Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Division of Diabetes Translation, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Am J Prev Med. 2017 Dec;53(6S2):S182-S189. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.07.018.
Hypertension and diabetes, both independent risk factors for cardiovascular disease, often coexist. The hypertension-increased medical expenditures by diabetes status is unclear, however. This study estimated annual total medical expenditures in U.S. adults by hypertension and diabetes status.
The study population consisted of 40,746 civilian, non-institutionalized adults aged ≥18 years who participated in the 2013 or 2014 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. The authors separately estimated hypertension-increased medical expenditures using two-part econometric and generalized linear models for the total; diabetes (n=4,396); and non-diabetes (n=36,250) populations and adjusted the results into 2014 U.S. dollars. Data were analyzed in 2017 and estimated the hypertension-increased medical expenditures by type of medical service and payment source.
The prevalence of hypertension was 34.9%, 78.3%, and 30.1% for the total, diabetes, and non-diabetes populations, respectively. The respective mean unadjusted annual per capita medical expenditures were $5,225, $12,715, and $4,390. After controlling for potential confounders, hypertension-increased expenditures were $2,565, $4,434, and $2,276 for total, diabetes, and non-diabetes populations, respectively (all p<0.001). The hypertension-increased expenditure was highest for inpatient stays among the diabetes population ($1,730, p<0.001), and highest for medication among the non-diabetes population ($687, p<0.001). By payment source, Medicare ranked first in hypertension-increased expenditures for the diabetes ($2,753) and second for the non-diabetes ($669) populations (both p<0.001).
Hypertension-increased medical expenditures were substantial and varied by medical service type and payment sources. These findings may be useful as inputs for cost- effectiveness evaluations of hypertension interventions by diabetes status.
高血压和糖尿病都是心血管疾病的独立危险因素,它们通常同时存在。然而,高血压患者的医疗支出因糖尿病状态而异,目前尚不清楚。本研究旨在评估美国成年人中高血压和糖尿病状态对医疗支出的影响。
研究人群为年龄≥18 岁、参加 2013 年或 2014 年医疗支出调查的 40746 名平民、非住院成年人。作者分别使用两部分经济计量和广义线性模型,针对总人群、糖尿病人群(n=4396)和非糖尿病人群(n=36250),估计高血压增加的医疗支出,并将结果调整为 2014 年的美元。数据于 2017 年进行分析,并根据医疗服务类型和支付来源,估计高血压增加的医疗支出。
总人群、糖尿病人群和非糖尿病人群的高血压患病率分别为 34.9%、78.3%和 30.1%。未经调整的人均年医疗支出分别为 5225 美元、12715 美元和 4390 美元。在控制了潜在的混杂因素后,总人群、糖尿病人群和非糖尿病人群的高血压增加支出分别为 2565 美元、4434 美元和 2276 美元(均 P<0.001)。糖尿病患者中,高血压增加的支出主要来自住院治疗(1730 美元,P<0.001),而非糖尿病患者中,高血压增加的支出主要来自药物治疗(687 美元,P<0.001)。按支付来源划分,医疗保险在糖尿病人群(2753 美元)和非糖尿病人群(669 美元)的高血压增加支出中均排名第一(均 P<0.001)。
高血压增加的医疗支出相当可观,且因医疗服务类型和支付来源而异。这些发现可能有助于评估针对糖尿病患者的高血压干预措施的成本效益。