Inflation Is Especially Hard on Chronic Pain Patients
/By Crystal Lindell
These days it feels like just walking into a grocery store costs $100. And topping off your gas tank is the kind of thing you have to start a savings plan to achieve.
It’s not your imagination. Everything has gotten outrageously more expensive, and it’s only getting worse.
According to a recent PBS article, overall food prices are up 3.2% in the last year, with foods like beef (+15%), coffee (+18.5%), and fresh tomatoes (+40%) rising even more.
Gas prices have soared to a nationwide average of $4.49 a gallon – up from $2.98 just before the Iran war began at the end of February.
Rent and utilities are also going up, and consumer confidence is so gloomy that two-thirds of Americans are cutting back on spending.
There seems to be no aspect of life where people can catch a break financially these days, but it’s especially difficult for chronic pain patients.
Many of us live on fixed incomes, and rely on aid programs like food stamps and Medicaid.
Unfortunately, the government is not increasing the amount of money recipients get from those programs to account for inflation. So as prices go up, the only choice is to live on less.
Of course, it’s not really a choice, because many patients are already living on a bare bones budget to begin with. You can’t shift down by going to a food pantry if you’ve already been going to a food pantry for the last three years.
So what actually happens is that we end up cutting back on essentials. We’re eating less, moving in with relatives to save money, and never turn on the A/C to keep the electric bill down.
There’s also the fact that patients have ongoing medical expenses to contend with, like prescriptions, insurance premiums, and co-pays. Those have all increased as well.
Those of us who are able to work can’t physically endure working more hours or taking a second job to help with the constant price increases.
It also means that we have less money for the types of services that are considered a “convenience” by healthy people, but are necessities when you have a chronic illness and can’t get around well. Things like grocery and restaurant delivery services become extravagances.
On the other side of that, jobs with DoorDash and Uber used to be good side gigs, because you can choose your own hours, and take a day off when you’re having a pain flare.
I personally spent the last year earning extra cash that way, but had to give it up when gas prices spiked because DoorDash refused to increase driver pay to cover the higher cost. It was costing me more to make deliveries than I was earning.
With all the constant financial pressure, it just feels important to lay everything out in one place, and to validate what many patients are struggling with these days.
When you’re already dealing with chronic pain that makes it painful to live, it’s easy for the whole situation to make you feel depressed, despondent, and lose hope.
Making it worse is that there doesn’t seem to be any sort of path or plan to make any of this better. Sure, maybe gas prices will inch down a few cents, and maybe you’ll be able to find a good two-for-one deal on beans at the grocery store.
But in the grand scheme of things, when your health is bad and your financial health is worse, it’s difficult to keep going.
But keep going is exactly what you need to do. Because if you’re still here, then the world still needs you in it. And you have no idea how much you may be helping others to endure all this as well.
Maybe one day, the government will finally start working for the people again, and we can start to dig our way out of this. Crazier things have happened.
