-
Living with Pulmonary Fibrosis is Expensive.
Living with any chronic illness, not just pulmonary fibrosis (PF) is expensive, and I know many patients can relate to this. However, I can only attest to the cost of living with PF based on my own experiences and yesterday I had a wave of feeling overwhelmed at the costs associated with this disease.
I know Canadian healthcare coverage of medications differs greatly from the US and other countries around the world, and I also know that the costs I am experiencing are probably a lot less than what others have to pay. As a result, I don’t want this post to become a comparison with others’ expenses and want to be respectful of other patients who have costs far exceeding mine. Please note that I am writing this post only based on my experience and costs pertaining to my illness, which can be overwhelming to me at times.
Last week I had two specialist appointments, and both doctors made medication adjustments. I was happy with this for the most part, as one doctor reduced my meds and I would prefer to be on less medication than more. However, I realized when I brought the prescription into the pharmacy that I still had over half a bottle of the higher milligram dose left. The doctors preference was that I discard this higher dose and start with what she prescribed me this week, and so I’ve done that. I also had to renew all 4 of my puffers in addition to this new medication, and get two new prescriptions filled as well. My bill was over $285, and that is with 80% medical coverage, meaning I was only paying 20% of the total bill. This means that my bill for medications was over $500! When I calculated this out in my mind, despite only having to pay 20% of the bill, I was quickly overwhelmed at what it costs to live with my illness.
I became very sad, not for me as someone who can thankfully afford medications (for the most part)… but what about those who cannot? My heart aches for them, because these medications, especially the anti-fibrotic ones, are so important to slowing the progression of our disease.
I posted a resource list yesterday on this forum, and I believe there was one listing for financial assistance for patients. Do you know of any other financial assistance for patients with IPF/PF to afford their medications? This could be a national, local or online resource that patients could access, and it could be focused on one geographical location or a wider area (ie. the entirety of the US). If so, I’d love to hear from you, and maybe your knowledge can be a game-changer for another patient living with this expensive illness!
Log in to reply.