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Wednesday, 05/28/2014 11:13:48 PM

Wednesday, May 28, 2014 11:13:48 PM

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More worrisome than Bavi efficacy:May 27, 2014 3:51 p.m. ET – The Wall Street Journal: WellPoint plans to begin offering oncologists a $350-a-month payment for each cancer patient who is on one of the health insurer's recommended treatment regimens.
Insurers are changing how they pay for cancer care, aiming to blunt soaring costs and push oncologists to adhere to standardized treatment guidelines.
The largest effort yet is set to be unveiled by WellPoint Inc., WLP -0.55% which will begin offering oncologists a $350-per-month payment for each patient who is on one of the insurer's recommended regimens. WellPoint, the No. 2 insurer in the U.S., will roll out its new program July 1 in six states and through its entire network by the middle of next year. Initially, it will focus on breast, lung and colorectal cancer, but it will expand to other forms of the disease.
Cleveland Clinic's Taussig Cancer Institute will participate in the WellPoint program 'where it makes sense,' and the extra $350 payment 'is not something we'd ignore,' said Taussig Chaiman Brian J. Bolwell. Bloomberg
Programs like WellPoint's and others around the country are part of an effort to smooth out wide variations in how doctors treat patients, which health experts say can be wasteful and don't always benefit patients. In cancer, insurers and health-care providers have been developing treatment protocols—sometimes known as "pathways"—that are supposed to represent the best and most efficient approaches, balancing cost, benefit and side effects. Insurers are then paying doctors according to how well they comply.
These efforts have the potential to transform the way doctors practice medicine, but they can also spark pushback if they are seen as heavy-handed. Some oncologists worry that moves to standardize treatment could cause tensions as genetics increasingly guide them toward more individualized approaches. Also, there is no widespread agreement about how such programs should work or the exact protocols they should use.
Brian J. Bolwell, chairman of Cleveland Clinic's Taussig Cancer Institute, said the clinic will participate in the WellPoint program "where it makes sense," and the extra $350 payment "is not something we'd ignore." He said WellPoint's clinical recommendations were reasonable, but the clinic is developing its own treatment pathways, and he is concerned about facing different recommendations from each insurer.
"We generally don't like to practice by insurance company, we practice by patient," he said.
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