• Hosp Community Psychiatry · Dec 1992

    The economic burden of mental illness.

    • D P Rice, S Kelman, and L S Miller.
    • School of Nursing, University of California, San Francisco 94143.
    • Hosp Community Psychiatry. 1992 Dec 1; 43 (12): 1227-32.

    AbstractMental illness imposes a substantial burden on individuals and society. Using data from national surveys and a newly developed methodology for calculating costs, the authors estimate that in 1985 the total economic costs of mental illness were $103.7 billion. Of this total, direct treatment and support costs were $42.5 billion, or 11.5 percent of total personal health care spending for all illnesses. Morbidity costs--the value of reduced or lost productivity--amounted to $47.4 billion. Mortality costs--the lost value of productivity due to premature death resulting from mental illness--were estimated to be $9.3 billion, or 5.1 percent of total productivity losses for all deaths. Other related costs, including the cost of caregiver services, amounted to $4.5 billion.

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