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Document type:
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Author(s):
Breitfelder, A; Wenig, CM; Wolfenstetter, SB; Rzehak, P; Menn, P; John, J; Leidl, R; Bauer, CP; Koletzko, S; Röder, S; Herbarth, O; von Berg, A; Berdel, D; Kramer, U; Schaaf, B; Wichmann, HE; Heinrich, J
Title:
Relative weight-related costs of healthcare use by children--results from the two German birth cohorts, GINI-plus and LISA-plus.
Abstract:
Obesity among children and adolescents is a growing public health burden. According to a national reference among German children and adolescents aged 3-17 years, 15% are overweight (including obese) and 6.3% are obese. This study aims to assess the economic burden associated with overweight and obesity in children based on a cross-sectional survey from two birth cohort studies: the GINI-plus - German Infant Nutritional Intervention plus Non-Intervention study (3287 respondents aged 9 to <12 years) and the LISA-plus study - Influence of life-style factors on the development of the immune system and allergies in East and West Germany (1762 respondents aged 9 to <12 years). Using a bottom-up approach, we analyse direct costs induced by the utilisation of healthcare services and indirect costs emerging from parents' productivity losses. To investigate the impact of Body Mass Index (BMI) on costs, we perform various descriptive analyses and estimate a two-part regression model. Average annual total direct medical costs of healthcare use are estimated to be EEUR418 (95% CI [346-511]) per child, split between physician (22%), therapist (29%), hospital (41%) and inpatient rehabilitation costs (8%). Bivariate analysis shows considerable differences between BMI groups: EUR469 (severely underweight), EUR468 (underweight), EEUR402 (normal weight), EEUR468 (overweight) and EEUR680 (obese). Indirect costs make up EEUR101 per year on average and tend to be higher for obese children, although this was not statistically significant. Drawing on these results, differences in healthcare costs between BMI groups are already apparent in children.
Journal title abbreviation:
Econ Hum Biol
Year:
2011
Journal volume:
9
Journal issue:
3
Pages contribution:
302-15
Language:
eng
Fulltext / DOI:
doi:10.1016/j.ehb.2011.02.001
Pubmed ID:
http://view.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21371953
Print-ISSN:
1570-677X
TUM Institution:
Klinik und Poliklinik für Kinderheilkunde und Jugendmedizin
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