over 20K for one chemo treatment
Comments
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Not as high......
Each of my chemo infusions, Taxotere/Cytoxan, were around $16,000. If you look at the itemized statement,which EVERYONE should request, the tubing alone for the taxotere, as it is so toxic, was $3,600.00. That's JUST TUBING! All together my chemo and radiation, 33 treatments were close to $200,000. I am so lucky, I have fantastic insurance so very little out of pocket and since my bc and treatment was all last year, I was wondering about a NEW deductable for this year.....I don't have to pay it, as this is considered an ongoing disease....so everything after my second chemo was covered 100% and still so.....again, I am so lucky in that respect.0 -
Mine Wasn't That High
I am on C/T and it runs about $14K per treatment (but the insurance payout is only about half of that which they accept as full reimbursement). When you tack on the Neulasta, it is another $6600 (and they get half of that). No doubt this is very expensive treatment and I am also very grateful for having good insurance. Before this event, when we were paying for "little" events like my husband's broken ankle, I thought our coverage was poor - I defnitely have a different perspective now.
Chris0 -
the high price
Mine was 18,500. Taxol/herceptin. Monthly herceptin, 9,000. My onc told me from the begining with surgery and all the treatments plus tests it would be in the ballpark of half a millon. The high price for recovery! Sure hope it works. lol I have great insurance. My costs so far is 4,500+ odd monies for co-pays for the Drs visits etc
I wonder sometimes how people make it. I work in surgery even w the surgeon that did my surgery. He did surgery on a homeless man. Unfortunely, he has colon cancer and has NO one. My doc has found treatments and monies to cover costs, but can't find a place where he can stay after treatments and a caregiver. Sad. We are living in a 5th wheel or I would take him in. We live in a small town in southern NM that has no facility for the homeless.
Any ideas?0 -
CHEMO $$$
HI
Mine was $10,350 a treatment which was over $60,000 for 6 treatments. Thank goodness
I had good insurance that paid 100%.
Arkansasgirl0 -
Cost of ChemoMAJW said:Not as high......
Each of my chemo infusions, Taxotere/Cytoxan, were around $16,000. If you look at the itemized statement,which EVERYONE should request, the tubing alone for the taxotere, as it is so toxic, was $3,600.00. That's JUST TUBING! All together my chemo and radiation, 33 treatments were close to $200,000. I am so lucky, I have fantastic insurance so very little out of pocket and since my bc and treatment was all last year, I was wondering about a NEW deductable for this year.....I don't have to pay it, as this is considered an ongoing disease....so everything after my second chemo was covered 100% and still so.....again, I am so lucky in that respect.
Hi I had a question. you said that you were wondering about a NEW deductable for this year.....But you don't have to pay it, as this is considered an ongoing disease....
I was wondering about that. I'll have to contact my insurance and see if that is true for me too. I am paying $982.00 a month for cobra insurance, which was Blue X Blue Shield. But my X employer changed insurances the first of the year. Which started a new ded of $1000.
Thanks for the info!
Take care0 -
Cost of Chemoarkansasgirl said:CHEMO $$$
HI
Mine was $10,350 a treatment which was over $60,000 for 6 treatments. Thank goodness
I had good insurance that paid 100%.
Arkansasgirl
Last year my BC/BS and Medicare were combined by BC so I am assuming the totals I see on my statements cover both. They have now separated them so I get two statements. On my year to date (and of course stuff is still being billed) they stated they had paid approx $40,000 (tht was the end of 2009) and that included all doctors, biopsies, lymph nodes, mastecomy, stress test, colonoscopy,4 days in the hospital, 4 chemo's of C/T. My Nuelasta was $3,200 each but I don't know if those statements include the drugs. One of my anti-nausea drugs was $1600. But that's what rthey paid,not what they wre billed and they only pay about 50% or less. After my $300 deductible they cover everything. Now I'm curious and will take a look again to see what was billed. I remember seeing "chemo - $5,500". I do not have to have radiation so I'm sure a huge chunk of change goes there. But I am totally knocked out by some of your figures!
