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New York: Many families who lose a child to cancer face not only emotional devastation, but serious financial problems as well, a new study suggests.
Interviewing US and Australian parents who had lost a child to cancer, researchers found that most had needed to cut down on work during their child's illness -- resulting in sometimes severe income loss.
Overall, one-quarter of U.S. and 39 percent of Australian families said they had faced a "great deal" of financial hardship during their child's treatment.
One-third of Australian families and 19 percent of those in the U.S. lost more than 40 percent of their income because at least one parent had to quit or cut down on work. And that kind of income loss is generally considered "catastrophic," lead researcher Dr. Veronica Dussel, of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, said in an e-mail.
"Our results underscore that the cost of losing a child to cancer exceeds emotional grief," Dussel and her colleagues report in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
The study, the researchers say, is one of the first to look at the financial toll of losing a child to cancer. And it suggests that their economic strains may be even greater than those of families with children who survive cancer, although the reasons are unclear.
In addition, Dussel pointed out, the toll was greatest for families who already had relatively low incomes.
These families generally lost the greatest percentage of income, and 16 percent of U.S. families and 22 percent of Australian families slid below the poverty line during their child's illness.
The findings are based on 141 families with a child treated at one of two U.S. children's hospitals, and 89 families from one Australian medical center.
In general, the Australian families reported greater financial difficulties. Dussel noted that low-income U.S. families were more likely than their Australian counterparts to use fundraisers as a way to cope. "But it is hard to know if this accounts for some of the difference in perceived financial hardship," she said.
What the findings do suggest, she and her colleagues write, is that the policies and resources in place at all three study sites were not enough to keep families from suffering financially as well as emotionally.
"The results from our study suggest that actions intended to prevent or reduce income loss may improve family distress," Dussel said.
Compared with the experience of families whose children survived cancer treatment, "the end-of-life period brings more frequent hospitalizations and increased care-giving demands," the authors note. Variable insurance coverage for palliative measures, home care assistance and funeral expenses may also account for potentially higher costs to bereaved families, they add.
Work disruptions were also more common than reported by families with children who survived.
Overall, the researchers found, the type of cancer and duration of illness did not explain the level of financial hardship experienced by a bereaved family. Younger parents and those with lower education levels were more likely to report hardships, and poverty level before the illness was strongly associated with subsequent financial distress.
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