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Health promotion practice · Jul 2007
The economic burden of chronic cardiovascular disease for major insurers.
- Justin G Trogdon, Eric A Finkelstein, Isaac A Nwaise, Florence K Tangka, and Diane Orenstein.
- RTI International in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA.
- Health Promot Pract. 2007 Jul 1;8(3):234-42.
AbstractAccounting models provide less precise estimates of disease burden than do econometric models. The authors seek to improve these estimates for cardiovascular disease using a nationally representative survey and econometric modeling to isolate the proportion of medical expenditures attributable to four chronic cardiovascular diseases: stroke, hypertension, congestive heart failure, and other heart diseases. Approximately 17% of all medical expenditures, or $149 billion annually, and nearly 30% of Medicare expenditures are attributable to these diseases. Of the four diseases, hypertension accounts for the largest share of prescription expenditures across payers and the largest share of all Medicaid expenditures. The large number of people with cardiovascular disease who are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid could lead to large shifts in the burden to these payers as prescription drug coverage is included in Medicare. A societal perspective is important when describing the economic burden of cardiovascular disease.
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