Mercury (Hobart)

Women face painful cost

Bill for endometrio­sis hits $9.7b

- JACKIE SINNERTON

THE under-recognised condition endometrio­sis is costing Australia an eye-watering $9.7 billion each year, with sufferers out of pocket on average $31,000 annually.

The huge cost of endometrio­sis is revealed today in an Australian study published in the science journal PLOS ONE.

The shock findings have sparked researcher­s to call for immediate policy action focused on better management of the unbearable pain reported by many women.

Endometrio­sis affects one in every 10 Australian women, with the average diagnosis taking between seven to 10 years.

Health Minister Greg Hunt last year launched the National Action Plan for Endometrio­sis, the first blueprint seeking to improve treatment, understand­ing and awareness.

But the lead author of the study, Western Sydney University NICM Health Research Institute’s Dr Mike Armour, said the national action plan needed to prioritise improving pain control because this was the most significan­t contributo­r to the economic impact.

“More applied research is needed to assess the true prevalence rate of endometrio­sis, to determine these economic impacts with greater accuracy and guide urgent clinical and policy responses,” Dr Armour said.

“Women in Australia with endometrio­sis or other causes of chronic pelvic pain incur a substantia­l financial burden caused by their condition.

“As well as health care costs, the pain they experience can result in time off work and a reduction in productivi­ty, both at work and outside of work,” he said.

The researcher­s found more than three-quarters of the costs were due to productivi­ty loss. They found that women with endometrio­sis often report inadequate pain management­s making it difficult to go to work.

Dr Armour said that a push to reduce this pain could reduce loss of productivi­ty, along with improving quality of life.

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