| Literature DB >> 23598714 |
Susan A Berry1, Mary Kay Kenney, Katharine B Harris, Rani H Singh, Cynthia A Cameron, Jennifer N Kraszewski, Jill Levy-Fisch, Jill F Shuger, Carol L Greene, Michele A Lloyd-Puryear, Coleen A Boyle.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Treatment of inherited metabolic disorders is accomplished by use of specialized diets employing medical foods and medically necessary supplements. Families seeking insurance coverage for these products express concern that coverage is often limited; the extent of this challenge is not well defined.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23598714 PMCID: PMC4541808 DOI: 10.1038/gim.2013.46
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Figure 1Percentage of reported payment sources used for medical foods and related products
Percentage of payment sources used for medical foods, dietary supplements, modified low-protein foods, and feeding supplies is noted on the y axis. Families used more than one payment source for some products and often paid for multiple products. Other, military health benefits and miscellaneous other sources; Self, parents' out-of-pocket expenditures; WIC, Women, Infant, and Children programs.
Figure 2Cost per month paid OOP for medical foods and related products
Percentage of families reporting OOP expenditures for medical foods, dietary supplements, modified low-protein foods, and feeding supplies is noted on the y axis. Families often paid for more than one product type. Families reported the range of costs they paid per month beyond insurance or other coverage for medical foods, modified low-protein foods, supplements, and supplies. Shown here are the ranges of OOP expenditures for each type of product (on the x axis); OOP, out of pocket.