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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

  • Milton says:

    I think ScoMo will call the election tomorrow *Thursday* !!

  • Bella says:

    Got a piece of a packed internet here in Beijing. 25M people here alone. Just excited to share that I climbed the Great Wall today JTI. An endurance test for sure! Hope everyone’s enjoying the election campaign back home.😍

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Enjoy Bella sounds like you are having a fabulous time in China. Cheers P.S. the Campaign has started from a very low “bar”.

  • Milton says:

    Chris Bowen – once a dud always a dud. If any proof was needed, outside of his own waffling incompetence, then having Rudd rate him as PM material should seal the deal. And people want this bloke to be treasurer!

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Alan Jones “gutted” him in record time, Milton. I think Bowen was silently screaming “Beam Me Up, Scotty”. Cheers

    • Trivalve says:

      Says the bloke who was happy with Joe Hockey as treasurer.

      So many sand grains
      Who could count them all for me?
      I need a cigar

      • Milton says:

        No I wasn’t, Trivalve. I’ve written often that Abbott should have made Turnbull treasurer. Though even Hockey is not as hopeless as Bowen.

  • Not Finished Yet says:

    Having decided some time ago how I will be voting in the coming election, I am, alas, lost to all candidates, journalists and commentators, other than our own JTI. My wife and I stopped watching television news years ago and I will take no interest in leaders debates. I took no interest in the budget or budget reply. I am not interested in the hatchet jobs they are all doing. I have stopped reading newspaper articles about the forthcoming election. Any advertising material will go straight into the recycling bin unread. None of it will have any effect on me. I will vote with enthusiasm, but other than that politics is now dead to me until after the election.

  • Milton says:

    Like the radical vegans the labor party want to proselytise towards smokers. Considering the vast amount of tax put into govt’s coffers by the coughers, if that coin dries up as a result of govt action how will it be replaced? Who knows, the fun police will find something else to tax; maybe fast food, gambling, sausage sizzles, meat trays, definitely alcohol….
    For vegans, non-smokers, atheists etc it is not enough that they do not partake, rather they want to dictate and stop others from partaking. A modern day ill tempered temperance movement. Once one avenue of choice or freedom is taken away with little fuss others can swiftly topple. And labor loves nothing more than an interfering, do gooder, niche industry to latch onto.

  • jack says:

    I see the cardiologists have jumped in on this one, probably the cardiac patients will as well, when they are going well enough to jump at all!

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Shocking to think this could happen in the Sunshine State, Mr. Insider as we read: “A Sunshine Coast man, diagnosed with Cancer for the second time and forced into homelessness, is in the sights of the local council for illegal camping.”
    How disgraceful, let’s hope this Man gets the help for Cancer he desperately needs and a Home to boot.
    http://tinyurl.com/y294w52r

  • Tracy says:

    I wasn’t too badly out of pocket for my eye surgery, $500 per eye for my surgeon and $150 per eye for the anesthetist, health fund covered the other eye watering $12,000.
    I did get slugged with the three appointments and various scans/gizmo’s before hand, Medicare covered very little.

  • JackSprat says:

    An alternate German view of Brexit.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63IcW4eo4uM

  • JackSprat says:

    I had an hernia operation just recently – went private. The hospital costs were covered but the surgeon and the anesthetist costs came in at well over 4 figures.
    Try spectacles -especially if you have multi-focals – that is a grand every couple of years.
    And then there are hearing aids – try about 8 grand every 3 or 4 years – and one still has problems hearing.
    Try blood thinner pills etc after a stent is put in – that will come to a over a grand a year.
    It is not just cancer patients who have to fork out massive costs for medical bills.
    I am not to sure that we will be able to afford all modern treatments as the boomers age. I currently know many 80+ people who are on very expensive treatments and the numbers will multiply greatly over the coming decades.
    I have no answer to the problem .
    I guess one could start at stopping family reunions of aging parents which over a period costs tens of billions of dollars and divert the money to our own aging – but that would be too radical.
    The magic pudding is getting tired.

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