Lifetime Costs of Hospitalised Cardiovascular Disease in Australia: An Incidence-Based Estimate.

2021 
Objectives To estimate the incidence-based, lifetime costs of health care and productivity losses associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) using hospital admission data from Queensland, Australia. Methods Retrospective analysis of data on CVD health care use sourced from Queensland Hospital Admitted Patient Data Collection (QHAPDC), Emergency Department Data Collection (EDDC), Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS). Costs were estimated from the societal perspective. Study participants included patients who were first admitted to any Queensland hospital in 2010 for a CVD-related treatment. Subsequent admissions of these patients were followed until December 2015. The present value of incidence-based lifetime costs per patient were used to estimate the total costs for Australia. All costs were presented in Australian dollars at 2019 prices. Results The estimated lifetime health care cost of CVD was $65,700 per person. Productivity loss cost was higher at $75,200 per person, and total indirect lifetime costs were $140,900 per person. Scaling these costs up for the Australian population, the estimated incidence-based lifetime CVD costs for Australia were $60.5 billion ($28.2 billion in direct costs and $32.3 billion in indirect costs). Conclusions Incidence-based lifetime indirect costs of CVD were higher than the direct costs. The life-time cost structure suggests that economic benefits of health care interventions for cardiovascular diseases from a societal perspective should be at least twice as large than that from a health service perspective.
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