Catherine R. Fedorenko
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
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Featured researches published by Catherine R. Fedorenko.
Health Affairs | 2013
Scott D. Ramsey; David K. Blough; Anne C. Kirchhoff; Karma L. Kreizenbeck; Catherine R. Fedorenko; Kyle Snell; Polly A. Newcomb; William Hollingworth; Karen A. Overstreet
Much has been written about the relationship between high medical expenses and the likelihood of filing for bankruptcy, but the relationship between receiving a cancer diagnosis and filing for bankruptcy is less well understood. We estimated the incidence and relative risk of bankruptcy for people age twenty-one or older diagnosed with cancer compared to people the same age without cancer by conducting a retrospective cohort analysis that used a variety of medical, personal, legal, and bankruptcy sources covering the Western District of Washington State in US Bankruptcy Court for the period 1995-2009. We found that cancer patients were 2.65 times more likely to go bankrupt than people without cancer. Younger cancer patients had 2-5 times higher rates of bankruptcy than cancer patients age sixty-five or older, which indicates that Medicare and Social Security may mitigate bankruptcy risk for the older group. The findings suggest that employers and governments may have a policy role to play in creating programs and incentives that could help people cover expenses in the first year following a cancer diagnosis.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
Scott D. Ramsey; Aasthaa Bansal; Catherine R. Fedorenko; David K. Blough; Karen A. Overstreet; Veena Shankaran; Polly A. Newcomb
PURPOSE Patients with cancer are more likely to file for bankruptcy than the general population, but the impact of severe financial distress on health outcomes among patients with cancer is not known. METHODS We linked Western Washington SEER Cancer Registry records with federal bankruptcy records for the region. By using propensity score matching to account for differences in several demographic and clinical factors between patients who did and did not file for bankruptcy, we then fit Cox proportional hazards models to examine the relationship between bankruptcy filing and survival. RESULTS Between 1995 and 2009, 231,596 persons were diagnosed with cancer. Patients who filed for bankruptcy (n = 4,728) were more likely to be younger, female, and nonwhite, to have local- or regional- (v distant-) stage disease at diagnosis, and have received treatment. After propensity score matching, 3,841 patients remained in each group (bankruptcy v no bankruptcy). In the matched sample, mean age was 53.0 years, 54% were men, mean income was
Journal of Rural Health | 2012
John F. Scoggins; Catherine R. Fedorenko; Sara M. A. Donahue; Dedra Buchwald; David K. Blough; Scott D. Ramsey
49,000, and majorities were white (86%), married (60%), and urban (91%) and had local- or regional-stage disease at diagnosis (84%). Both groups received similar initial treatments. The adjusted hazard ratio for mortality among patients with cancer who filed for bankruptcy versus those who did not was 1.79 (95% CI, 1.64 to 1.96). Hazard ratios varied by cancer type: colorectal, prostate, and thyroid cancers had the highest hazard ratios. Excluding patients with distant-stage disease from the models did not have an effect on results. CONCLUSION Severe financial distress requiring bankruptcy protection after cancer diagnosis appears to be a risk factor for mortality. Further research is needed to understand the process by which extreme financial distress influences survival after cancer diagnosis and to find strategies that could mitigate this risk.
BJUI | 2011
Steven B. Zeliadt; David F. Penson; Carol M. Moinpour; David K. Blough; Catherine R. Fedorenko; Ingrid J. Hall; Judith Lee Smith; Donatus U. Ekwueme; Ian M. Thompson; Thomas E. Keane; Scott D. Ramsey
PURPOSE Distance to provider might be an important barrier to timely diagnosis and treatment for cancer patients who qualify for Medicaid coverage. Whether driving time or driving distance is a better indicator of travel burden is also of interest. METHODS Driving distances and times from patient residence to primary care provider were calculated for 3,917 breast, colorectal (CRC) and lung cancer Medicaid patients in Washington State from 1997 to 2003 using MapQuest.com. We fitted regression models of stage at diagnosis and time-to-treatment (number of days between diagnosis and surgery) to test the hypothesis that travel burden is associated with timely diagnosis and treatment of cancer. FINDINGS Later stage at diagnosis for breast cancer Medicaid patients is associated with travel burden (OR = 1.488 per 100 driving miles, P= .037 and OR = 1.270 per driving hour, P= .016). Time-to-treatment after diagnosis of CRC is also associated with travel burden (14.57 days per 100 driving miles, P= .002 and 5.86 days per driving hour, P= .018). CONCLUSIONS Although travel burden is associated with timely diagnosis and treatment for some types of cancer, we did not find evidence that driving time was, in general, better at predicting timeliness of cancer diagnosis and treatment than driving distance. More intensive efforts at early detection of breast cancer and early treatment of CRC for Medicaid patients who live in remote areas may be needed.
