Cancer Patients' Waiting List 'Will Lengthen'
Posted on: Friday, 4 November 2005, 18:00 CST
By JENNY HOPE
WAITING lists for cancer patients needing chemotherapy will lengthen because of rising demand and inefficient hospital services, specialists warn.
In chemotherapy, drugs are used to destroy cancer cells, usually after surgery. Until now the treatment has been administered in hospital using timeconsuming intravenous infusions of drugs. New oral treatments are available, however, which are more convenient for patients as they can be taken at home and could help control waiting lists.
But a report by specialists and charities which make up the Cancer Capacity Coalition reveals trusts are not encouraged to offer oral drugs because under a system called Payment by Results, hospitals get financial 'rewards' to maintain old ways of working as the income they receive is linked to them.
Professor Jim Cassidy, of the Beatson Medical Oncology Centre, Glasgow, said patients may not get the oral treatment as hospitals could lose income and possibly staff if they are not administering the drugs.
'We have to remove these perverse incentives for inefficient treatments,' he said.
He warned waiting lists are likely to grow because more people are living longer which raises the risk of the disease.
'There could be a 200 to 500 per cent increase in chemotherapy needed as a result.'
Source: Daily Mail; London (UK)
Related Articles
- Oral Chemotherapy Offers Patients a More Convenient, Less Invasive Treatment Option
- Drug Screen for Cancer Patients Found
- Chemo Drug Helps Breast Cancer Patients
- City Cancer Patients Still Waiting Too Long for Treatment Not Enough Sufferers Seen Inside Scotland's Two-Month Limit
- Cancer Patients to Wait Months
- Trial Shows New Drug May Help Cancer Patients Who Need Stem Cell Transplants
- Drug Extends Lung Cancer Patients' Survival
- Anti-Tumor Drug Extends Lung Cancer Patients' Lives
- Genentech's Drug, Avastin, Helped Cancer Patients Live Longer, Study Reveals
- Study: Drug Helps Sickest Cancer Patients
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds