Mayo Clinic Webinar
Did anyone else tune in to this today? I was interested in the points being made about clinical trials; MYTH: insurance doesn't pay for them FACT: insurance doesn't pay, but there is no cost to you, the patient. One person's comment on this said that while the drugs are not a cost to the patient in the trial, administering the drugs and associated co-pays are still the patient's responsibility. Has anyone been involved in a clinical trial, and was it a cost to the patient?
Comments
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Thanks Veranos for yourVeranos said:I was on the Olaparib
I was on the Olaparib clinical trial for 2 years; the drug was free, but the insurance had to cover the rest.
Thanks Veranos for your reply. That more or less puts it in line with what my onc. said, that the clinical trials weren't "free".
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Pandagypsy
I don't know if it makes any difference, but I am in Canada.
I was in ARIEL2 trial sponsored by Clovis Oncology. Absolutely everything related to the trial (biopsy, drug, blood tests, CT scans, doctor's visits) was paid by the trial sponsor and free to me. I was also reimbursed for travel / parking up to $25 per visit.
All other medical treatments unrelated to drug trial are paid by insurance and also free to me.
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Thanks AlexandraAlexandra said:Pandagypsy
I don't know if it makes any difference, but I am in Canada.
I was in ARIEL2 trial sponsored by Clovis Oncology. Absolutely everything related to the trial (biopsy, drug, blood tests, CT scans, doctor's visits) was paid by the trial sponsor and free to me. I was also reimbursed for travel / parking up to $25 per visit.
All other medical treatments unrelated to drug trial are paid by insurance and also free to me.
So, it is just the same old thing............ask ask ask, and get info BEFORE. I guess you can't just generalize on this, as they seemed to do on the Webinar.
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