Volume 17, Issue 2 361071 pp. 74-80
Open Access

Direct Health Care Costs Associated with Asthma in British Columbia

Mohsen Sadatsafavi

Mohsen Sadatsafavi

Collaboration for Outcomes Research and Evaluation University of British Columbia, Canada , ubc.ca

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Larry Lynd

Corresponding Author

Larry Lynd

Collaboration for Outcomes Research and Evaluation University of British Columbia, Canada , ubc.ca

Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences University of British Columbia, Canada , ubc.ca

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Carlo Marra

Carlo Marra

Collaboration for Outcomes Research and Evaluation University of British Columbia, Canada , ubc.ca

Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences University of British Columbia, Canada , ubc.ca

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Bruce Carleton

Bruce Carleton

Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences University of British Columbia, Canada , ubc.ca

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Wan C Tan

Wan C Tan

Department of Medicine University of British Columbia, Canada , ubc.ca

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Sean Sullivan

Sean Sullivan

University of British Columbia Departments of Pharmacy Health Services and Medicine Vancouver British Columbia, Canada , ubc.ca

University of Washington Seattle Washington, USA , washington.edu

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J Mark FitzGerald

J Mark FitzGerald

Department of Medicine University of British Columbia, Canada , ubc.ca

Centre for Clinical Epidemiology and Evaluation Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute, Canada , vchri.ca

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First published: 01 January 2010
Citations: 122

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A better understanding of health care costs associated with asthma would enable the estimation of the economic burden of this increasingly common disease.

OBJECTIVE: To determine the direct medical costs of asthma-related health care in British Columbia (BC).

METHODS: Administrative health care data from the BC Linked Health Database and PharmaNet database from 1996 to 2000 were analyzed for BC residents five to 55 years of age, including the billing information for physician visits, drug dispensations and hospital discharge records. A unit cost was assigned to physician/emergency department visits, and government reimbursement fees for prescribed medications were applied. The case mix method was used to calculate hospitalization costs. All costs were reported in inflation-adjusted 2006 Canadian dollars.

RESULTS: Asthma resulted in $41,858,610 in annual health care-related costs during the study period ($331 per patient-year). The major cost component was medications, which accounted for 63.9% of total costs, followed by physician visits (18.3%) and hospitalization (17.8%). When broader definitions of asthma-related hospitalizations and physician visits were used, total costs increased to $56,114,574 annually ($444 per patient-year). There was a statistically significant decrease in the annual per patient cost of hospitalizations (P<0.01) over the study period. Asthma was poorly controlled in 63.5% of patients, with this group being responsible for 94% of asthma-related resource use.

CONCLUSION: The economic burden of asthma is significant in BC, with the majority of the cost attributed to poor asthma control. Policy makers should investigate the reason for lack of proper asthma control and adjust their policies accordingly to improve asthma management.

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