• Am J Manag Care · May 2014

    Observational Study

    Healthcare utilization and costs in persons with insomnia in a managed care population.

    • Louise H Anderson, Robin R Whitebird, Jennifer Schultz, Charlene E McEvoy, Mary Jo Kreitzer, and Cynthia R Gross.
    • Am J Manag Care. 2014 May 1; 20 (5): e157-65.

    ObjectivesTo better understand the direct costs of insomnia. Our study aimed to compare healthcare costs and utilization of patients diagnosed with insomnia who received care in a managed care organization with a set of matched controls.DesignOur observational, retrospective cohort study compared 7647 adults with an insomnia diagnosis with an equally sized matched cohort of health plan members without an insomnia diagnosis between 2003 and 2006. We also compared a subset of patients diagnosed with and treated for insomnia with those diagnosed with insomnia but not treated.SettingA large Midwestern health plan with more than 600,000 members.ResultsMultivariate analysis was used to estimate the association between insomnia diagnosis and costs, controlling for covariates, in the baseline and follow-up periods. Although we cannot conclude a causal relationship between insomnia and healthcare costs, our analysis found that insomnia diagnosis was associated with 26% higher costs in the baseline and 46% in the 12 months after diagnosis. When comorbidities were recognized, the insomnia cohort had 80% higher costs, on average, than the matched control cohort.ConclusionsThese outcomes suggest the need to look beyond the direct cost of insomnia to how its interaction with comorbid conditions drives healthcare cost and utilization.

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