DISCREPANCIES BETWEEN ACTUAL COSTS AND REIMBURSEMENT TARIFFS FOR BREAST CANCER RADIOTHERAPY IN INDONESIA: A HOSPITAL-BASED RETROSPECTIVE STUDY

Suryanegara, F. D. A. and Iskandar, D. and Ekaputra, E. and Kuntjoro, E. and Setiawan, D. and Postma, M. J. and de Jong, L. (2023) DISCREPANCIES BETWEEN ACTUAL COSTS AND REIMBURSEMENT TARIFFS FOR BREAST CANCER RADIOTHERAPY IN INDONESIA: A HOSPITAL-BASED RETROSPECTIVE STUDY. VALUE IN HEALTH, 26 (12, S). S121. ISSN 1098-3015

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Abstract

Objectives: Breast cancer is the most prevalent cancer and a major financial burden to the health system in Indonesia. Radiotherapy plays an important role in preventing recurrence and mortality of breast cancer. The Indonesia
Case Based Groups (INA-CBG) reimbursement tariff for radiotherapy has not changed since 2016. This study aimed to compare the tariff with the actual costs of radiotherapy in breast cancer patients based on real-world data from
two Indonesian hospitals. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study in a national public referral type A hospital in Yogyakarta Special Province and a private type C hospital in Central Java Province. We collected BPJS Kesehatan claims data from both hospitals of breast cancer (ICD-10 code C50.9) outpatients undergoing radiotherapy (INA-CBG code C-3-10-0) from 2017-2022. We analyzed the total actual costs, the actual cost per patient and visit, and the absolute and relative differences between the actual costs and INA-CBG tariff. Results: A total of 3,890 breast cancer patients were included in the study, with 74.4% from Public Hospital A. The total actual costs for radiotherapy in breast cancer outpatients were US$ 6,490,920 in Public Hospital A and US$ 1,787,200 in Private Hospital C. The total actual costs were significantly higher than the INA-CBG tariff, with a discrepancy of US$853,340 for Public Hospital A from 2017-2022 and US$ 727,370 for Private Hospital C from 2019-2022. The reimbursement for radiotherapy covered only approximately 80% of costs per visit and per patient in both hospitals. Conclusions: The INA-CBG tariff for outpatient radiotherapy services for breast cancer was not sufficient to cover all of the actual costs in either Public Hospital A or Private Hospital C. There is a need to increase the tariff to cover the actual costs in Indonesian hospitals to assure the accessibility and availability of radiotherapy for breast cancer patients.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: R Medicine > RB Biomedical Sciences
Divisions: Faculty of Medicine, Public Health and Nursing > Biomedical Sciences
Depositing User: Sri JUNANDI
Date Deposited: 31 Dec 2024 01:59
Last Modified: 31 Dec 2024 01:59
URI: https://ir.lib.ugm.ac.id/id/eprint/12026

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