A woman holding a piggy bank in an undated photo illustration. A study released in Winnipeg says the financial cost of cancer can be devastating on patients and their families.
A study released in Winnipeg says the financial cost of cancer can be
devastating on patients and their families. For some, it begins a financial
tailspin that results in debt, distress, bankruptcy and even a lifetime on
social assistance. The study by the Canadian Cancer Society and the Canadian
Cancer Action Network says nine out of 10 families that experience a cancer
diagnosis have some form of financial hardship.
The study also says it found one in five Canadians has no supplemental
health insurance. There was no one single challenge reported in the study but a
combination of factors that led to financial hardship. Sick time and vacation
time gets used up, day-to-day living costs increase and unforeseen expenditures
come in the form of drugs and medical equipment.
Other major costs include childcare, travel expenses and even the high
cost of parking of hospital and other treatment centres. “We heard
heart-breaking stories of financial devastation, sometimes affecting three
generations in a single family,” said Pam King, chairwoman of the cancer care
network. “Some families are pushed so far that they never regain their
financial footing, even after they’ve beaten this disease.”
Teresa Solta was a self-employed accountant who owned a successful
business when the youngest of her four daughters was diagnosed with cancer of
the spinal cord. As a single mother, she immediately reduced her business
activity so she could take care of her daughter full-time. Two years later she
was diagnosed with leukemia and had to stop work all together. “Within a year’s
time, I went from having a thriving business with employees to having to
declare bankruptcy,” Solta says. “I lost my home. The five of us moved in
temporarily with my parents in a two-bedroom apartment.”
Mark McDonald, executive director of the Manitoba wing of the Canadian
Cancer Society, says this study “gives a voice to cancer patients and their
families and highlights the vital role we can all play in bringing about
change.” The study calls for actions including improved federal supports for
Canadians facing chronic illness and their caregivers; better statutory
protections for people at risk of losing their jobs while caring for an ill
family member; and improvements to provincial welfare programs so chronically
ill people can retain a greater portion of their savings. It also suggests
other provinces follow Manitoba’s lead and provide coverage for all cancer
treatment and support drugs. The study took place over three years.
Source: Metro News
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