This paper by presents some very useful information about vitamin use and NTDmultiples. We wish to offer two comments. 1. In our population-based case control study in Western Australia , we estimated the effect of dietary folate intake for the 13 cases of NTD multiples included in the study, comp
Methods for developing useful estimates of the costs associated with birth defects
✍ Scribed by Amy P. Case; Mark A. Canfield
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 75 KB
- Volume
- 85
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1542-0752
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Cost estimates for birth defects are useful to policy makers in deciding the best use of resources to prevent these conditions. Much of the effort in this area has focused on spina bifida, in part because cost savings can be estimated from folic acid–preventable cases. However, comprehensive cost‐of‐illness estimates for this condition may be too outdated, too general, or not applicable to individual states' environments.
METHODS:
Using the live birth prevalence for spina bifida in Texas, we applied recent spina bifida cost estimates to approximate total lifetime medical and other costs for an average live birth cohort of spina bifida cases in Texas. In addition, we queried various government programs that provide services for persons with spina bifida to provide program‐specific annual costs for this condition.
RESULTS:
Applying a recently published average lifetime medical cost of $635,000 per case of spina bifida to the average annual birth cohort of 120 Texas cases, an estimated $76 million in direct and indirect medical and other costs will be incurred in Texas over the life span of that cohort. Examples of estimated medical costs for one year are $5 million for infants using actual employer‐paid insurance claims data and $6 million combined for children in two public sector programs.
DISCUSSION:
Stakeholders and state policy makers may look to state birth defects registries for useful cost data. Although comprehensive state‐specific figures are not available, applying prevalence data to existing estimates and obtaining actual claims and program expenditures may help close this information gap. Birth Defects Research (Part A) 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract ## BACKGROUND: Weight loss products are frequently used by reproductive‐aged women and these products may be taken (inadvertently or intentionally) during pregnancy. This study assessed the association between periconceptional use of weight loss products and major structural birth defe
The role of periconceptional folic acid in the prevention of neural tube defects (NTDs) is well established. However, it is not clear whether a protective effect exists for the subset of nonsyndromic NTD with other "unrelated" major structural birth defects (NTD-multiples). This question is importan
## Abstract A __post hoc__ analysis of data from a prospective cost‐effectiveness analysis (CEA) conducted alongside a randomized controlled trial (National Emphysema Treatment Trial – NETT) was used to assess the impact of using different imputation methods for missing quality of life data on the
## Abstract Genome‐wide association (GWA) study is becoming a powerful tool in deciphering genetic basis of complex human diseases/traits. Currently, the univariate analysis is the most commonly used method to identify genes associated with a certain disease/phenotype under study. A major limitatio