How do we decide what a human life is worth? And who is "we" making these decisions? An easy start is to factor in age, prognosis, future potential–what insurance companies and courts do on a regular basis. What about ability to pay the difference between what "society" determines an individual’s life worth and the actual cost of treatment? – Ilene
$93,000 cancer drug: How much is a life worth?
How much is a life worth? $93,000 cancer drug pushes boundaries, and patients feel the pinch
Marilynn Marchione, AP Medical Writer
BOSTON (AP) — Cancer patients, brace yourselves. Many new drug treatments cost nearly $100,000 a year, sparking fresh debate about how much a few months more of life is worth.
The latest is Provenge, a first-of-a-kind therapy approved in April. It costs $93,000 and adds four months’ survival, on average, for men with incurable prostate tumors. Bob Svensson is honest about why he got it: insurance paid.
"I would not spend that money," because the benefit doesn’t seem worth it, says Svensson, 80, a former corporate finance officer from Bedford, Mass.
His supplemental Medicare plan is paying while the government decides whether basic Medicare will cover Provenge and for whom. The tab for taxpayers could be huge — prostate is the most common cancer in American men. Most of those who have it will be eligible for Medicare, and Provenge will be an option for many late-stage cases. A meeting to consider Medicare coverage is set for Nov. 17.
"I don’t know how they’re going to deal with that kind of issue," said Svensson, who was treated at the Lahey Clinic Medical Center in suburban Boston. "I feel very lucky."
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