Buying cures versus renting health: Financing health care with consumer loans.

Sci Transl Med
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

A crisis is building over the prices of new transformative therapies for cancer, hepatitis C virus infection, and rare diseases. The clinical imperative is to offer these therapies as broadly and rapidly as possible. We propose a practical way to increase drug affordability through health care loans (HCLs)-the equivalent of mortgages for large health care expenses. HCLs allow patients in both multipayer and single-payer markets to access a broader set of therapeutics, including expensive short-duration treatments that are curative. HCLs also link payment to clinical benefit and should help lower per-patient cost while incentivizing the development of transformative therapies rather than those that offer small incremental advances. Moreover, we propose the use of securitization-a well-known financial engineering method-to finance a large diversified pool of HCLs through both debt and equity. Numerical simulations suggest that securitization is viable for a wide range of economic environments and cost parameters, allowing a much broader patient population to access transformative therapies while also aligning the interests of patients, payers, and the pharmaceutical industry.

Year of Publication
2016
Journal
Sci Transl Med
Volume
8
Issue
327
Pages
327ps6
Date Published
2016 Feb 24
ISSN
1946-6242
URL
DOI
10.1126/scitranslmed.aad6913
PubMed ID
26912902
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