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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

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    As Gomer Pyle used to say Mr. Insider “Surprise, Surprise”!
    “A major opinion polling company used by GetUp!, Greenpeace, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age and some political candidates is co-owned by union heavyweights the CFMMEU and the ACTU, an ABC investigation has discovered.
    Melbourne-based uComms, which uses the robo-polling technology of veteran pollster ReachTEL, is now facing a backlash from clients who say they had no idea the company was controlled by two of the most powerful forces on the left-side of politics.”
    Strewth, its Newspoll for me.
    http://tinyurl.com/yypkxaeb

  • BASSMAN says:

    Alan Jones screaming tonight that ALL Medicare scans and tests are already fully covered. This is crap. Many tests cost a fortune if your specialist does not indicate BB (Bulk Bill). When I was in hospital my CT Scans were covered but NOT my PET scan. My specialist said it would cost $500 so I gave it a miss.

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    Turnbull seems to believe he has spotted a chink in Dutton’s armour.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    “Vengeance is mine”, sayeth nasty ex ousted PM Malcolm Turnbull, Mr. Insider. The man who grabbed the Levers of Power then showed the Nation he had no idea of how it all worked now wants the Coalition to lose the Election.
    He’s no longer satisfied with just seeing the Liberal Party lose his seat of Wentworth.
    Now he wants the Coalition to lose the lot.
    My TOTY (Turd Of The Year) Award goes to Turnbull recognising in advance all the “work” he is about to do to help Labor.
    Alas, Turnbull I strongly suggest no one is listening to you, they never did as PM, they never will.
    http://tinyurl.com/yxf7xydd

  • Dismayed says:

    JTI how many seats will approving the uneconomically viable carmichael mine cost the libs in inner city areas? It may save 2 in QLD and cost them more elsewhere.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Labor has similar problems with Adani although probably not as pronounced. Put it this way, if the Morrison gov approves it any chance of winning Wentworth is gone. Warringah is lost, too but it probably already was.

      • Tracy says:

        We hope Warringah is lost, the thought of Abbott coming back as opposition leader may terrify a few to switch their vote.
        I don’t think Steggle really has that much to say, electorates on the North Shore don’t even matter when the Libs are in power both state and federally, the first bit of infrastructure we’ve had built in the 25 years I’ve lived here (the new hospital) has been an absolute fiasco and the ongoing roadworks are doing just that, going on and on.
        I think she’ll squeak it but will she hang onto it next time, don’t think so

  • Dismayed says:

    Budget numbers continue to not add up. “The much touted Snowy 2.0 pumped hydro scheme appears to have suffered another blowout in costs, just weeks after the Coalition government shovelled $1.4 billion into its wholly owned energy utility Snowy Hydro to support the project.”
    “Details of the contract announced by Italian group Salini Impreglio late last week reveal that with the main construction “mega contract” now comes to $5.1 billion for the civil works and the electro-mechanical component, essentially the drilling of the tunnels and the construction of the power station.
    This covers most, but not all, of the total project costs.”

  • Dismayed says:

    oh dear.”Coalition tips funds into battery electric vehicle – to cut pollution at coal mines” The Morrison Coalition government has decided funding into a University of Wollongong project that is developing what it is claiming as the “first” battery-powered electric transporter vehicle for underground mining. The technology will use aa new “smart battery” being developed by the UoW.
    “With the completion of this grant we hope to have a battery operated vehicle in coal mines across Australia, particularly underground coal mines in both News South Wales and Queensland, providing better control of underground emissions and a safer working environment for miners,”

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Joseph_de_Maistre

    It’s fun to speculate but it will never be a serious debating subject because we might all suspect we will all be looking at ourselves at some point for the answer, but how does a nation with our possibilities end up with the politicians we have?

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      In reality we here in the great Democracy that is Australia don’t do too bad at all imho, Mr. Baptiste.
      Don’t forget fellow our Mainstream Pollies are from similar walks of life as we.
      And a Democracy such as ours allows for “Fringe Dweller” Minority Pollies that can be seen to represent a small few in our Society.
      Democracy, dear Mr. Baptiste there is no better Political System fellow. Cheers

  • Dismayed says:

    the only available medicine for the cancer that is the coalition is a labor government.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Bless you, sweet young lass or laddie, if my reading of things is correct Election Night will be like a Horror Movie for you.
      Get yourself some “hard likka” to ease the pain. Cheers

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