Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login
Thousands of Australians are living with undiagnosed cancers after lockdowns (abc.net.au)
43 points by mrfusion on Nov 8, 2021 | hide | past | favorite | 13 comments



I think this is happening everywhere. I know of friends of friends who went undiagnosed and had shorter life spans because of it. My best friend was diagnosed in July 2020 and died exactly 3 months later from pancreatic cancer. I'm certain he took longer to get diagnosed (I pushed him hard due to symptoms, but he kept putting it off).


My father is an interesting counter-example I guess?

He hates going to doctors and never does check-ups he should be doing. He got covid and my mother conviced him to get checked up if he has any lasting sideeffects he should be curing.

He got his cancer diagnosed only because of the pandemic


> between April and July last year, there was a drop of 37 per cent in the number of detected breast cancer cases, and a 23 per cent drop in detected bowel cancer cases compared to the three years prior.

While that is interesting, the overall trend seems to be pretty clear. In general, people got a whole lot less routine medical care in the past year and a half.


Understaffing by HMO’s and insurance companies trying to cut costs. The medical staff are going on strike in my area. Their pay can’t keep pace with the inflation stoked by this administration’s disastrous policy decisions. Rents are up 15% yoy, nurses and doctors salaries flat while they work twice as hard. Shameful really.


You are replying to a post about an Australian health care issue with a knee-jerk response that is focused on American domestic health care policies.

This suggests that you did not read the article and that you process the existence of a headline as confirmation of your existing beliefs, even when those beliefs are completely irrelevant.

Australia has universal health care and HMO means Health Medical Officer there. Nothing about your comment has anything to do with the subject.

It does say Australians right there in the headline.


In NZ the jargon is PHOs, primary healthcare organizations, for GPs. what's the Aussie jargon?


This assertion that US federal administration policies have created enormous inflation is popular, but not well supported. Most of the inflationary shocks have proven to be short term and are in the process of correction including lumber and shipping prices.

The most concerning price increases have to do with housing, education, and health care and have been outpacing salaries for even longer than Biden has been a politician, let alone serving as President. The long term explosion of health care costs means calls to pay providers more may not even be possible given the huge and sharply increasing percentage of GDP that health care already takes.

Not only is inflation not something we can depend on, there are strong deflationary forces at work which is why we continue to be in the strange position of having zero to negative real interest rates. Of course if deflation starts to do its terrible work then that will be blamed on that horrible opposing political party as well.


The story doesn't really give the detail if care slots / appointments are more restricted or is it the trouble of getting to an appointment during a lock down. Is it the system or the hassle?


It's probably a bit of everything. And the fact that nobody wants to go places, especially not doctors offices, during the pandemic. That's basically the same reason I've been putting off a bunch of medical stuff too.


I have friends in Australia and New Zealand. Far as I can tell they've been only sporadically locked down during the whole time. So I feel like it's likely more that people have been avoiding care not that they are being denied.

I have the same deal as you, I put off going to a dermatologist for the last year. And getting new glasses.

I feel like peoples personal agency is wholly missing from the debate about what to do. Outfits like the WSJ are making the claim that the government is forcing people to stay home. When the reality is a lot of people have been noping out on their own irrespective of what government officials do.


Speaking as an Australian, it highly depends on where in Australia people are. A lot of Victorians will resonate with the article, I'm sure; Queenslanders not so much.


There were periods where the strong advice was to just wait a minute for non-urgent GP visits and general checkups. Also elective and non-urgent surgeries and day procedures have been suspended in hospitals a few times, either to manage infection risk or staffing shortages.

More than the actual closures though I think there’s been a perception in the public that it’s better to wait a bit. Vaccination rate is now 80% nation wide and over 90% here in Sydney so we’re up and running again.


I basically did the same for 2020 but it was more a "don't come for basics" attitude with the local provider so I am sympathetic.

In the 90's we did a rural health grant where we equipped an RV as a traveling doctor's exam room. I do wonder if that concept would have helped in the current situation.




Consider applying for YC's Summer 2025 batch! Applications are open till May 13

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: