Categories: All - treatment - costs - diagnosis - risk

by Hunain Ahmed 4 years ago

223

Impact of Lung Disease

Lung disease significantly impacts job performance, leading to production losses and potential financial instability. Despite these challenges, advancements in treatment and patient education create new employment opportunities, particularly in roles supporting disease management.

Impact of Lung Disease

Impact of Lung Disease

Media

Have to warn people of the dangers of Lung Desies
Do camercails about how to pervent people from have this desies.
Warn peopleabout the danger of smokeing.
Do camercails about people being affected by lung desies

Idaviduals

People with Cystic Fibrosis have a hard time living
Anger due to the fact that they have to spend all there time in the clinic. Makes them tired and cut down of what they where planing.
Living in fear if they are dieing
Having hard time doing different types of actives. Shortness of breath (feeling like you have ran a marathon).
Over 3 million Canadians cope with one of five serious respiratory diseases.
Affect individuals of all ages, cultures and backgrounds from children to parents to grandparents.
Asthma, Tb, COPD, Lung Cancer
People who are thought that smoke was cool
Long Term

Many different types of desieses caused by somkeing makes it difficult to breath.

Having a hard time leaving the house

Hard time liveing

Short Term

People thought that they could stop any time

Because every one else was doing it

Didn't want to the odd man out

Asthma
Hard time breathing
Any thing can cause you asthma to pop up.

Theodosius to take all of the medication

Need to take many and different types of medication

COPD in Canada is greatly underestimate.
On average, 58 Canadians died from lung cancer every day.
On average, 78 Canadians were diagnosed with lung cancer every day.
28,600 Canadians were diagnosed with lung cancer. This represents 14% of all new cancer cases in 2017.
Asthama reates continue to climb.
Emergency room visits and hospitalization suggest that many individuals with asthma require help in keeping their disease under control.
The prevalence of self-reported asthma is higher among women than men and is increasing for both sexes.

Economey

If no further enhancements are made to strategies for dealing with respiratory diseases.
Policies to further reduce and modify the risk factors for the three diseases—lung cancer, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease—could reduce future costs substantially.
The annual economic burden is projected to double by 2030.
Three major chronic lung diseases cost Canada’s economy $12 billion in 2010.
COPD is the leading cause of hospitalization. A large number of Canadians with COPD and asthma also remain undiagnosed.
Overall, chronic lung disease accounts for more than 6% of annual health-care costs in Canada.

Employment

Development of new, more effective treatment approaches.
Will lead to expansion of services such as equipment required in the treatment of sleep apnea.
Lead to the creation of new jobs to support patient education and disease self‐management, including asthma and COPD educators
Lung disease is a leading cause of degraded job performance and production losses from short‐term disability.
Haveing a high chance of getting bankrupt.
Higher tax revenues, contributing to deficit reduction, as Canadians with lung disease work and live longer.

Family

Asthama can be caught in diffrent age grops
Almost 8.3% of Canadians who are 12 yeras or younger have Asthma.
In 2018 almost 2,591,800 was the cost for familes whose children are 12 years haveing Asthma.
COPD was once commen in men than a women under the age of 75.
Families and for the delivery of comprehensive hospital and community services.
The projected increase in the number of individuals with COPD will have major implications.

Healthcare

Respiratory diseases exert a significant economic impact on the Canadian health care system.
An additional $6.72 billion for less visible (indirect) expenses associated with disability and mortality.
This accounts for nearly $5.70 billion in direct costs of health care, such as for hospitalization, physician visits, research and drugs.
Almost 6.5% of total health care costs were related to respiratory diseases not includeing lung cancer.
2.0 million are living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Collectively, there is also an impact in terms of lost productivity and health care costs, especially considering the increasing prevalence of both asthma and COPD.
Individuals living with asthma or COPD may experience impaired participation in daily life, school, work, and social activities.
Both of which can impact a person's ability to breathe.
Canada is facing a wave of chronic respiratory diseases.
The corresponding increase in demand for services will pose a significant challenge for the health care system due to the fact of resorses.
Many can be tied to an aging population, the number of people with respiratory diseases can be expected to increase.