## Abstract ## Objective To obtain estimates of medical care expenditures and earnings losses associated with arthritis and other rheumatic conditions and the increment in such costs attributable to arthritis and other rheumatic conditions in the US in 2003, and to compare these estimates with tho
Medical care expenditures and earnings losses of persons with arthritis and other rheumatic conditions in the United States in 1997: Total and incremental estimates
β Scribed by Edward Yelin; Miriam G. Cisternas; David J. Pasta; Laura Trupin; Louise Murphy; Charles G. Helmick
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 90 KB
- Volume
- 50
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0004-3591
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Objective
To provide estimates of the total medical care expenditures and earnings losses associated with arthritis and other rheumatic conditions (AORC), as well as the increment in such costs specifically attributable to these conditions, in the US in 1997.
Methods
The estimates were derived from the 1997 Medical Expenditures Panel Survey (MEPS), a national probability sample of 14,147 households including 34,551 persons, of whom 4,776 selfβreported arthritis. After weighting, those who selfβreported AORC represent 38.4 million persons. We tabulated all medical care expenditures of the adult MEPS respondents, stratified by arthritis and comorbidity status, and then used regression techniques to estimate the increment in health care expenditures attributable to AORC, after taking comorbidity, demographic characteristics, and insurance status into account. Using the same methods, we also estimated the magnitude of the earnings losses sustained by persons of working ages (18β64 years) who had AORC.
Results
Persons with AORC incurred mean total medical care expenditures of $4,865 (total $186.9 billion). The largest components of these expenditures were inpatient care (39%), ambulatory care (29%), and prescriptions (14%). The mean increment in medical care expenditures specifically attributable to AORC among those ages 18 years and older was $1,391 (total βΌ$51.1 billion). Persons with AORC ages 18β64 years earned $3,812 less on average than did other persons of these ages (total $82.4 billion). Of this average, $1,579 was attributable to the AORC (total $35.1 billion).
Conclusion
In 1997, persons with AORC incurred direct and indirect costs of $269.3 billion, of which $86.2 billion was attributable to these conditions.
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