Deakin Health Economics, Deakin University, Burwood 3125, Victoria, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2011 Jun 21;11:483. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-483.
A large proportion of disease burden is attributed to behavioural risk factors. However, funding for public health programs in Australia remains limited. Government and non-government organisations are interested in the productivity effects on society from reducing chronic diseases. We aimed to estimate the potential health status and economic benefits to society following a feasible reduction in the prevalence of six behavioural risk factors: tobacco smoking; inadequate fruit and vegetable consumption; high risk alcohol consumption; high body mass index; physical inactivity; and intimate partner violence.
Simulation models were developed for the 2008 Australian population. A realistic reduction in current risk factor prevalence using best available evidence with expert consensus was determined. Avoidable disease, deaths, Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) and health sector costs were estimated. Productivity gains included workforce (friction cost method), household production and leisure time. Multivariable uncertainty analyses and correction for the joint effects of risk factors on health status were undertaken. Consistent methods and data sources were used.
Over the lifetime of the 2008 Australian adult population, total opportunity cost savings of AUD2,334 million (95% Uncertainty Interval AUD1,395 to AUD3,347; 64% in the health sector) were found if feasible reductions in the risk factors were achieved. There would be 95,000 fewer DALYs (a reduction of about 3.6% in total DALYs for Australia); 161,000 less new cases of disease; 6,000 fewer deaths; a reduction of 5 million days in workforce absenteeism; and 529,000 increased days of leisure time.
Reductions in common behavioural risk factors may provide substantial benefits to society. For example, the total potential annual cost savings in the health sector represent approximately 2% of total annual health expenditure in Australia. Our findings contribute important new knowledge about productivity effects, including the potential for increased household and leisure activities, associated with chronic disease prevention. The selection of targets for risk factor prevalence reduction is an important policy decision and a useful approach for future analyses. Similar approaches could be applied in other countries if the data are available.
很大一部分疾病负担归因于行为风险因素。然而,澳大利亚的公共卫生计划资金仍然有限。政府和非政府组织都对减少慢性病对社会的生产力影响感兴趣。我们旨在估计在可行的降低六种行为风险因素(吸烟、蔬果摄入不足、高危饮酒、高身体质量指数、缺乏身体活动和亲密伴侣暴力)的流行率后,对社会的潜在健康状况和经济效益。
为 2008 年澳大利亚人口开发了仿真模型。使用最佳现有证据和专家共识,确定了当前风险因素流行率的实际降低。使用摩擦成本法计算了劳动力、家庭生产和休闲时间的生产力收益。避免了可预防的疾病、死亡、伤残调整生命年(DALYs)和卫生部门的费用。进行了多变量不确定性分析,并对风险因素对健康状况的联合影响进行了校正。使用了一致的方法和数据来源。
在 2008 年澳大利亚成年人的一生中,如果可行地降低风险因素,将节省 23.34 亿澳元(95%不确定区间 13.95 亿至 33.47 亿澳元;卫生部门 64%)。DALY 将减少 9.5 万(澳大利亚总 DALY 减少约 3.6%);新发病例减少 16.1 万例;死亡人数减少 6000 人;劳动力缺勤减少 500 万天;休闲时间增加 52.9 万天。
降低常见行为风险因素可能会给社会带来巨大的好处。例如,卫生部门的潜在年总成本节约约占澳大利亚年卫生总支出的 2%。我们的研究结果为与慢性病预防相关的生产力影响提供了重要的新知识,包括家庭和休闲活动增加的潜力。选择降低风险因素流行率的目标是一个重要的政策决策,也是未来分析的一个有用方法。如果有数据,类似的方法可以在其他国家应用。