Doctors who provide at least 10 hours of charity care per month tend to be better than other doctors at holding insured patients' out-of-pocket costs down.
Researchers at the Center for Studying Health System Change, Washington, and the University of Chicago Hospitals, have published a study analyzing health system change center physician cost-efficiency survey data in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
Only 40% of doctors consider patient costs when deciding what diagnostic tests to recommend, and only 51% consider patient costs when deciding whether to treat a patient in the hospital or on an outpatient basis, the researchers report.
Although 46% of primary care doctors said they would consider patients' out-of-pocket costs when choosing diagnostic tests, only 30% of the specialists who participated said they would take out-of-pocket costs into account, the researchers report.