Exploring provider- and practice-level drivers of cost-consciousness in breast cancer reconstruction—secondary analysis of a survey of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons

Background The role of physicians in dampening health care costs is a renewed focus of policy-makers. We examined provider- and practice-level factors affecting four domains of cost-consciousness among plastic surgeons performing breast reconstruction. Methods Secondary analysis was performed on the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Breast cancer research and treatment 2021-06, Vol.187 (2), p.569-576
Hauptverfasser: Sheckter, Clifford C., Aliu, Oluseyi, Bailey, Chad, Liu, Jun, Selber, Jesse C., Butler, Charles E., Offodile, Anaeze C.
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container_end_page 576
container_issue 2
container_start_page 569
container_title Breast cancer research and treatment
container_volume 187
creator Sheckter, Clifford C.
Aliu, Oluseyi
Bailey, Chad
Liu, Jun
Selber, Jesse C.
Butler, Charles E.
Offodile, Anaeze C.
description Background The role of physicians in dampening health care costs is a renewed focus of policy-makers. We examined provider- and practice-level factors affecting four domains of cost-consciousness among plastic surgeons performing breast reconstruction. Methods Secondary analysis was performed on the survey responses of 329 surgeons who routinely performed breast reconstruction. Using a 5-point Likert scale, we queried four domains of cost-consciousness: out-of-pocket cost awareness, cost discussions, cognizance of patients’ financial burden, and attitudes regarding cost discussions. Multivariable linear regression was performed to identify provider- and practice-level factors affecting these domains according to composite scores. Results Overall cost-consciousness scores (CS) were moderate and ranged from 2.14 to 4.30. There were no significant differences across practice settings. Male gender ( p  = 0.048), Hispanic ethnicity ( p  = 0.021), and increasing clinical experience ( p  = 0.015) were associated with higher out-of-pocket cost awareness. Increasing surgeon experience was also associated with having cost discussions ( p  = 0.039). No provider- or practice-level factors were associated with cognizance of patients’ financial burden. Salaried physicians displayed a more positive attitude toward out-of-pocket cost discussions ( p  = 0.049). On pairwise testing, the out-of-pocket cost awareness was significantly different between Hispanic surgeons and white surgeons (4.30 vs. 3.55), and between surgeons with more than 20 years’ experience and with less than 5 years’ experience (3.87 vs. 3.37). Conclusions Surgeon gender, ethnicity, and experience and practice compensation type inform various domains of cost-consciousness in breast reconstruction. Structural and behavioral interventions could possibly increase physicians’ cost-consciousness.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10549-020-06085-4
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We examined provider- and practice-level factors affecting four domains of cost-consciousness among plastic surgeons performing breast reconstruction. Methods Secondary analysis was performed on the survey responses of 329 surgeons who routinely performed breast reconstruction. Using a 5-point Likert scale, we queried four domains of cost-consciousness: out-of-pocket cost awareness, cost discussions, cognizance of patients’ financial burden, and attitudes regarding cost discussions. Multivariable linear regression was performed to identify provider- and practice-level factors affecting these domains according to composite scores. Results Overall cost-consciousness scores (CS) were moderate and ranged from 2.14 to 4.30. There were no significant differences across practice settings. Male gender ( p  = 0.048), Hispanic ethnicity ( p  = 0.021), and increasing clinical experience ( p  = 0.015) were associated with higher out-of-pocket cost awareness. Increasing surgeon experience was also associated with having cost discussions ( p  = 0.039). No provider- or practice-level factors were associated with cognizance of patients’ financial burden. Salaried physicians displayed a more positive attitude toward out-of-pocket cost discussions ( p  = 0.049). On pairwise testing, the out-of-pocket cost awareness was significantly different between Hispanic surgeons and white surgeons (4.30 vs. 3.55), and between surgeons with more than 20 years’ experience and with less than 5 years’ experience (3.87 vs. 3.37). Conclusions Surgeon gender, ethnicity, and experience and practice compensation type inform various domains of cost-consciousness in breast reconstruction. 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We examined provider- and practice-level factors affecting four domains of cost-consciousness among plastic surgeons performing breast reconstruction. Methods Secondary analysis was performed on the survey responses of 329 surgeons who routinely performed breast reconstruction. Using a 5-point Likert scale, we queried four domains of cost-consciousness: out-of-pocket cost awareness, cost discussions, cognizance of patients’ financial burden, and attitudes regarding cost discussions. Multivariable linear regression was performed to identify provider- and practice-level factors affecting these domains according to composite scores. Results Overall cost-consciousness scores (CS) were moderate and ranged from 2.14 to 4.30. There were no significant differences across practice settings. Male gender ( p  = 0.048), Hispanic ethnicity ( p  = 0.021), and increasing clinical experience ( p  = 0.015) were associated with higher out-of-pocket cost awareness. Increasing surgeon experience was also associated with having cost discussions ( p  = 0.039). No provider- or practice-level factors were associated with cognizance of patients’ financial burden. Salaried physicians displayed a more positive attitude toward out-of-pocket cost discussions ( p  = 0.049). On pairwise testing, the out-of-pocket cost awareness was significantly different between Hispanic surgeons and white surgeons (4.30 vs. 3.55), and between surgeons with more than 20 years’ experience and with less than 5 years’ experience (3.87 vs. 3.37). Conclusions Surgeon gender, ethnicity, and experience and practice compensation type inform various domains of cost-consciousness in breast reconstruction. 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We examined provider- and practice-level factors affecting four domains of cost-consciousness among plastic surgeons performing breast reconstruction. Methods Secondary analysis was performed on the survey responses of 329 surgeons who routinely performed breast reconstruction. Using a 5-point Likert scale, we queried four domains of cost-consciousness: out-of-pocket cost awareness, cost discussions, cognizance of patients’ financial burden, and attitudes regarding cost discussions. Multivariable linear regression was performed to identify provider- and practice-level factors affecting these domains according to composite scores. Results Overall cost-consciousness scores (CS) were moderate and ranged from 2.14 to 4.30. There were no significant differences across practice settings. Male gender ( p  = 0.048), Hispanic ethnicity ( p  = 0.021), and increasing clinical experience ( p  = 0.015) were associated with higher out-of-pocket cost awareness. 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source Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Automobile drivers
Breast cancer
Cancer research
Consciousness
Economic aspects
Epidemiology
Ethnicity
Gender
Health care
Mammaplasty
Medical care, Cost of
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Minority & ethnic groups
Oncology
Patients
Physicians
Surveys
title Exploring provider- and practice-level drivers of cost-consciousness in breast cancer reconstruction—secondary analysis of a survey of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons
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