National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Am J Prev Med. 2018 Oct;55(4):433-444. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2018.04.049. Epub 2018 Aug 22.
This study estimated the U.S. lifetime per-victim cost and economic burden of intimate partner violence.
Data from previous studies were combined with 2012 U.S. National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey data in a mathematical model. Intimate partner violence was defined as contact sexual violence, physical violence, or stalking victimization with related impact (e.g., missed work days). Costs included attributable impaired health, lost productivity, and criminal justice costs from the societal perspective. Mean age at first victimization was assessed as 25 years. Future costs were discounted by 3%. The main outcome measures were the mean per-victim (female and male) and total population (or economic burden) lifetime cost of intimate partner violence. Secondary outcome measures were marginal outcome probabilities among victims (e.g., anxiety disorder) and associated costs. Analysis was conducted in 2017.
The estimated intimate partner violence lifetime cost was $103,767 per female victim and $23,414 per male victim, or a population economic burden of nearly $3.6 trillion (2014 US$) over victims' lifetimes, based on 43 million U.S. adults with victimization history. This estimate included $2.1 trillion (59% of total) in medical costs, $1.3 trillion (37%) in lost productivity among victims and perpetrators, $73 billion (2%) in criminal justice activities, and $62 billion (2%) in other costs, including victim property loss or damage. Government sources pay an estimated $1.3 trillion (37%) of the lifetime economic burden.
Preventing intimate partner violence is possible and could avoid substantial costs. These findings can inform the potential benefit of prioritizing prevention, as well as evaluation of implemented prevention strategies.
本研究估算了美国终生每例受害者成本和亲密伴侣暴力的经济负担。
在数学模型中,将先前研究的数据与 2012 年美国国家亲密伴侣和性暴力调查数据相结合。亲密伴侣暴力被定义为接触性暴力、身体暴力或跟踪受害者及其相关影响(例如,旷工天数)。从社会角度来看,成本包括归因于健康受损、生产力损失和刑事司法成本。首次受害的平均年龄评估为 25 岁。未来成本贴现 3%。主要结果指标为亲密伴侣暴力每例受害者(女性和男性)和总人口(或经济负担)终生成本的平均值。次要结果指标是受害者(例如焦虑症)的边际结果概率及其相关成本。分析于 2017 年进行。
根据 4300 万具有受害史的美国成年人的数据,估计亲密伴侣暴力终生成本为每位女性受害者 103767 美元,每位男性受害者 23414 美元,或近 3.6 万亿美元(2014 年美元)的人口经济负担。这一估计包括 2.1 万亿美元(59%)的医疗费用、受害者和施害者丧失生产力的 1.3 万亿美元(37%)、730 亿美元(2%)的刑事司法活动和 620 亿美元(2%)的其他成本,包括受害者财产损失或损坏。政府来源估计支付终生经济负担的 1.3 万亿美元(37%)。
预防亲密伴侣暴力是可能的,可以避免大量成本。这些发现可以为优先考虑预防措施提供潜在的好处,并为评估已实施的预防策略提供信息。