American Diabetes Association, 1701 N. Beauregard Street, Alexandria, VA 22311.
Diabetes Care. 2013 Apr;36(4):1033-46. doi: 10.2337/dc12-2625. Epub 2013 Mar 6.
This study updates previous estimates of the economic burden of diagnosed diabetes and quantifies the increased health resource use and lost productivity associated with diabetes in 2012.
The study uses a prevalence-based approach that combines the demographics of the U.S. population in 2012 with diabetes prevalence, epidemiological data, health care cost, and economic data into a Cost of Diabetes Model. Health resource use and associated medical costs are analyzed by age, sex, race/ethnicity, insurance coverage, medical condition, and health service category. Data sources include national surveys, Medicare standard analytical files, and one of the largest claims databases for the commercially insured population in the U.S.
The total estimated cost of diagnosed diabetes in 2012 is $245 billion, including $176 billion in direct medical costs and $69 billion in reduced productivity. The largest components of medical expenditures are hospital inpatient care (43% of the total medical cost), prescription medications to treat the complications of diabetes (18%), antidiabetic agents and diabetes supplies (12%), physician office visits (9%), and nursing/residential facility stays (8%). People with diagnosed diabetes incur average medical expenditures of about $13,700 per year, of which about $7,900 is attributed to diabetes. People with diagnosed diabetes, on average, have medical expenditures approximately 2.3 times higher than what expenditures would be in the absence of diabetes. For the cost categories analyzed, care for people with diagnosed diabetes accounts for more than 1 in 5 health care dollars in the U.S., and more than half of that expenditure is directly attributable to diabetes. Indirect costs include increased absenteeism ($5 billion) and reduced productivity while at work ($20.8 billion) for the employed population, reduced productivity for those not in the labor force ($2.7 billion), inability to work as a result of disease-related disability ($21.6 billion), and lost productive capacity due to early mortality ($18.5 billion).
The estimated total economic cost of diagnosed diabetes in 2012 is $245 billion, a 41% increase from our previous estimate of $174 billion (in 2007 dollars). This estimate highlights the substantial burden that diabetes imposes on society. Additional components of societal burden omitted from our study include intangibles from pain and suffering, resources from care provided by nonpaid caregivers, and the burden associated with undiagnosed diabetes.
本研究更新了以往对已诊断糖尿病经济负担的估计,并量化了 2012 年糖尿病相关的健康资源利用和生产力损失。
该研究采用基于患病率的方法,将 2012 年美国人口的人口统计学数据与糖尿病患病率、流行病学数据、医疗保健成本和经济数据结合到糖尿病成本模型中。按年龄、性别、种族/族裔、保险覆盖范围、医疗状况和医疗服务类别分析卫生资源利用和相关医疗费用。数据来源包括全国性调查、医疗保险标准分析文件以及美国商业保险人群中最大的索赔数据库之一。
2012 年已诊断糖尿病的总估计费用为 2450 亿美元,其中直接医疗费用 1760 亿美元,生产力下降 690 亿美元。医疗支出最大的组成部分是医院住院治疗(占总医疗费用的 43%)、治疗糖尿病并发症的处方药(18%)、抗糖尿病药物和糖尿病用品(12%)、医生门诊就诊(9%)和护理/住宿设施住院(8%)。患有已诊断糖尿病的人每年的平均医疗支出约为 13700 美元,其中约 7900 美元归因于糖尿病。患有已诊断糖尿病的人,其医疗支出平均比没有糖尿病的情况下高出约 2.3 倍。在所分析的费用类别中,美国每 5 美元医疗保健支出中就有超过 1 美元用于治疗患有已诊断糖尿病的人,而这部分支出中有一半以上是直接归因于糖尿病。间接成本包括增加旷工(50 亿美元)和在职人员工作效率下降(208 亿美元)、非劳动力人口工作效率下降(27 亿美元)、因病致残导致无法工作(216 亿美元)以及因过早死亡导致的生产能力丧失(185 亿美元)。
2012 年已诊断糖尿病的估计总经济成本为 2450 亿美元,比我们之前估计的 2007 年美元的 1740 亿美元增长了 41%。这一估计突显了糖尿病给社会带来的巨大负担。我们的研究还忽略了其他一些社会负担,包括痛苦和苦难带来的无形成本、非付费护理人员提供的护理资源以及未诊断糖尿病带来的负担。