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How to Manage the High Costs of Breast Cancer

- Jupiterimages—Getty Images
Jupiterimages—Getty Images

Molly MacDonald was transitioning to a new job in 2005 when she was hit with some unexpected news: She had breast cancer, and would have to undergo operations and radiation treatments, stat.

Thankfully, the disease was caught at an early stage. But after six months of treatments during which she couldn’t work, MacDonald says the financial reality of her situation was, to put it lightly, bleak. She was paying $1,200 per month in insurance premiums and her home went into foreclosure. She even started cutting her children’s hair to save on costs. Eventually, the family found itself in line at the local food bank.

“I was thinking we are going to join the ranks of the homeless, ” MacDonald says. “I felt really hopeless.”

MacDonald's dire situation illustrates what a lot of women who get diagnosed with breast cancer have to deal with: A massive influx in costs that treatment requires. According to research from The Pink Fund, an organization MacDonald launched that gives financial support to breast cancer patients to meet basic needs while they’re in treatment, 50% of personal bankruptcies are the result of an illness or illness-related job loss.

While cancer is an extremely costly disease to treat—even with insurance—there are ways to manage it. Should you or a loved one have a breast cancer diagnosis, here's what you need to know.

Manage Your Insurance Costs

Experts estimate treatments can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, not counting the income lost from not working or other expenditures like transportation to and from treatment centers. And despite the physical and emotional strains patients and their families undergo, there is little time to waste to get your finances in order. Here are some steps you should take:

Choose the Right Insurance Plan

Because of the Affordable Care Act, cancer patients cannot be denied insurance coverage. If you are switching plans or shopping for a new one during open enrollment, the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship advises to double check that your new plan covers all of the services you will need, and that your doctor is still in-network. Additionally, here are some other things to keep in mind:

Manage Your Prescription Costs

For breast-cancer survivor Maryann Small, prescription drug costs were particularly hard to pay for. After undergoing operations, chemotherapy, and radiation, she still needed to take an aromatase inhibitor which cost $1,100 every 90 days at her local pharmacy.

Like MacDonald, Small says “on paper” her family looked too wealthy to qualify for financial support. But in reality, her finances had reached a breaking point. “We were just starting to get back on our feet again, and I literally just put my head on my desk and started crying,” she says.

Small used FamilyWize, a free program that negotiates drug prices with pharmacies, and then locates those with the lowest prices for consumers. She says her prescription costs decreased from $1,100 every 90 days to $400. GoodRx is another option that compares prices and offers coupons. When it comes to prescriptions, remember:

 

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