April 5, 2017
Crowdfunding for medical care—seeking financial contributions from a large number of donors, often via social networks, to pay medical expenses—is growing in popularity in both the US and Canada. While the practice can have tangible benefits for some patients, it also raises challenging ethical and equity questions at the social level and for individual donors and campaigners. In this lecture, Professor Valorie Crooks examined some of these questions, identified important directions for ethics-focused research, and discussed what we know about the medical expenses people are seeking to have covered.
Learn more on our website: http://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/events/details/crowdfunding-medical-care
4. WHAT DO THE
NUMBERS TELL US?
GoFundMe reported that in
2014 US$150 million was
raised for medical
crowdfunding
Anticipated 25% growth in the
number of medical
crowdfunding campaigns and
the funds they raise in the
coming years
6. WHAT ACTIVITIES DO CANADIANSWANT TO
COVER THROUGH MEDICAL
CROWDFUNDING? A THEMATIC ANALYSIS
Analysis in progress
7. SEEKING CROWDFUNDS FOR
“The health system in Canada does not recognize chronic
Lyme disease as an illness and has no regulated treatment
to cure it. Even though I was infected by the disease on this
soil, I have to travel internationally to receive treatment.As a
result, I am asking for your help and support to travel to a
specialized Lyme disease and Cancer clinic in Germany.”
Travel & Movement
Daily expenses (parking, gas)
Relocation to be closer to hospital or caregiver
Medical tourism
Shifting from hospital to home, or home to hospital
8. SEEKING CROWDFUNDS FOR
MedicalTreatment & Care
Actual costs of hands on medical care
Experimental treatments
Complementary & alternative care
Pharmaceuticals
Going elsewhere for a second opinion
or better quality care
“We are working with a detox specialist and Herbologist to try and helpTammy.
We have hope we can extend her life for just a little longer so she can enjoy
some time with her son and family.We need funds to help with the cost of the
natural medicine, and we would like to hire a nurse to come and help the family
giveTammy the best possible care.”
9. SEEKING CROWDFUNDS FOR
“All this to say, Rhys is a miracle and he has changed our
families lives for the better. However, medical appointments
and cost of living in a different city, has put a severe strain on
all of us financially. Paying for our empty home all the while
living in a hospital room for 6 months nearly destroyed us.”
Supplement Income
Having to stop work for treatment
Reaching the end of employment insurance benefits
Caregivers needing to stop work
Having to maintain housing in two locations
Having to offset the financial burden to the family unit
Avoiding medical bankruptcy
10. FUND MYTREATMENT!:A CALL FOR ETHICS-
FOCUSED SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH INTO
THE USE OF CROWDFUNDING FOR MEDICAL
CARE
Social Science & Medicine 169 (2016): 27-30.
11. SIGNIFICANT ETHICAL QUESTIONS BECOME APPARENT
Who benefits the most from medical crowdfunding
and how does such crowdfunding affect access to
medical care?
Typically a 5% fee per donation plus a 2.9%
processing fee and 30 cent per transaction fee are
charged. Language on these sites often masks the size
of these fees.
There is great potential for fraudulent campaigns
to be posted.
Websites typically place restrictions on the
purposes funds can be used for.This may restrict
access to treatments that are illegal in the home
country, such as reproductive care or gender
reassignment procedures.
12. SIGNIFICANT ETHICAL QUESTIONS BECOME APPARENT
Websites typically suggest that campaigns focus on
emotional pull rather than actual need.
Websites typically suggest that campaigns be
focused on unexpected need rather than
systemic inequities that have shaped lack of access to
care.
Websites encourage positive messaging and
communication. For example,YouCaring:“include
photos that show a positive, determined outlook in
the face of adversity.”
How does medical crowdfunding affect our
understanding of the causes of inadequate access to
medical care?
13. SIGNIFICANT ETHICAL QUESTIONS BECOME APPARENT
How can campaigner and donor privacy be affected
by the practice of medical crowdfunding?
Websites encourage and sometimes even require
disclosure of personal information for wide
circulation.
Campaigns are open and searchable by online
search engines, meaning individuals retain little
control over who gains access to their information.
Campaigners are advised to set their social media
security settings to ‘public’ to facilitate maximum
exposure.
14. APPEALING TOTHE CROWD: ETHICAL
JUSTIFICATIONS IN CANADIAN MEDICAL
CROWDFUNDING CAMPAIGNS
Journal of Medical Ethics, in press, doi:10.1136/medethics- 2016-103933
15. ETHICAL JUSTIFICATIONS
Personal connections between the recipient and the
donor
Campaigns typically appeal to known individuals
”I’m guessing that if you’re reading this, you know and love
Steve.”
Personal relationships are framed through an
obligation to donate
“I truly believe that when we have someone we care about
in need, we should gather around them as one big family
and help as much as possible.”
16. ETHICAL JUSTIFICATIONS
Detailed, and sometimes even graphic, descriptions
of illness or injury
Focus on how need for support is impacting
others
Explanations of how need can be addressed
through financial assistance
The recipients’ need for help and the good that can
be done through donation
17. ETHICAL JUSTIFICATIONS
Giving back to recipients who have previously helped
others
Emphasize the selfless nature of campaign recipients
“compassionate, loving, giving and one of the most caring
women on this planet.”
”literally one of those people who would give you the shirt
off his back.”
Articulate previous ‘good deeds’ performed by the
recipient
A “person who was always there for others when needed,
and now its come to a time in his life where he needs us.”
18. INJUSTICE &
INEQUITY
Health system, health and social
care, and insurance-based
inequities were rarely mentioned
in campaigns or cited as a
justification for the funding
request.
Is this masking exposure to
injustice or unfair circumstances?
And does the presence of
crowdfunding lessen pressure for
reform?
20. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Collaborators: Drs. Jeremy Snyder and Peter Chow-White
Research Assistants:Annalise Mathers and AnikaVassell
Funding: Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Valorie Crooks holds the Canada Research Chair in Health Service Geographies and a Scholar Award from the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research