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Incremental healthcare expenditure attributable to diabetes mellitus: A cost of illness study in Tasmania, Australia
Home Research Publications Incremental healthcare expenditure attributable to diabetes mellitus: A cost of illness study in Tasmania, Australia

Incremental healthcare expenditure attributable to diabetes mellitus: A cost of illness study in Tasmania, Australia

Ngan Dinh Thi Thu, Barbara de Graaff, Julie A. Campbell, Matthew D. Jose, John Burgess, Timothy Saunder, Alex Kitsos, Nadine Wiggins, Andrew J. Palmer, Feb-2022, In: Diabetic medicine, 39, 6, p. e14817

Overview

  • Ngan Dinh Thi Thu
  • Barbara de Graaff
  • Julie A. Campbell
  • Matthew D. Jose
  • John Burgess
  • Timothy Saunder
  • Alex Kitsos
  • Nadine Wiggins
  • Andrew J. Palmer

Abstract:

Aims

To quantify the incremental direct medical costs in people with diabetes from the healthcare system perspective; and to identify trends in the incremental costs.

Methods

This was a matched retrospective cohort study based on a linked data set developed for investigating chronic kidney disease in Tasmania, Australia. Using propensity score matching, 51,324 people with diabetes were matched on age, sex and residential area with 102,648 people without diabetes. Direct medical costs (Australian dollars 2020–2021) due to hospitalisation, Emergency Department visits and pathology tests were included. The incremental costs and cost ratios between mean annual costs of people with diabetes and their controls were calculated.

Results

On average, people with diabetes had healthcare costs that were almost double their controls ($2427 [95% CI 2322–2543]; ratio 1.87 [95% CI 1.85–1.91]; pooled from 2007–2017). While in the first year of follow-up, the costs of a person with diabetes were $1643 (95% CI 1489–1806); ratio 1.83 (95% CI 1.76–1.92) more than their control, this increased to $2480 (95% CI 2265–2680); ratio 1.69 (95% CI 1.62–1.77) in the final year. Although the incremental costs were higher in older age groups (e.g., ≥70: $2498 [95% CI 2265–2754]; 40–49: $2117 [95% CI 1887–2384]), the cost ratios were higher in younger age groups (≥70: 1.52 [95% CI 1.48–1.56]; 40–49: 2.37 [95% CI 2.25–2.61]).

Conclusions

Given the increasing burden that diabetes imposes, our findings will support policymakers in future planning for diabetes and enable targeting sub-groups with higher long-term costs for possible cost savings for the Tasmanian healthcare system.

Article number e14817
Journal Diabetic medicine
Volume 39
Issue number 6
Publication status E-pub ahead of print - Feb-2022
ISBN 0742-3071