Hoffman C, Rice D, Sung H Y
Institute for Health and Aging at the University of California, San Francisco, USA.
JAMA. 1996 Nov 13;276(18):1473-9.
To determine (1) the number and proportion of Americans living with chronic conditions, and (2) the magnitude of their costs, including direct costs (annual personal health expenditures) and indirect costs to society (lost productivity due to chronic conditions and premature death).
Analysis of the 1987 National Medical Expenditure Survey for prevalence and direct health care costs; indirect costs based on the 1990 National Health Interview Survey and Vital Statistics of the United States.
US population.
For the estimate of prevalence and direct costs, the National Medical Expenditure Survey sample of persons who reported health conditions associated with (1) use of health services or supplies or (2) periods of disability.
None.
The number of persons with chronic conditions, their annual direct health care costs, and indirect costs from lost productivity and premature deaths.
In 1987, 90 million Americans were living with chronic conditions, 39 million of whom were living with more than 1 chronic condition. Over 45% of noninstitutionalized Americans have 1 or more chronic conditions and their direct health care costs account for three fourths of US health care expenditures. Total costs projected to 1990 for people with chronic conditions amounted to $659 billion--$425 billion for direct health care costs and $234 billion in indirect costs.
The prevalence and costs of chronic conditions as a whole have rarely been estimated. Because the number of persons with limitations due to chronic conditions is more regularly reported in the literature, the total prevalence of chronic conditions has perhaps been minimized. The majority of persons with chronic conditions are not disabled, nor are they elderly. Chronic conditions affect all ages. Because persons with chronic conditions have greater health needs at any age, their costs are disproportionately high.
确定(1)患有慢性病的美国人数量及比例,以及(2)其成本规模,包括直接成本(年度个人医疗支出)和社会间接成本(慢性病导致的生产力损失和过早死亡)。
分析1987年国家医疗支出调查的患病率和直接医疗成本;基于1990年国家健康访谈调查和美国生命统计数据的间接成本。
美国人口。
对于患病率和直接成本的估计,国家医疗支出调查样本为报告了与(1)使用医疗服务或用品或(2)残疾期相关的健康状况的人员。
无。
慢性病患者数量、其年度直接医疗成本以及生产力损失和过早死亡导致的间接成本。
1987年,9000万美国人患有慢性病,其中3900万人患有不止一种慢性病。超过45%的非机构化美国人患有1种或更多慢性病,他们的直接医疗成本占美国医疗支出的四分之三。预计到1990年,慢性病患者的总成本达6590亿美元——直接医疗成本4250亿美元,间接成本2340亿美元。
慢性病总体的患病率和成本很少被估计。由于文献中更经常报告因慢性病导致受限的人数,慢性病的总体患病率可能被低估了。大多数慢性病患者并非残疾,也不是老年人。慢性病影响所有年龄段。由于慢性病患者在任何年龄都有更大的健康需求,他们的成本高得不成比例。