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The politics of cancer

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The signature piece of Bill Shorten’s budget-in-reply last night, a $2.3 billion extension to Medicare for cancer patients, is a case of decent policy meeting tawdry politics.

My first thought was the announcement would resonate with voters. At face value, it will give some comfort to people who have been recently diagnosed and remind those who have already been through the oncological wringer of the financial challenges they endured.

When I was first diagnosed, the last thing I thought of was money, but it quickly became front and centre. The costs of scans loomed largest for me.

All cancers are different but there are similarities in treatment. One might undergo chemotherapy or radiotherapy or in a growing number of cases, immunotherapy.

One thing all cancer patients know is that at some point, they will be lying down in an ill-fitting disposable gown, feeling vaguely claustrophobic while being shoved through a gigantic, whirring doughnut.

One friend who has had a long battle with brain cancer told me last night he is up for a five-figure bill in scans this year. He shed a tear when he heard Shorten’s announcement.

Another mate with rectal cancer has done the oncological quadrella — radio, chemo, surgery and is currently undergoing a last round of chemo before he, too, will be scanned to determine the next course of action. He has had six scans since his diagnosis in June last year. He estimated his out of pocket expenses on scans alone at $1200.

With a little luck, he may be given the all clear and will be scanned for the next five years at either three- or six- month intervals.

Last year I had approximately 20 scans. To be honest I lost count. Most of them were CT (Computed Tomography), some MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) and the occasional ultrasound. Some of the scans took place at a public hospital immediately after surgery and there was no charge. A small number were bulk billed. I had to pay for ten scans directly out of pocket. Whether one has private medical insurance or is a common or garden Medicare claimant does not matter a whole lot. There is a large, empty space between the figure the diagnostic imaging centres charge and the scheduled fee. A quick flick through my records this morning shows I dropped about two grand cold in scans last year.

I’m on the mend or so they tell me, so Labor’s policy won’t affect me greatly. I expect to undergo just two scans this year. An ultrasound in a month and another of some description before I see the urologist again later in the year. If both are clear that should be it.

Some patients, especially those with rare cancers endure extraordinary financial hardship with the cost of drug therapy.

In 2017, I went on a clinical trial of a drug known by its trademark as Keytruda or its pharmaceutical name Pembrolizumab which the oncologists or oncs, (medicos love to abbreviate) refer to as Pembro. I didn’t have to pay a cent and I took a certain perverse delight in knowing each infusion (I had four in total) cost an astonishing $60,000.

I used to joke with the nurse at the infusion centre that we should whisk the Pembro away, cut it up with baby formula, sell it on the street and split the profits.

The Coalition has got a good story to tell on medicines, cancer and non-cancer. Under the Coalition, the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme has waved through hundreds of new drug therapies that would otherwise be beyond the financial reach of patients. Pembro didn’t help me and I’m told its success rate is quite low but when it works, especially with lung and bowel cancers, the results can be spectacular. Almost instant remission. The drug went on the PBS in 2018.

Speaking with people in various stages of cancer treatment over the last day or so, the prevailing view is that the Shorten announcement was good policy that might attract some ugly electoral marketing. Will Labor’s campaign entail Bill Shorten, Chris Bowen and shadow health spokesperson, Catherine King, stumbling around infusion centres, knocking out cannulas with a gaggle of media in tow?

Everyone with cancer has their own story and I am not comfortable with those stories being hijacked for political gain.

This morning Scott Morrison announced a Royal Commission to examine the abuse, neglect and exploitation within the disability sector. Like Labor’s policy announcement, it was a matter of a good result cloaked in virtue signalling. Morrison became emotional when referring to his brother-in-law, Garry Warren, who suffers from multiple sclerosis.

Shorten responded by saying the announcement was overdue and while that is correct, he went on to make a cynical insinuation that the government had only established the royal commission with an election looming.

“Labor supported this two years ago. I’m glad the government came on board on election eve,” Shorten said.

Using sick or disabled people as political props is about as low as it gets. Perhaps the only thing worse is the holier than thou squabbling.

With the election campaign proper little more than days away, we can expect an almighty clamour for the moral high ground with Labor and the Coalition running around, chests out, declaring they are more virtuous than the other.

I think voters will get sick of that quickly.

This column was first published in The Australian on 5 April 2019.

79 Comments

  • Tracy says:

    Footy tips Jack

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    The 1st Low Blow of the Campaign by big “Pee” Dutton, Mr Insider as we see he has been criticised for accusing Labor candidate Ali France of using her disability as an ‘excuse’.
    Shocker Dutton, that was just above the Kneecaps fellow!
    http://tinyurl.com/yxl7n9c9

  • JackSprat says:

    I despair.
    I have a mate who has more money than sense – really nice guy though.
    In his house 2 people go through 56 kilowatts of electricity a DAY – pool pump that runs 8 hours a day to solar heat it as well as a spa plus that is heated plus more halogen lights than you can poke a stick at.
    A while back, I put him on to a good deal to replace all the halogens with leds which he bought.
    I have just found out that an electrician mate of his son told him that it was a waste of time because it did not save electricity which is very incorrect – the “power” used by a transformer is dependent on the load which in the case of the leds is 8 watts.
    The leds were never installed.
    The NSW government has a scheme where it will very cheaply install leds.
    As I keep saying – climate change is an OPP – Other Person’s Problem.
    If Shorten thinks he is on a winner with electric cars he has not met some of the tradies floating around this neighborhood.

