It's Arthritis New Zealand's Annual Appeal Week - Give Until It Stops Hurting
IN JUST A FEW YEARS people with arthritis will outnumber
Maori. More than three-quarters-of-a-million people, 17 percent of the
population, will be bringing their condition to an already overburdened health
system. By 2020 close to 4 percent of the population (approximately 200,000 New
Zealanders) will find themselves to a greater or lesser degree disabled by rheumatoid
arthritis, a condition that’s been compared to having broken glass embedded in
your joints.
There was a time when I would have dismissed statistics like
these with an off-hand: “Oh, come on, it’s just arthritis.” Not even the fact
that my wife has been working for Arthritis NZ for more than a decade left me
very much better informed than the average Kiwi. In fact it was only when her
employers asked me to help promote their annual appeal, and flooded me with
screeds of information, that I truly began to understand what arthritis is all
about.
For a start, it’s not just an “old person’s disease”. As
many children live with arthritis as live with cancer, and many of them live
under a regime of medication almost as taxing on their young bodies as the
cancer sufferer’s chemotherapy. These “Kids With Arthritis” are genuine heroes
whose daily struggles go largely unnoticed by the general public.
Then there are Arthritis NZ’s poster-people: Prominent Kiwis
who have risen above the condition to achieve things that most of us can only
dream about. Like the international Cricket umpire, Billy Bowden; the young V8
race-car champion, Matt Lockwood; former All-Black hooker, Anton Oliver; and,
in this Olympic year, the extraordinary Mahe Drysdale, New Zealand’s gold medal
winner in the single-sculls.
Out of the spotlight are tens-of-thousands more Kiwis who have
learned to live with, and rise above, arthritis. I’ve got to know some of them,
heard their stories, and wondered why this often excruciating condition
receives so little attention from just about everyone.
Because it’s not as if arthritis is socially or economically
cheap. In a recently released report: Fit
for Work: Musculoskeletal Disorders and the New Zealand Labour Market; it
is estimated that these “MSDs” (of which arthritis is by far the most
prevalent) cost New Zealand $5.57 billion per year and account for at least 25
percent of total annual health care costs. MSDs are also the second-largest
category of conditions attracting Sickness and Invalids benefits.
And believe me when I say, those numbers are only going to
get worse. Already, more and more of us “Baby Boomers” are beginning to feel
the twinges, the aches and the sharp pains in our joints signalling one of the
more than 140 forms of the condition. Arthritis isn’t going away.
What does need to go away, however, is our complacency about
arthritis. A condition that is going to affect 1 in 6 New Zealanders deserves
more than our offhand dismissal. It should be at the front of our thinking
about health care in the 21st Century.
We all know what the pink ribbon stands for, and happily pin
the Cancer Society’s plastic daffodils to our lapels, but Arthritis NZ – like
so many other charitable institutions in this country – struggles for public
attention. In the political economy of charities the biblical observation that:
“For whoever has, to him more shall be given; and whoever does not have, even what he has shall be taken away from him”, has a depressingly
familiar ring.
So, if you’re out
on the streets today and you’re accosted by someone offering you a bright
orange gerbera flower, please, don’t walk on by. Arthritis NZ’s staff and
volunteers assist tens-of-thousands of New Zealanders every year and need every
dollar you can spare.
Rheumatoid
Arthritis, Osteoarthritis, Ankylosing Spondylitis and Gout – all of these forms
of arthritis can be managed, but they cannot – yet – be cured. With a
population that’s growing older with every passing year, we need to know much
more, and do much more, about arthritis.
Think about that
twinge in your knee – and give until it stops hurting.
This essay was originally published in The Dominion Post, The
Waikato Times, The Taranaki Daily
News, The Timaru Herald, The Otago Daily Times and The Greymouth Star of Friday, 28 September 2012.
The Fit for Work report that you refer to was prepared by The Work Foundation in Lancaster, UK, and states it was funded by a grant from Abbott, a global pharmaceutical company. On page 77 the report names 5 leading NZ experts consulted, the first of whom is from the UK and has been named in Parliament and in the ODT as a medical assessor contracting to ACC for large sums of money. The report does not distinguish between work-related MSDs and MSDs that would develop irrespective of work, but ACC cover for gradual process conditions is only for work-related MSDs.
ReplyDeletewas it Gareth Morgan's
ReplyDelete"Health Cheque"
-arthritis
-diabetes
-alzheimers
-obesity
-dementia
-infectious disease
-STI incidence increasing
-alcohol abuse and dependence
-poor nutrition
-cognitive overload
-stress related conditions
-pharmaeutical interactions
-recreational drugs
Be careful what you ask for
(Supersize that?)
I was at a celebration party in the 7ts.It was Oban Street in Wadestown Wellington.The Celebration was for the architects of A.C.C.The champaign corks were flying, as was the proud self assurance that N.Z. had created a world first medical care for Kiwis injured in their life in our land without charge and for the STATE to care.Is it not sad how society and its care can be manipulated, by capitals profits design.
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