BACKGROUND: Chronic illness and disability can have damaging, even catastrophic, socioeconomic effects on individuals
and their households. We examined the experiences of people affected by chronic heart failure, complicated diabetes
and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease to inform patient centred policy development. This paper provides a first
level, qualitative understanding of the economic impact of chronic illness.
Methods: Interviews were conducted with patients aged between 45 and 85 years who had one or more of the index
conditions and family carers from the Australian Capital Territory and Western Sydney, Australia (n = 66). Content
analysis guided the interpretation of data.
RESULTS: The affordability of medical treatments and care required to manage illness were identified as the key aspects
of economic hardship, which compromised patients' capacity to proactively engage in self-management and risk reduction
behaviours. Factors exacerbating hardship included ineligibility for government support, co-morbidity, health service
flexibility, and health literacy. Participants who were on multiple medications, from culturally and linguistically diverse or
Indigenous backgrounds, and/or not in paid employment, experienced economic hardship more harshly and their
management of chronic illness was jeopardised as a consequence. Economic hardship was felt among not only those
ineligible for government financial supports but also those receiving subsidies that were insufficient to meet the costs of
managing long-term illness over and above necessary daily living expenses.
CONCLUSION: This research provides insights into the economic stressors associated with managing chronic illness,
demonstrating that economic hardship requires households to make difficult decisions between care and basic living
expenses. These decisions may cause less than optimal health outcomes and increased costs to the health system. The
findings support the necessity of a critical analysis of health, social and welfare policies to identify cross-sectoral strategies
to alleviate such hardship and improve the affordability of managing chronic conditions. In a climate of global economic
instability, research into the economic impact of chronic illness on individuals' health and well-being and their disease
management capacity, such as this study, provides timely evidence to inform policy development
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