疾病费用:美国,1980年。

P E Parsons, R Lichtenstein, S E Berki, H A Murt, J M Lepkowski, S A Stehouwer, J R Landis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1980年,美国非收容人口患病和受伤的总费用达3817亿美元。疾病和伤害的直接成本——用于医疗和牙科疾病的诊断、治疗和管理的资源支出——为1539亿美元,占总成本的40.3%。间接成本——由发病率和死亡率造成的经济损失——为2279亿美元,占总成本的59.7%。在间接成本中,1049亿美元是由于发病率造成的生产力损失,1230亿美元是根据4%的净有效贴现率计算的过早死亡造成的生产力损失的现值。这些估计是基于1980年代的数据。国家医疗保健利用和支出调查(NMCUES),不同于1980年对疾病和伤害成本的其他估计(Gibson和Waldo, 1982;Rice, Hodgson, and Kopstein, 1985)。这种差异可以解决,主要归因于两个因素:(1)nmcue仅包括非机构人口的平民,但其他估计包括机构人口和军人;(2) nmcue对无法工作人口的间接成本估计包括1979年和1980年因健康原因退休的人,残疾家庭主妇,以及1980年全年残疾但在1979年因健康原因未退休的其他人员,但Rice等人的估计不包括无法工作人口中的后两类。nmcue关于非收容平民人口疾病总成本的主要调查结果强化了考虑分配效应的重要性。65岁及65岁以上的人占这一人口的十分之一,但其直接费用占四分之一以上,超过其在总费用中的份额,即使不包括被收容的老年人。这一年龄组总费用的三分之二以上是直接费用。17岁以下人群的直接成本也占总成本的三分之二以上。然而,这个最年轻的年龄组占非收容平民人口的四分之一以上,只产生12.3%的直接费用。相比之下,间接成本占劳动年龄人口(17-64岁)总成本的60%以上。在工作年龄人口中,非完全参加劳动力的人均直接成本最高,其中许多人由于受伤或健康不佳而没有全职工作或根本没有工作。(摘要删节为400字)
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Costs of illness: United States, 1980.

The total costs of illness and injury in the U.S. civilian noninstitutionalized population in 1980 amounted to $381.7 billion. The direct costs of illness and injury--resource expenditures for the diagnosis, treatment, and management of medical and dental conditions--were $153.9 billion, or 40.3 percent of total costs. Indirect costs--economic losses from morbidity and mortality--were $227.9 billion, or 59.7 percent of total costs. Of indirect costs, $104.9 billion resulted from productivity losses because of morbidity, and $123.0 billion represent the present value of lost productivity from premature mortality based on a net effective discount rate of 4 percent. These estimates, based on data from the 1980. National Medical Care Utilization and Expenditure Survey (NMCUES), differ from other estimates of the costs of illness and injury in 1980 (Gibson and Waldo, 1982; Rice, Hodgson, and Kopstein, 1985). The differences, which can be resolved, are attributable to two major factors: (1) NMCUES includes only the civilian noninstitutionalized population, but the other estimates include the institutionalized population and the military; and (2) NMCUES indirect cost estimates for the population unable to work include persons who were retired for health reasons in 1979 and 1980, disabled homemakers, and other persons who were disabled for the entire year 1980 but were not retired for health reasons in 1979, but the Rice et al. estimates do not include the last two categories in the population unable to work. The principal NMCUES findings on the total costs of illness in the civilian noninstitutionalized population reinforce the importance of considering distributional effects. Persons 65 years of age and over represent one-tenth of this population yet account for more than one-fourth of direct costs and more than their share of total costs, even though the institutionalized elderly are excluded. More than two-thirds of total costs for this age category are accounted for by direct costs. Direct costs also account for more than two-thirds of total costs for people under 17 years of age. However, this youngest age category, which constitutes over one-fourth of the civilian noninstitutionalized population, generates only 12.3 percent of direct costs. In contrast, indirect costs account for well more than 60 percent of total costs for the working-age population (17-64 years of age). Within the working-age population, per capita direct costs are highest among persons who are not full participants in the work force, many of whom are not working full time or at all because of injury or ill health.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Determinants of total family charges for health care: United States, 1980. Health care utilization and costs of adult cardiovascular conditions United States, 1980. Determinants of financially burdensome family health expenses: United States, 1980. Disability, utilization, and costs associated with musculoskeletal conditions. Incidence, utilization, and costs associated with acute respiratory conditions, United States, 1980.
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