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November 10, 2009

Insurance Companies and the Case for the Post-mortem Patient

As Raju mentioned in the previous entry, one goal of personalized medicine is to help minimize our country’s skyrocketing healthcare costs. Although this will be accomplished, in part, by using genetic information to improve a physician's ability to deliver targeted treatments to patients, another key component to this financial equation will be the education of insurance companies on how best to use personalized genetic medicine.

To highlight this point, take the case of a family who tragically lost a father from sudden cardiac death due to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Since HCM is one of the most commonly inherited cardiovascular diseases, the father’s close relatives, including his young son and daughter, are considered at risk for having inherited the disease. It’s important for the family to understand exactly what mechanisms contributed to the father’s death because this can help guide future healthcare decisions for his little boy and girl.

Although pricey at roughly $3000, tests for most of the genes known to cause HCM exist and insurance companies have demonstrated they will pay to have their patients tested. The standard procedure is to test the proband - or known affected family member - first, then if a genetic mutation is identified, all remaining family members can be tested for the known mutation at a fraction of the cost. In this scenario, the cost to test our father and his two children would be about $3500.

The problem is that the father in our scenario is dead and therefore no longer a patient of his insurance company. What happens now? Well, surprisingly, the insurance company pays a total of $6000 to have both the boy and girl tested for HCM. Let’s say the boy, but not the girl, is found to be positive for a mutation. Without knowing if the father carried this mutation and passed it on to his son, it can be challenging to interpret the significance of the mutation, and even more difficult to predict how this will affect the little boy’s health.

This is a simplified, yet real example of how insurance companies, if not properly educated, can contribute to the increasing cost of healthcare. To help solve this problem, physicians, geneticists, genetic counselors, and the insurance companies need to get together to discuss the most appropriate ways to obtain clinically relevant genetic information. Although this will be an ever evolving and ongoing conversation, patients, and the healthcare industry as a whole will most certainly benefit from these educational collaborations.


Posted by Elizabeth Duffy on November 10, 2009 at 10:47 AM in Healthcare Reform | Permalink | Comments (0)


October 9, 2009

Healthcare Reform
When President Obama took office he was faced with a financial crisis of unprecedented proportions. The President has identified that Healthcare reform is an essential component of our fiscal well being. Healthcare reform has emerged as a critical initiative of the new Presidency. Much of the healthcare reform debate is focused on how to provide access to a large population of uninsured Americans and how to pay to for the costs associated with such an increase. One of the ideas about containing healthcare costs is to provide only those treatments that are known to be effective for each patient. Although the phrase personalized medicine is not frequently used in the healthcare debate, I believe that implementation of personalized medicine could provide medical care that results in better outcomes for patients and at a lower cost. This is the premise of personalized medicine. I have always felt that making personalized medicine a reality requires bringing together all of the stakeholders and have them engage in intense discussions about the status of personalized medicine and the pathways for bringing personalized medicine to healthcare. This year we are celebrating the fifth anniversary of an annual meeting held on the campus of Harvard Medical School in Boston to accomplish this goal. I would like to encourage all who are interested in bringing better healthcare to the populations around the world to join us at this year’s exciting meeting.
Posted by Raju Kucherlapati on October 9, 2009 at 2:36 PM in Healthcare Reform | Permalink | Comments (0)







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