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Release Date: Oct. 25, 2004
PHYSICAL INACTIVITY COSTS MILLIONS IN HEALTH CARE EXPENSES
By Susan Farrer, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Lack of physical activity is costly
not just to people’s health but
to their wallets as well, a new study suggests.
Researchers found that sedentary lifestyles can lead to higher medical costs,
which they say are borne by consumers and employers in the form of health insurance
premiums, member co-insurance and taxes to foot the bill for public health
insurance. The findings, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine,
add to a growing body of evidence that physical inactivity is a serious and
expensive public health problem.
“In spite of the growing evidence for the importance of physical activity,
most Americans have a sedentary lifestyle,” write Nancy A. Garrett, Ph.D.,
of HealthPartners, and colleagues. “This analysis puts a dollar figure
on the direct cost of physical inactivity in a health plan population.”
Garrett and colleagues estimated
the total medical expenditures attributable to physical inactivity patterns
among all 1.5 million adult members of Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota in the year 2000. They found that the health
plan spent $83.6 million — or $56 per member — for medical care
and pharmacy costs for diseases associated with inactivity.
Heart disease was the most expensive
outcome of physical inactivity, costing the health plan $35.3 million in
2000. Hypertension ($10.8 million), stroke
($9.2 million), depression and anxiety ($9.1 million), and type 2 diabetes
($7.2 million) also accounted for a large portion of the health plan’s
year 2000 medical expenditures related to physical inactivity. The costs of
breast cancer, osteoporosis and colon cancer together totaled $12 million.
The estimates could have been much higher if obesity, a risk factor for the
diseases included in the study, had been included in the analysis, the researchers
note.
The study also reported that a quarter of Minnesotans age 18 and older engaged
in no leisure-time physical activity in 2000. About half (49 percent) of the
population was sometimes active and one-fourth (27 percent) of the population
was regularly active.
The investigators conclude that
the $83.6 million figure “puts the abstract
concept of physical activity as a public health issue into a concrete form
that is meaningful to a wide variety of stakeholders.”
Once the dollar costs of physical inactivity are made clear, communities,
health plans, employers that pay for health insurance and local governments
might be more willing to invest time and money in physical activity promotion,
the researchers suggest.
The data analyzed came from two
sources: the health plan members’ medical
claims records and the 2000 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System results
for Minnesota.
The BRFSS is a national system of statewide surveys conducted by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention that gathers information about physical
activity patterns in the states. The BRFSS results for Minnesota approximate
the physical activity patterns of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota members.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Vice President of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
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