  • Hardacre says:

    Hi JTI

    First off, it’s very good to hear that you’re on the final straight of your particular cancer journey. I sincerely wish you all the best.

    On the subject of your article, have the rules or circumstances changed in recent years regarding receiving benefits for various scans?

    My story is I was diagnosed with cancer in early 2006. For various reasons it was decided I wouldn’t undergo radio or chemotherapy, but be put under surveillance instead. This meant, a bit like you, I undertook many, many CT scans & x-rays over the next 9 years. I also lost count but reckon over 40 CT scans & maybe 20+ x-rays.

    Now the thing is, I didn’t pay a cent for any of these. The initial few scans were taken at RPA but for whatever reason my oncologist gave me referrals to Alfred Imaging in the medical centre up the road. But he wrote “BB” on all of them so I paid nothing. At the time I didn’t read much into except to feel very fortunate to be an Australian when this struck me. So again, my question is why did I get all this for free when it isn’t the case now?

    The only bill I had, over all nine years, was for my initial surgery (& the anesthetist charged more than the surgeon!).

    I’m confused.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Thanks Hardacre. It seems like there are lots of differences in treatment costs depending on who the patient sees and what the specialists insist upon.

      • Trivalve says:

        Bulk billing for scans is not common as far as I know.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          It isn’t and that is the problem bit you and I faced. In my case, the requests were often completed by the surgeon/urologist with the company name and address of the scanning joint already included. I asked him about this and he told me he used them because they had the best and most up top date scanning equipment and reported to him directly in a reliable fashion.

          • jack says:

            we have variable pricing here in HK, if you are insured they just top up the bill knowing the insurer will pay, it’s all fairly transparent, but a tad surprising to an aussie.

            We have v good insurance, which is just as well, my most recent bout with the medicos involved a six or seven hour general in a cardiac catheter lab, overnight stay and a bill at an eye-watering mill HKD.

            Mind you , the lab looks like an up-to date Houston Space Centre with nearly as many staff, and there are scans of all kinds going on during the bus, but it does mean they can do running repairs on a heart, once they work out you have one that is.

            Brilliant but expensive was my take on it, and the food there is rubbish, Adventists, so all that mock meat vegetarian nonsense.

            Mercifully this time too crook to eat.

  • Penny says:

    Oh dear the issue that ScoMo was in tears about and claiming it was above politics, has been shot to pieces by Dutton’s comments about his opponents disability…oh sorry, it was taken out of context

  • JackSprat says:

    Testing

  • Milton says:

    I’m pleased for the Rush outcome and happy with Assange outing. No wonder the Ecuadorian’s got the shits with ungrateful turd. Now he is not in hiding he should face the courts, John Pilger should also face something for being a myopic tosser.

  • wraith (aka the pisshead) says:

    You still not speaking to me? Either way, here’s a piece of truth for you, and its sooooo on topic.
    .
    I will tell you about ‘streaming’ and the great Australian bully tactics used on sick and disabled people every day. Its the most awful thing. And I had a relative in the ‘business’ that told me everything that goes on. Again, you dont have to believe me. Its just a quick telling of what I know.
    You see, there are a lot of people nowdays that are very ill, and may or may not be on a disability pension, depending on the evil qualifying criteria policy of the government of the day. Many of these souls find themselves trapped in the unemployment cycle. No one will give them a job because they are an out and out liability just to have them around, and the government wont pension them off, because, they just wont. So they spend a long time on unemployment, and this is where it gets dirty. Because the longer you are unemployed, the more money you are worth.
    What? you say….
    You are worth more to the ’employment service provider’ on a payola scheme the government has going, the longer you are unemployed.
    If you are young, recently unemployed, fit, educated and presentable you might think you are a catch, but you are worth nothing to employment agent. You are what they call a “stream 1”, you could get a job on your own falling out of bed, and the government will pay little to them for getting you a job.
    .
    Be older, unemployed a bit longer, perhaps not so educated, you are a “stream 2”, worth a little more, good for filling in labor hire for big companies. You can do retail. Not worth huge dollar, but better than stream ones.
    .
    Older still, less educated, unemployed for a while, maybe months, maybe you drink a little, maybe you are ugly a little, perhaps you dont smell the best, “stream 3″ for you. Abattoirs, farm hands, anyone on killing shift work, factories, stream threes are harder to site, but, they do pay better.
    .
    But then, the glorious ‘stream 4” people. Ones that have been unemployed for so long the government knows they have serious problems. They know they should not be in the work force. But we cant have more invalid pensioners can we!!! So the hell of stream four begins for the poor sick souls. They are forced onto ‘study programs’. The lie is that the person will be more employable at the end of the study. The TRUTH is, putting a stream four into a study program gets you a technical ‘not unemployed’ because you are not in the system, and they get paid really good money, thousands per placement, for a stream four.
    But the poor person cant cope, usually they fail for all the reasons of non support that disable people deal with, especially in the country, mate, there isnt even the bus. So they are forced into study, promised everything, and set up to fail. Crushed again, failed again, no job again. But wait, there’s more, they will always have another course, another program to shove them in, because you are still a poor sodding stream four, and you are still worth money.

    Apols for the length. If I felt it was appropriate I would share some horrifying stories I know of individuals and how they have been treated. Forget Scomo, this shit really would make you cry.

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