensates them for staying open 24 hours and caring for 
uninsured and underinsured patients.

For doctors in private practice, providing chemotherapy to uninsured and 
Medicaid patients is a money loser. As a result, many, including Dr. 
Ward before he sold his practice, end up sending those patients to 
nearby hospitals for chemotherapy while keeping them as patients for 
office visits.

“We hate doing it, I can’t tell you how much we hate doing it,” said Dr. 
Brooks, the Texas oncologist. “But I tell them, ‘It will cost me $200 to 
give you this medication in my office, so I am going to ask you to go to 
the hospital as an outpatient for infusions.’ ”

Dr. Peter Eisenberg, in private practice in Marin County in Northern 
California, said: “The disgrace is that we have to treat people 
differently depending on how much money they’ve got. That we do 
diminishes me.”

Hospitals may be less personal and less efficient, said Dr. Richard 
Schilsky, chief medical officer at the American Society of Clinical 
Oncology. Many private practice oncology offices, he said, “Run on time, 
they are efficient, you get in, you get out, as opposed to academic 
medical centers where they may be an hour and a half behind.”

Dr. Ward and others in private practice said they tried for years to 
make a go of it but were finally defeated by what he described as “a 
series of cuts in oncology reimbursement under the guise of reform to 
which private practice is most vulnerable.”

Lower reimbursements have two effects. One is on overhead. Unlike other 
doctors, oncologists stock their own drugs, maintaining a sort of 
mini-pharmacy. If a patient gets too sick to receive a drug or dies, the 
doctor takes the loss. That used to be acceptable because insurers paid 
doctors at least twice the wholesale price of drugs. Now doctors are 
reimbursed for the average cost of the drug plus 4.3 percent, there are 
more and more drugs to stock, and drugs cost more.

“The overhead is enormous,” Dr. Schilsky said. “This is one of the 
reasons why many oncologists are becoming hospital-based.”

The second — and bigger — effect is less profit from selling drugs to 
patients. For years, chemotherapy drugs provided a comfortable income. 
Those days are gone, doctors say.

The finances are very different in hospitals, with their higher 
reimbursement rates for administering drugs, discounts for buying large 
quantities, and a special federal program that about 30 percent of 
hospitals qualify for. The program, to compensate research hospitals and 
hospitals serving poor people, lets hospitals buy chemotherapy drugs for 
all outpatients at about a 50 percent discount.

In addition, Dr. Schilsky notes, cancer patients at hospitals use other 
services, like radiation therapy, imaging and surgery.

“A cancer patient is going to generate a lot of revenue for a hospital,” 
Dr. Schilsky said.

Health care economists say they have little data on how the costs and 
profits from selling chemotherapy drugs are affecting patient care. 
Doctors are constantly reminded, though, of how much they can make if 
they buy more of a company’s drug.

Celgene, for example, in a recent email about its drug Abraxane, told 
one doctor who had bought 50 vials that he could get a rebate of $647.51 
by buying 68 vials. If he bought 175 vials he’d get $1,831.93

This hidden profit possibility troubles Dr. Peter B. Bach, director of 
the Center for Health Policy and Outcomes at Memorial Sloan Kettering 
Cancer Center.

“When you walk into a doctor’s office you don’t know that in most cancer 
scenarios there are a range of therapeutic choices,” Dr. Bach said. 
“Unless the doctor presents options, you assume there aren’t any.”

While individual oncologists deny choosing treatments that provide them 
with the greatest profit, Dr. Kanti Rai, a cancer specialist at North 
Shore-Long Island Jewish Cancer Center, said it would be foolish to 
believe financial considerations never influence doctors’ choices of drugs.

“Sometimes hidden in such choices — and many times not so hidden — are 
considerations of what also might be financially more profitable,” he said.
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