health systems costs account for about 80 per cent of societal costs for cancer, with lung, breast, colorectal and prostate cancer, combined, expected to account for 47 per cent of health systems costs at $14.2 billion in 2024.
the research team factored in rising cost of living and increasing numbers of people facing cancer diagnosis because of the growing and aging population, which led to a significant cost leap projected over the next decade to $8.8 billion per year.
out-of-pocket costs include items like ongoing prescription drugs, homecare, assistive devices, family care, travel-related expenses and accommodations.
“it’s a huge expense to be able to shoulder and this is something that we’re passionate about at canadian cancer society because we hear about it every day from people who are being directly impacted all the time. so this is an important public and political conversation to have. but it’s also an important issue to elevate on behalf of patients,” says kelly wilson cull, director of advocacy at the canadian cancer society.
while everyone’s journey is going to look different from a cost perspective, she cites an example of how it would look for a mother of a younger family living in rural newfoundland. if she has breast cancer, she is going to have to pay a considerable amount of money to travel to and from st. john’s, where she’d need to go to receive some, if not all, of her cancer treatment. so that would involve travel and accommodation. you might have childcare costs and you might need a breast prostheses or a wig.