Medical school rotation at a free clinic for the uninsured

My patient had onychomycosis – toenail fungus.  Not a devastating disease.  The treatment for this fungus is a 12-week course of terbinafine.  About $50 for a month’s supply … $150 for 3 months.  Terbinafine’s potential side effects include liver toxicity.

During my primary care clerkship at the Bronx VA Hospital, I treated several patients who had onychomycosis and had undergone the antifungal treatment.  One patient declined treatment with terbinafine because of the possible risk to his liver.

My patients at the VA Hospital had a choice.  They were able to choose treatment or no treatment for this relatively benign condition.

But for this patient I was not at the VA.  I was volunteering at a free clinic for the uninsured.  And neither I nor they had a choice.  I wasn’t going to treat this patient’s moderate onychomycosis, period.  Even though her liver was healthy, we were not going to prescribe terbinafine.  Terbinafine is too expensive for the clinic, and onychomycosis is not worrisome enough for the CoSMO clinicians.

CoSMO is the Columbia Student Medical Outreach, a student-run free clinic for uninsured (and largely undocumented) patients in our neighborhood of Washington Heights.  It’s an in-depth undertaking, with senior clinicians (3rd and 4th year med students and advanced nurse practitioner – NP – students) teaching junior clinicians (1st and 2nd year med students and new NP students), interpreters, nursing students doing blood draws and vaccinations, nutrition students doing health education, social work students offering assistance, and student administrators doing scheduling, grant applications, drug assistance applications, quality assurance, etc.  Students run the clinic, with one physician supervising.

Despite the fact that we’re all still students, patients at CoSMO receive quality care, with an emphasis on prevention.  They are also able to be referred to necessary specialists or get X-rays and lab tests as indicated, through various partnerships and limited funding sources.

But because the funds are extremely limited, the student administrators and we clinician volunteers are forced to consider costs in every decision we make.  At the VA Hospital, I’d send a patient over 50 for a colonoscopy for cancer screening, repeated every 10 years or as necessary.  At CoSMO, however, the more cost-conscious screening (which is still evidence-based) is noninvasive, annual fecal immunochemical testing (stool cards).  Whereas a patient in a private clinic who is insured may get a Pap smear annually for cervical cancer screening simply because they ask for it, CoSMO stringently sticks to guidelines that state that Paps are indicated every 3 years after 3 negative Paps over the age of 30.

The biggest item in CoSMO’s budget is prescription drugs.  One patient of mine was on 7 different medications for his diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia… and his monthly bill alone would have been almost 1/15th of CoSMO’s entire medication budget.  And we see almost 15 patients in one Saturday!  We send most patients to Target for $4 generics (if they’re available).  But some patients can’t pay even $4 monthly for their medications (or the $4 x however many meds they’re on).

Another patient came in with empty bottles of 2 different drugs for his blood pressure.  He’d run out of refills, and he’d just been laid off and lost his health insurance.  I thought this was a simple enough case, writing prescriptions for those same drugs as they were controlling his pressure.  The physician signed the prescriptions, agreeing with my clinical decision-making.  But then I presented the scripts to the clinic administrators…and they told me No way, come up with a better plan.  Those 2 drugs alone would cost $70 for a month – but if I switched the meds to cheaper alternatives, he could pay just $4 at Target.  We didn’t necessarily know if the new drugs would work for this patient, but, financially, it was worth the bet.

The exact same antihypertensive medications I ordered over and over again for my patients at the VA were out of the question at the CoSMO free clinic.  When I started volunteering as a senior clinician at CoSMO, I was just beginning to feel comfortable with my clinical decision-making.  I was quickly reminded that I still have much to learn about comprehensive decision-making.

Suchita Shah is a medical student who blogs at University and State.

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  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000977601479 Melissa Gastorf

    Why doesn’t your clinic utilize the needy meds site which has programs for most of the medications out there?  It is a good place to get many of those medications, and they are based on income.  Target and Walmart both have decent $4 plans, but there is not always a suitable alternative for the name brand, and many of the patients can get a three month supply for somewhere between $5 and $15 per month, and some even free from the drug company.  Surely the clinic you are at has an internet connection and a printer?

    • http://twitter.com/katellington Katherine Ellington

      The neighborhood doesn’t have a Target or a Walmart. Online solutions may remedy the challenge if the clinic has the resources to become the “online pharmacy” for patients as most live in the world of the digital divide with little access to the computers or the internet.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_2LRZNHDZS6DU45WQ567LPQ7CMI ninguem

    Terbinafine 250 mg is four dollars for a month supply, or ten dollars for a 12-week course. Check the Wal-Mart four dollar list:

    http://i.walmartimages.com/i/if/hmp/fusion/customer_list.pdf

    Most pharmacies price-match Wal-Mart. If onychomycosis treatment is $50 a month for the medication, you’re using the wrong pharmacy.

  • marykparker

    In addition to your student providers, maybe you should open it up to student social workers…

    I don’t understand why you aren’t referring these patients to the pharmaceutical web sites like Pfizer: http://www.pfizerhelpfulanswers.com/pages/misc/Default.aspx Many of them offer free or reduced-fee medications if the patient meets certain income standards.

    There are other “umbrella-type” organizations:
    http://www.rxassist.org/ 
    http://www.pparx.org/
    http://www.nami.org/Content/ContentGroups/Helpline1/Prescription_Drug_Patient_Assistance_Programs.htm

    If your patient meets the criteria, there may be resources available through the Elder programs run in many states. There should be a listing in the telephone book, through your local government web site, or through a search engine.

    Even dental assistance programs may be available if there is teaching school nearby. I’ve provided information to patients on how to access these systems, too. The wait may be long, but if they can’t afford dental care otherwise, this is what is left.
     
    Having someone available to fill out the forms could also be delegated to high school students needing community service hours. There are many ways to approach this, but if your patients are poor, there are resources available to them.

  • ram ray

    Student-run free clinics present an excellent opportunity to introduce community medicine to medical students -  medical schools should integrate such free clinics into their mainstream curriculum and offer credit for the hours student volunteer at these clinics; for students, it will be a welcome change from the otherwise money driven health system –
    J. Ram Ray   

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Susan-Conforti/100000518831931 Susan Conforti

    It would be good if a chaplain intern or chaplain resident (that is, a student in Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE)) were assigned to your clinic.  You could contact the Association for Clinical Pastoral Education (ACPE) at http://www.acpe.edu to see where the closest training is.