Uninsured Cancer patients are paying anywhere from two to 43 times 
what Medicare would pay for chemotherapy drugs, according to a new study
 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Researchers led by Stacie Dusetzina, an assistant professor in the 
Eshelman School of Pharmacy and the Gillings School of Global Public 
Health, reviewed newly available Medicare data on what physicians 
charged for chemotherapy drugs delivered intravenously in 2012.
Uninsured patients who did not negotiate the billed amounts could 
expect to pay $6,711 for an infusion of the colorectal cancer drug Oxaliplatin. However, Medicare and private health plans only pay $3,090 
and $3,616 for the same drug, respectively. Although uninsured cancer patients paid on average two times more 
than Medicare paid for expensive chemotherapy drugs, very high payment 
differences were seen for drugs that were quite inexpensive on Medicare. An example, Carboplatin was estimated at $26 for one infusion with 
Medicare, but the estimate for uninsured patients was $1,124. “Patients with Medicare and private insurance don’t pay the sticker 
price of health care,” said Dusetzina. “They pay a discounted rate. 
However, uninsured patients don’t have the bargaining power, or they may
 not try to negotiate for a better price.”
 In addition to estimating costs for infused chemotherapy drugs, the 
researchers also looked at what cancer patients were asked to pay for a 
doctor visit. Uninsured patients were billed between $129 and $391, 
depending on the complexity of the visit. Medicare paid between $65 and 
$188 and private insurance paid $78 to $246 for the same visits.
These drug pricing discrepancies could become even more important depending on the outcome of the pending Supreme Court case King vs. Burwell,
 which challenges the legitimacy of federal health-care subsidies and 
could leave as many as 8 million Americans without subsidies and 
uninsured in 2016.
This site is for information on the various Chemo treatments and Stem Cell Therapies since 1992. This journey became bitter sweet in 2014, with the passing of my beautiful and dear wife. Sherry, had fought Non - Hodgkins Lymphoma(NHL) since 1990, in and out of remissions time and time again. From T-Cell therapies(1990's) to Dual Cord Blood Transplant(2014), she was in Clinical Trials over the years. This site is for informational purpose only and is not to promote the use of certain therapies.
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