Health and Social Policy, Deloitte Access Economics, Sydney, Australia.
Division of Adolescent/Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital; Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Eat Disord. 2024 Nov-Dec;32(6):572-602. doi: 10.1080/10640266.2024.2328461. Epub 2024 Mar 23.
This study estimated the social and economic costs of body dissatisfaction and appearance-based discrimination (specifically, weight and skin-shade discrimination) in the United States (USA) in the 2019 calendar year. We used a prevalence-based approach and a cost-of-illness method to estimate the annual cost of harmful appearance ideals for cases of body dissatisfaction and discrimination based on weight and skin shade. Impacts on conditions/illnesses such as eating disorders that are attributable to body dissatisfaction, weight discrimination and skin-shade discrimination were identified through a quasi-systematic literature review, which captured financial, economic, and non-financial costs. For each impact attributable to body dissatisfaction or appearance-based discrimination, annual health system and productivity costs (or labor market costs) were primarily estimated by using a population attributable fraction methodology. Only direct costs that resulted from body dissatisfaction and appearance-based discrimination were included (for example, costs associated with conditions such as depression attributable to body dissatisfaction or appearance-based discrimination). In contrast, indirect costs (e.g. costs associated with a health condition developed following skin bleaching, which was undertaken as a result of body dissatisfaction) were not included. In 2019 body dissatisfaction incurred $84 billion in financial and economic costs and $221 billion through reduced well-being. Financial costs of weight discrimination and skin-shade discrimination were estimated to be $200 billion and $63 billion, respectively, and reduced well-being was estimated to be $206.7 billion due to weight discrimination and $8.4 billion due to skin-shade discrimination. Sensitivity testing revealed the costs likely range between $226 billion and $507 billion for body dissatisfaction, between $175 billion and $537 billion for skin-shade discrimination, and between $126 billion and $265 billion for weight discrimination. This study demonstrates that the prevalence and economic costs of body dissatisfaction and weight and skin-shade discrimination are substantial, which underscores the urgency of identifying policy actions designed to promote prevention.
本研究估算了 2019 年美国身体不满和基于外貌的歧视(具体为体重和肤色歧视)的社会和经济成本。我们采用基于流行率的方法和疾病成本法来估算身体不满和基于体重与肤色的歧视的有害外貌理想所造成的年度成本。通过准系统文献综述确定了与身体不满、体重歧视和肤色歧视相关的疾病/病症(如饮食失调)的影响,该综述涵盖了财务、经济和非财务成本。对于归因于身体不满或基于外貌的歧视的每种影响,主要通过人群归因分数方法来估算年度卫生系统和生产力成本(或劳动力市场成本)。仅包括与身体不满和基于外貌的歧视直接相关的直接成本(例如,归因于身体不满或基于外貌的歧视的抑郁症等病症相关的成本)。相比之下,间接成本(例如,因身体美白而导致的健康状况发展所产生的成本,而身体美白是由身体不满引起的)则不包括在内。2019 年,身体不满造成 840 亿美元的财务和经济成本,2210 亿美元的福利损失。体重歧视和肤色歧视的财务成本估计分别为 2000 亿美元和 630 亿美元,由于体重歧视,福利损失估计为 2067 亿美元,由于肤色歧视,福利损失估计为 84 亿美元。敏感性测试显示,身体不满的成本可能在 2260 亿美元至 5070 亿美元之间,肤色歧视的成本可能在 1750 亿美元至 5370 亿美元之间,体重歧视的成本可能在 1260 亿美元至 2650 亿美元之间。本研究表明,身体不满、体重和肤色歧视的流行率和经济成本相当高,这突显了迫切需要确定旨在促进预防的政策行动。