Western Mail

UK faces ‘cost of dying’ crisis

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MORE than 90,000 people die in poverty in the UK every year, new estimates suggest, prompting campaigner­s to warn that society is facing a “cost-ofdying” crisis.

Working-age adults are twice as likely to die below the poverty line as pensioners, according to research from Loughborou­gh University commission­ed by the end-of-life charity, Marie Curie.

The estimates suggest that in 2019, the latest year for which data is available, more than 90,000 people died having experience­d poverty in the last year of their life – around one in seven of the total number who died. This comprises 68,000 pensioners and 25,000 working-age people who died, from any cause.

More than a quarter (28%) of adults of working age who died were estimated to have been in poverty, compared with 13% of those who died having reached pension age. The research also suggests that women, parents with dependent children, and people from ethnic minority groups are more vulnerable to poverty at the end of their life, while across the UK nations the risk is greatest in Wales.

Researcher­s used a definition of poverty from the Social Metrics Commission that takes into account people’s “inescapabl­e costs” such as childcare, and said poverty can both increase the risks and be a consequenc­e of ill-health and subsequent mortality.

It applies to those whose average income over the last three years (after accounting for core living costs such as childcare, housing, and disability) was less than 54% of the average UK income minus these costs.

Marie Curie said the figures – the first of their kind – are “shocking” and “nothing short of a national indignity”.

The charity is calling for the state pension to be given to dying people of working age so they do not miss out.

It welcomed recent UK Government steps enabling people with a year or less to live to be given fast-tracked access to benefits, but said the system is failing to keep working-age people out of poverty at the end of their lives.

Marie Curie’s report, Dying In Poverty, said: “This report shows that the UK is also facing a ‘cost-of-dying crisis’, with many more people affected by terminal illness at risk of falling into poverty as a result of lost income, higher prices and a working-age benefits system that is increasing­ly failing to safeguard people from poverty at the end of life.”

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