Global Health Outcomes, Eli Lilly and Company, Lilly Corporate Center, DC 1833, Indianapolis, IN 46285, USA.
Sleep. 2011 Apr 1;34(4):443-50. doi: 10.1093/sleep/34.4.443.
Insomnia is a chronic condition with significant burden on health care and productivity costs. Despite this recognized burden, very few studies have examined associations between insomnia severity and healthcare and productivity costs.
A retrospective study linking health claims data with a telephone survey of members of a health plan in the Midwestern region of the United States.
The total healthcare costs study sample consisted of 2086 health plan members who completed the survey and who had complete health claims data. The productivity costs sample consisted of 1329 health plan members who worked for pay-a subset of the total healthcare costs sample.
Subjects' age, gender, demographic variables, comorbidities, and total health care costs were ascertained using health claims. Insomnia severity and lost productivity related variables were assessed using telephone interview.
Compared with the no insomnia group, mean total healthcare costs were 75% larger in the group with moderate and severe insomnia ($1323 vs. $757, P<0.05). Compared with the no insomnia group, mean lost productivity costs were 72% larger in the moderate and severe insomnia group ($1739 vs. $1013, P<0.001). Chronic medical comorbidities and psychiatric comorbidities were positively associated with health care cost. In contrast, psychiatric comorbidities were associated with lost productivity; while, medical comorbidities were not associated with lost productivity.
Health care and lost productivity costs were consistently found to be greater in moderate and severe insomniacs compared with non-insomniacs. Factors associated with lost productivity and health care costs may be fundamentally different and may require different kinds of interventions. Future studies should focus on better understanding mechanisms linking insomnia to healthcare and productivity costs and to understanding whether developing targeted interventions will reduce these costs.
失眠是一种慢性疾病,给医疗保健和生产力成本带来了巨大负担。尽管这种负担已被广泛认识,但很少有研究探讨失眠严重程度与医疗保健和生产力成本之间的关系。
一项回顾性研究,将健康保险索赔数据与美国中西部地区一项健康计划成员的电话调查相联系。
总医疗成本研究样本包括 2086 名完成调查且拥有完整健康保险索赔数据的健康计划成员。生产力成本样本包括 1329 名为薪酬工作的健康计划成员,他们是总医疗成本样本的一个子集。
使用健康保险索赔确定受试者的年龄、性别、人口统计学变量、合并症和总医疗保健费用。使用电话访谈评估失眠严重程度和与生产力损失相关的变量。
与无失眠组相比,中度和重度失眠组的平均总医疗保健费用高出 75%($1323 比$757,P<0.05)。与无失眠组相比,中度和重度失眠组的平均生产力损失成本高出 72%($1739 比$1013,P<0.001)。慢性医疗合并症和精神合并症与医疗保健费用呈正相关。相比之下,精神合并症与生产力损失相关,而医疗合并症与生产力损失无关。
与非失眠者相比,中度和重度失眠者的医疗保健和生产力损失成本明显更高。与生产力损失和医疗保健成本相关的因素可能在根本上有所不同,可能需要不同类型的干预措施。未来的研究应重点关注更好地理解失眠与医疗保健和生产力成本之间的关系机制,并了解开发有针对性的干预措施是否会降低这些成本。