I have to go now and start looking at BC/BS & Medicare statements!
Hugs, Judy :-)0 -
Chemo is Very Expensive
Chemo is very expensive especially if only one manufacturer makes the chemical. They charge an outrageous figure for it. And the figure includes everything, like the tubing, the saline, the anti nausea drugs, ect. Yes, I am broke from it all.
Oh well, you got to go on living.
P0 -
dont know about the chemo,aztec45 said:Chemo is Very Expensive
Chemo is very expensive especially if only one manufacturer makes the chemical. They charge an outrageous figure for it. And the figure includes everything, like the tubing, the saline, the anti nausea drugs, ect. Yes, I am broke from it all.
Oh well, you got to go on living.
P
dont know about the chemo, but the neulasta was significantly higher than the abouve estimates. the radiation was 6,700 per treatment x33. I am lucky to have good insurance. I would tell myself that when I felt sick etc.. trying to find the positive.0 -
Does it really costaztec45 said:Chemo is Very Expensive
Chemo is very expensive especially if only one manufacturer makes the chemical. They charge an outrageous figure for it. And the figure includes everything, like the tubing, the saline, the anti nausea drugs, ect. Yes, I am broke from it all.
Oh well, you got to go on living.
P
$14 - $22k to manufacture one treatment? Does it really cost $3k+ to make the tubes? Radiator tubes are only $20 - $40 each and glycol (SP?) is more toxic than these drugs.....what gives?
Obama wants to fix health care/insurance, but take a look at the cost of the drugs, equipment, etc as well. Insurance compnaies are not bilking us, everyone is!!!!!
We have good insurance, but I still am looking at $6k+ worth of bills with more on the way. I just got my ugly red headed butt out of trouble with mortgage, car, cards, etc and now we are heading right back down that road.
Did the surgeon really need to charge $385 for the Q&A session (10 minutes) we had with him 2 days after the positive diagnoses?
Seems like when you get the diagnoses, everyone jacks up their fees.
Do the post surgical mastectomy shirts really cost $125 to make? Do the baseball hats with the wig hair around the back really cost $90.
*As you can tell, this struck a chord with me.0 -
Talking about medical costs
Talking about medical costs ....
I had a single mastectomy with DIEP flap reconstruction and spent 4 nights at Stanford hospital. They billed insurance $150 000 however insurance had only contracted $24 000.
For the AC, one transfuscion which I have at the Palo Alto Medical Foundation came to $3 972 but the neulasta was $ 7 824. The chemo probably would have been more if I had had it at Stanford Hospital. I am not sure what the Herceptin and Taxol will cost.
Last year I had an HMO and would have paid nothing, however our company did away with the HMO and I was forced to choose from a PPO and HRA. WIth the PPO I have a max out of pocket of $2000 excluding copayments. Not bad but not as good as the HMO.
Aside from being life threatening Cancer is sooo costly!0 -
I had 8 total cycles of
I had 8 total cycles of chemo and surgery (no reconstuction) and 6 weeks of radiation back in 2003/2004. Unless I misscalulated I totaled the insurance paid $40,000, with my share being $4000. For some reason they billed chemo different than radiation and I had to pay the 20% on it and deductable where they paid 100% for the chemo. When I asked they said something about the chemo office was part of the hospital but the radiation was a seperate company even tho they were in the same building and shared a waiting room. Oh well.0 -
Greg
You hit a chord with me, too! And as much as I hate to say it in public, although I don't think the new health care plan is the fix, I would go for socialized medicine in a heartbeat. We had a family at work whose very young wife developed cancer and the cost of her medications was so high that their kids were going to go without Christmas (the office took up a donation for them). A week before my diagnosis this past Christmas, my sister and I got into an argument about the health care plan and my whole point is that there is something wrong when we live in such an advantaged country and families have to worry about going broke if someone gets cancers (or not being able to eat vs. not being able to treat). Even though I am a nurse, I will never understand why health is a for-profit business in this country.....0
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