Schedule:
Sunday, January 14, 2024: 9:45 AM-11:15 AM
Independence BR F, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington DC)
Cluster:
Symposium Organizer:
Chiara Acquati, PhD, LMSW, University of Houston
Discussant:
Julie Birkenmaier, PhD, Saint Louis University
Socioeconomic factors represent the single-largest category of social determinants of population health (Magnan, 2021). The Social Work Grand Challenges recognize the multi-factorial role these determinants play in limiting financial opportunities and sustaining public institutions and policies that are inherently unjust to members of minoritized populations and those at-risk for financial exploitation and harm (Sherraden et al., 2015; Lein et al., 2016). In the context of healthcare, socioeconomic-related inequities often manifest as financial hardships when personal finances/resources are insufficient to cover the burgeoning direct and indirect costs of care. The resulting financial strain has grave proximal consequences for patients and caregivers' mental/physical health, healthcare utilization, and treatment adherence (Greenfield et al., 2018); these relationships have been well-documented in the extent literature. Yet, financial strain is not limited to the immediate costs associated with diagnosis and treatment. Rather, this strain insidiously exerts a financial toxicity over distal health and wellness outcomes through maladaptive financial coping strategies and long-term impacts on familial economic opportunities and financial security (Lentz et al., 2019; Smith et al., 2022). In response to this body of evidence, interventions for managing financial toxicity range from financial navigation, online education, to financial assistance programs and medical financial partnerships (Beck et al., 2019; Smith et al., 2022; Aery et al., 2017; Knight et al., 2022; Edward et al., 2022; Coughlin et al., 2021). However, multiple considerable questions remain unresolved when considering financial strain and health. In particular, mandates and expectations regarding financial toxicity screening are limited; pathways and protocols have only been recently implemented, and further evidentiary support is needed regarding different intervention approaches. Moreover, protective factors or proximal, socio-contextual, or distal mechanisms that can be modified or intervened upon to alleviate the burden of financial strain have been marginally considered. This symposium provides three papers that examine important aspects of finances critical to healthcare hardship, the role of interpersonal processes in reducing the burden of financial difficulties on mental health outcomes, and innovative interventions to reduce the financial burden of cancer treatment. First, "Health care hardship before and during COVID-19: Financial protective factors" examines the relationship between household financial factors and health care utilization in the aftermath of the pandemic, highlighting the interaction between medical debt, insurance status, income, and comprehensive charity care laws. The second paper "Hidden costs of breast cancer: How interpersonal processes are associated with financial toxicity among young women" illustrates proximal and intermediate factors associated with greater vulnerability and provides new insights about intervening targets that account for the interdependence of patients and caregivers. Turning to interventions approaches, "Mixed-methods evaluation of a social work intervention to reduce the financial burden of cancer treatment" reports on the preliminary efficacy of a novel financial treatment program on financial toxicity, health-related quality of life, mental health, and treatment non-adherence. Together, these papers advance our understanding of the intersection of finances, health care utilization, and mental health outcomes of individuals coping with a variety of health conditions, and they provide the audience with critical evidence to inform interventions.
* noted as presenting author
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