Obese adults spend more on care Over the period from 1998 to 2006 the annual medical burden of obesity increased from 6.5% to 9.1% of annual spending indicating that obesity imposes a substantial and growing burden on both public and private payers. “The results from the study also indicated that the increasing prevalence of obesity was responsible for most of the increased medical spending attributable to obesity between 1998 and 2006,” Joel W. Cohen, PhD, director, Division of Social and Economic Research, CFACT/AHRQ, tells Managed Healthcare Executive. “The results suggest that without some effort to reduce the prevalence of obesity, it will continue to impose additional costs on the U.S. healthcare system into the future,” Cohen says. In terms of surprises, the finding that the increases in overall costs associated with obesity were mainly a result of increasing prevalence, and not increases in cost per case differed from the results of some previous research looking at obesity-related spending in an earlier time period, according to Cohen. |
![]() Health News Headlines from the Wall Street Journal
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