| Bipolar: How to beat unfair
mental health funding! |
Bipolar sufferers in Australia receive less health funding than
the average person despite the huge costs of the disorder to the
individual and the key to changing this is battling stigma in
the street.
I happened to be talking to my local politician before Christmas
because a fine website on depression, www.DepressioNet.com.au
was about to lose funding for its crucial 24 hour support forums
as a result of failure by the Australian government to fund its
programs.
So I pinged the pollies and Bill, my local politician, wanted
to chat. The one illuminating aspect of our 45 minute conversation
was that it was very hard (for politicians) to decide what other
health programs should be cut in order to increase funding for
mental health because of myriad vested interests.
Watching news reports around the world and back home I see similar
difficulties arising. It is somewhat reminiscent of the ‘Yes
Minister’ dilemmas that Sir Humphrey Appleby would put to
his boss, thereby stymieing him every time.
Just last week in South Australia an identical furore erupted.
There, the government was brave (or hassled) enough to announce
increased mental health funding. The opposition was equally mean
enough to demand to know what (more highly valued) general health
programs were to be sacrificed for the increase. Read the report
here:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200601/s1545360.htm
Now to get back to Yes Minister, Jim Hacker in his early days
would have said ‘But we should just fund health needs according
to the cost to the community, the individual and the carer. And
that should be the minimum amount needed to restore the ill person’s
health so as to function in relationships, at work and in the
community.’ You wish!
The unfairness is obvious when authoritative reports state: ‘Stigma
is systemic in decision-making at the highest political levels.
Ultimate responsibility for mental health services lies with government
leaders at Federal and State levels.
‘It is they who have ensured these services have had such
a low priority in policy-making and funding…
‘The proportion of Australia’s health budget spent
on mental health services is under 8%. In comparable OECD countries,
the proportion is 12% or more.’ Dare to Care, SANE Mental
Health Report 2004 at http://www.sane.org/images/assets/Research_reports_and_images/MHR2004text.pdf
A report by Access Economics for SANE Australia in 2003 calculated
the costs of bipolar in Australia as being ‘$16,000 on average’
per year for each sufferer. Yet spending is ‘only $3,007
per person.’
It gets worse. The report states that this paltry $3,007 is even
less than spending on the average Australian’s health care,
even though ‘the burden of disease – the pain, suffering,
disability and death – is greater for bipolar disorder than
for ovarian cancer, rheumatoid arthritis or HIV/AIDs, and similar
to schizophrenia and melanoma.’
And who makes up the shortfall? According to the report, ‘around
half (i.e. $8,000) of this cost is borne by people with the illness
and their carers.’
‘Mentally healthy’ public outnumber the mentally
ill by a factor of 4 to 1. They want their subsidized spas and
perfect teeth at the expense of us getting into hospital when
we need it! But because they still view the behaviors of mental
illness as not symptoms but as plain bad behavior, our health
needs are viewed as less deserving than theirs, and funded accordingly.
Because of the ‘Yes Minister’ factor, I think we
face an uphill battle persuading the politicians. They won’t
shift until public opinion does, to say nothing of favors and
kickbacks.
The 4 people in 5 who don’t have a mental illness have
something much worse—prejudice. They are the ones who need
persuading that mental health deserves equitable funding.
Australians who want to get involved in dismantling stigma can
get involved in SANE Australia’s StigmaWatch program at
http://sane.org/index.php?option=displaypage&Itemid=266&op=page
You can read a summary of the Access Economics report Bipolar
Disorder: costs—an analysis of the burden of bipolar disorder
and related suicide in Australia, an Access Economics Report for
SANE Australia 2003 at http://www.sane.org/images/assets/Research_reports_and_images/bipolar_costs_es.pdf
Madeleine Kelly is the author
of the prizewinning book Bipolar and the Art of Roller-coaster
Riding (Two Trees Media ISBN 0-646-44939-7).
More information about managing bipolar disorder can be found
at http://www.beatbipolar.com.
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