Costs of a hepatitis A outbreak affecting homosexual men

Autor: Stephanie L. Sansom, Kathleen Cowen, Forrest Smith, Sietske de Fijter, Teresa Long, Elizabeth Koch, Suzanne M. Cotter, Deborah Coleman, Susan Tilgner, Beth P. Bell, Nancy Pry
Rok vydání: 2003
Předmět:
Zdroj: American Journal of Preventive Medicine. 25:343-346
ISSN: 0749-3797
DOI: 10.1016/s0749-3797(03)00209-5
Popis: Background Hepatitis A is one of the most commonly reported, vaccine-preventable diseases in the United States. Many cases occur in association with community-wide outbreaks, but societal costs to the community are seldom documented. Methods Hepatitis A case-patients available for a follow-up interview as part of an outbreak investigation were asked about hospitalization, healthcare costs, missed work, and lost wages associated with their illness, as well as healthcare insurance coverage and sick-leave reimbursement. Average costs were calculated by case-patient age, gender, and hospitalization status for lost wages, and by age and hospitalization status for medical costs, and then assigned to case-patients not re-interviewed to provide an estimate of overall costs. Health departments provided outbreak-associated costs. Results Between the weeks of November 2, 1998, and May 17, 1999, a total of 136 cases of hepatitis A were reported. Of the 89 (65.4%) case-patients available for interview, 74 (83%) were male; of those, 47 (64%) identified themselves as men who have sex with men (MSM). The average cost of the outbreak per case-patient was $2894, of which 51% was associated with lost wages, 40% with medical costs, and 9% with health department costs. Case-patients incurred 44% of total outbreak costs; employers, 29%; healthcare insurers, 18%; and health departments, 9%. Conclusions In this community-wide hepatitis A outbreak, case-patients incurred the largest portion of costs, followed by employers, healthcare insurers, and health departments.
Databáze: OpenAIRE