Excess body weight increases the burden of age-associated chronic diseases and their associated health care expenditures
Author(s) -
Vincenzo Atella,
Joanna Kopinska,
Gerardo Medea,
Federico Belotti,
Valeria Tosti,
Andrea Piano Mortari,
Claudio Cricelli,
Luigi Fontana
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.100833
Subject(s) - medicine , overweight , obesity , demography , diabetes mellitus , per capita , observational study , body mass index , residence , disease , health care , chronic disease , gerontology , environmental health , population , endocrinology , sociology , economic growth , economics
Aging and excessive adiposity are both associated with an increased risk of developing multiple chronic diseases, which drive ever increasing health costs. The main aim of this study was to determine the net (non-estimated) health costs of excessive adiposity and associated age-related chronic diseases. We used a prevalence-based approach that combines accurate data from the Health Search CSD-LPD, an observational dataset with patient records collected by Italian general practitioners and up-to-date health care expenditures data from the SiSSI Project. In this very large study, 557,145 men and women older than 18 years were observed at different points in time between 2004 and 2010. The proportion of younger and older adults reporting no chronic disease decreased with increasing BMI. After adjustment for age, sex, geographic residence, and GPs heterogeneity, a strong J-shaped association was found between BMI and total health care costs, more pronounced in middle-aged and older adults. Relative to normal weight, in the 45-64 age group, the per-capita total cost was 10% higher in overweight individuals, and 27 to 68% greater in patients with obesity and very severe obesity, respectively. The association between BMI and diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular disease largely explained these elevated costs.
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