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- Benjamin G Druss, Steven C Marcus, Mark Olfson, and Harold Alan Pincus.
- Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, USA.
- Health Aff (Millwood). 2002 Jul 1; 21 (4): 105-11.
AbstractThis study uses a nationally representative survey to identify the most expensive conditions in the United States and to examine the association between spending and disability. The most expensive conditions at a population level were ischemic heart disease and motor vehicle accidents; at the per capita level they were respiratory malignancies. There was not a significant association between rank order of treatment costs and disability; the conditions with the greatest disability relative to expenditures were mood disorders, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and arthropathies. We use the findings to discuss the role for cost-of-illness and burden-of-disease estimates in setting priorities.
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