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Catastrophic illness

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A catastrophic illness is a severe illness requiring prolonged hospitalization or recovery. Examples include cancer, heart attack or stroke. These illnesses usually involve high costs for patients and health insurance companies and may incapacitate the person from working, creating a financial hardship. They are the type intended to be covered by high-deductible health plans. Research indicates that the unusual economic environment of the delivery of catastrophic illness care encourages the use of innovative therapies. Medicare contains a benefit for catastrophic illness.

References

  1. MR Gillick; NA Serrell; LS Gillick (1982), "Adverse consequences of hospitalization in the elderly", Social Science & Medicine, 16 (10): 1033–1038, doi:10.1016/0277-9536(82)90175-7, PMID 6955965
  2. Warner, Kenneth E. (January 1977), "Treatment Decision Making in Catastrophic Illness" (PDF), Medical Care, XV (1): 19–33, doi:10.1097/00005650-197701000-00002, JSTOR 3763281, PMID 401923, S2CID 154649629
  3. John K. Iglehart (March 2001), Medicare's New Benefits: "Catastrophic" Health Insurance, vol. 10, Journal of Research in Pharmaceutical Economics, pp. 213–228


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