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Article Abstract

Introduction: Asthma care teams are well-positioned to help caregivers address financial toxicity in pediatric asthma care, although discussing cost can be challenging. We sought to characterize cost conversations in pediatric asthma specialty care.

Method: We surveyed 45 caregivers of children aged 4-17 with asthma. Eligible caregivers reported costs concerns and had accompanied their child to a multisite asthma specialty practice in North Carolina.

Results: About one-third of caregivers reported a cost conversation (36%). Cost conversations were less common among caregivers whose child had public versus private health insurance (16% vs. 56%), who attended a telehealth versus in-person visit (6% vs. 52%), or who did not versus did want a conversation (19% vs. 77%, all p < .05). Common cost conversation topics were medications and equipment like spacers.

Discussion: Our findings suggest cost conversations may be relatively uncommon in pediatric asthma care, particularly for publicly insured patients and telehealth visits.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pedhc.2023.10.012DOI Listing

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