For young people like Madison, cancer costs more than their health

0
2
Advertisement
Courtney Kruk

Brisbane university student Madison Purkis was just 19 years old when she began to experience bouts of severe back pain.

“There’d be a flare-up, and it would be pushing on my spine quite heavily,” she explains. “Those periods were just hellish.”

Purkis – a student at the time – was living on campus at the Australian National University and surviving on a shoestring budget.

Cancer survivor Madison Purkis has launched a campaign calling for crisis payments for young people leaving hospital.

As doctors and hospital staff dismissed her pain, she spent what little money she had on painkillers and numbing drugs.

Advertisement

“I had so many people tell me that it’s all in my head,” she says. “[The hospital] just gave me valium and sent me home continuously.”

Unable to afford to see a specialist, Purkis’ unexplained pain continued until her mum insisted on an appointment with the family’s GP.

“I got tests, got a CT scan, and within two days, I was in hospital with a biopsy, trying to work out what type of cancer I had,” she says.

“People often ask what it was like to receive the cancer diagnosis, and the weird thing was, it was relieving.”

Advertisement

Purkis was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma – a rare and aggressive cancer that forms in bones or soft tissue – a month before her 20th birthday.

Because the cancer was enmeshed with her spine, she was unable to have surgery, and was instead treated with high doses of chemotherapy drugs.

Madison Purkis relocated to Melbourne for her cancer treatment, with accommodation expenses supported by the Sony Foundation.

“My fun fact is that I’ve had the lifetime dosage of three of the hardest chemotherapies available,” she says.

“They go very hard on this kind of cancer because there is just one treatment, and if the cancer grows resistant to that treatment in its reoccurrence, there’s nothing they can really do.”

Advertisement

Purkis spent a year living in Melbourne while receiving treatment. Accommodation was covered by the Sony Foundation, but she says the ongoing financial burden of her health has been a challenge over the past two years.

“The way I try to explain it is, the geriatric costs of medicine have been brought forward to my 20s, and normally at that stage of life, you would have retirement savings … but I’m woefully underprepared,” she said.

Research into the cost of cancer care in Queensland has found that a diagnosis between the age of 15 and 24 imposes a significant burden on the healthcare system, the cancer survivor, and their family. It is estimated patients contribute up to 26 per cent of the total.

Out-of-pocket expenses have the greatest impact on young low-income earners, who are left with a higher risk of decreased life expectancy and poorer health outcomes.

Advertisement

A 2025 Cancer Council survey found almost all Australians diagnosed with cancer incurred out-of-pocket expenses – even when accessing public healthcare – mostly from loss of income, surgical expenses and insurance gap payments.

Purkis has channelled her health experience into a campaign for a medical crisis payment, like other government crisis payments.

It would target young people leaving hospital, a period that she says can lead to sudden financial distress as people transition back to their everyday lives.

“This payment will give young people access to the specialist appointments they require and preventive care, which will make a significant difference in the lives of those trying to rebuild their health and stability,” Purkis says in her campaign manifesto.

Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au