Oncologist | 2016
Jean A. McDougall; Aasthaa Bansal; Bernardo Goulart; Jeannine S. McCune; Andy Karnopp; Catherine R. Fedorenko; Stuart Greenlee; Adriana Valderrama; Sean D. Sullivan; Scott D. Ramsey
Study Type – Patient experience (non‐consecutive cohort)
International Journal of General Medicine | 2011
Sun Hee Rim; Ingrid J. Hall; Megan E. Fairweather; Catherine R. Fedorenko; Donatus U. Ekwueme; Judith Lee Smith; Ian M. Thompson; Thomas E. Keane; David F. Penson; Carol M. Moinpour; Steven B. Zeliadt; Scott D. Ramsey
BACKGROUND Approximately 40% of men diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer experience one or more skeletal-related events (SREs), defined as a pathological fracture, spinal cord compression, or surgery or radiotherapy to the bone. Accurate assessment of their effect on survival, health care resource utilization (HCRU), and cost may elucidate the value of interventions to prevent SREs. MATERIALS AND METHODS Men older than age 65 years with prostate cancer and bone metastasis diagnosed between 2004 and 2009 were identified from linked Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare records. Hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the risk for death associated with SREs were calculated by using Cox regression. HCRU and costs (in 2013 U.S. dollars) were evaluated in a propensity score-matched cohort by using Poisson regression and Kaplan-Meier sample average estimators, respectively. RESULTS Among 3,297 men with prostate cancer metastatic to bone, 40% experienced ≥1 SRE (median follow-up, 19 months). Compared with men who remained SRE-free, men with ≥1 SRE had a twofold higher risk for death (HR, 2.29; 95% CI, 2.09-2.51). Pathological fracture was associated with the highest risk for death (HR, 2.77; 95% CI, 2.38-3.23). Among men with ≥1 SRE, emergency department visits were twice as frequent (95% CI, 1.77-2.28) and hospitalizations were nearly four times as frequent (95% CI, 3.20-4.40). The attributable cost of ≥1 SRE was
The Journal of Urology | 2010
Scott D. Ramsey; Steven B. Zeliadt; Neeraj K. Arora; David K. Blough; David F. Penson; Ingrid Oakley-Girvan; Ann S. Hamilton; Stephen K. Van Den Eeden; Catherine R. Fedorenko; Arnold L. Potosky
21,191 (≥1 SRE:
Archive | 2015
Arpit Gupta; Edward R. Morrison; Catherine R. Fedorenko; Scott D. Ramsey
72,454 [95% CI,
The Journal of Urology | 2009
David F. Penson; Steven B. Zeliadt; Carol M. Moinpour; Ingrid J. Hall; Judith Lee Smith; Catherine R. Fedorenko; Ian M. Thompson; Thomas E. Keane; Scott D. Ramsey
67,362-
Journal of Oncology Practice | 2018
Laura Panattoni; Catherine R. Fedorenko; Mikael Anne Greenwood-Hickman; Karma L. Kreizenbeck; Julia Rose Walker; Renato Martins; Keith D. Eaton; John Whitelaw Rieke; Ted Conklin; Bruce Smith; Gary H. Lyman; Scott D. Ramsey
76,958]; SRE-free: