Diabetes Care. 2008 Mar;31(3):596-615. doi: 10.2337/dc08-9017.
The prevalence of diabetes continues to grow, with the number of people in the U.S. with diagnosed diabetes now reaching 17.5 million. The objectives of this study are to quantify the economic burden of diabetes caused by increased health resource use and lost productivity, and to provide a detailed breakdown of the costs attributed to diabetes.
This study uses a prevalence-based approach that combines the demographics of the population in 2007 with diabetes prevalence rates and other epidemiological data, health care costs, and economic data into a Cost of Diabetes Model. Health resource use and associated medical costs are analyzed by age, sex, type of medical condition, and health resource category. Data sources include national surveys and claims databases, as well as a proprietary database that contains annual medical claims for 16.3 million people in 2006.
The total estimated cost of diabetes in 2007 is $174 billion, including $116 billion in excess medical expenditures and $58 billion in reduced national productivity. Medical costs attributed to diabetes include $27 billion for care to directly treat diabetes, $58 billion to treat the portion of diabetes-related chronic complications that are attributed to diabetes, and $31 billon in excess general medical costs. The largest components of medical expenditures attributed to diabetes are hospital inpatient care (50% of total cost), diabetes medication and supplies (12%), retail prescriptions to treat complications of diabetes (11%), and physician office visits (9%). People with diagnosed diabetes incur average expenditures of $11,744 per year, of which $6,649 is attributed to diabetes. People with diagnosed diabetes, on average, have medical expenditures that are approximately 2.3 times higher than what expenditures would be in the absence of diabetes. For the cost categories analyzed, approximately $1 in $5 health care dollars in the U.S. is spent caring for someone with diagnosed diabetes, while approximately $1 in $10 health care dollars is attributed to diabetes. Indirect costs include increased absenteeism ($2.6 billion) and reduced productivity while at work ($20.0 billion) for the employed population, reduced productivity for those not in the labor force ($0.8 billion), unemployment from disease-related disability ($7.9 billion), and lost productive capacity due to early mortality ($26.9 billion).
The actual national burden of diabetes is likely to exceed the $174 billion estimate because it omits the social cost of intangibles such as pain and suffering, care provided by nonpaid caregivers, excess medical costs associated with undiagnosed diabetes, and diabetes-attributed costs for health care expenditures categories omitted from this study. Omitted from this analysis are expenditure categories such as health care system administrative costs, over-the-counter medications, clinician training programs, and research and infrastructure development. The burden of diabetes is imposed on all sectors of society-higher insurance premiums paid by employees and employers, reduced earnings through productivity loss, and reduced overall quality of life for people with diabetes and their families and friends.
糖尿病的患病率持续上升,目前美国确诊糖尿病的人数已达1750万。本研究的目的是量化因卫生资源使用增加和生产力损失导致的糖尿病经济负担,并详细分析糖尿病相关成本。
本研究采用基于患病率的方法,将2007年的人口统计学数据与糖尿病患病率及其他流行病学数据、医疗保健成本和经济数据整合到糖尿病成本模型中。按年龄、性别、疾病类型和卫生资源类别分析卫生资源使用情况及相关医疗成本。数据来源包括全国性调查和理赔数据库,以及一个专有数据库,该数据库包含2006年1630万人的年度医疗理赔信息。
2007年糖尿病的总估计成本为1740亿美元,其中包括1160亿美元的额外医疗支出和580亿美元的国民生产力下降损失。糖尿病相关的医疗成本包括直接治疗糖尿病的费用270亿美元、治疗糖尿病相关慢性并发症的费用580亿美元,以及额外的一般医疗成本310亿美元。糖尿病相关医疗支出的最大组成部分是医院住院护理(占总成本的50%)、糖尿病药物和用品(12%)、治疗糖尿病并发症的零售处方药(11%)和医生门诊(9%)。确诊糖尿病患者每年的平均支出为11744美元,其中6649美元归因于糖尿病。确诊糖尿病患者的医疗支出平均比无糖尿病情况下高出约2.3倍。在所分析的成本类别中,美国每5美元的医疗保健费用中约有1美元用于照顾确诊糖尿病患者,而每10美元的医疗保健费用中约有1美元归因于糖尿病。间接成本包括就业人群旷工增加(26亿美元)和工作时生产力下降(200亿美元)、非劳动力人群生产力下降(8亿美元)、因疾病相关残疾导致的失业(79亿美元)以及因过早死亡导致的生产能力损失(269亿美元)。
糖尿病的实际国家负担可能超过1740亿美元的估计值,因为该估计值未包括无形的社会成本,如痛苦、无薪护理人员提供的护理、未确诊糖尿病相关的额外医疗成本,以及本研究未涵盖的医疗保健支出类别中归因于糖尿病的成本。本分析未包括的支出类别有医疗保健系统管理成本、非处方药、临床医生培训项目以及研究和基础设施开发。糖尿病的负担施加于社会的各个层面——员工和雇主支付更高的保险费、因生产力损失导致收入减少,以及糖尿病患者及其家人和朋友的整体生活质量下降。