The economic burden to the public health system of treating non-viral injecting-related injury and disease in Australia (a cost of illness analysis)

Objective: We estimated the cost to the public health system of treating Injecting-Related Injuries and Diseases (IRIDs) in the three most populous states in Australia in the 12 months over 2005/06. Methods: We conducted a cost of illness analysis from the perspective of the public health system. Co...

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Main Authors: Sweeney, R., Conroy, A., Dwyer, Robyn, Aitken, C.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13895
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author Sweeney, R.
Conroy, A.
Dwyer, Robyn
Aitken, C.
author_facet Sweeney, R.
Conroy, A.
Dwyer, Robyn
Aitken, C.
author_sort Sweeney, R.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objective: We estimated the cost to the public health system of treating Injecting-Related Injuries and Diseases (IRIDs) in the three most populous states in Australia in the 12 months over 2005/06. Methods: We conducted a cost of illness analysis from the perspective of the public health system. Costs of treating IRIDs in the community were estimated from health service utilisation surveys of injecting drug users and physicians (yielding data on Government subsidised physician visits, medicines prescribed and emergency department presentations). Data on admitted hospitalisations in public hospitals due to IRIDs were extracted from State Government databases. Appropriate costs were attached to all Government-borne services and prescriptions to estimate the total cost to the public health system of treating IRIDs in 2005/06 in Queensland, NSW and Victoria. Results: Our estimate of the cost to the public health system of treating IRIDs in Queensland, NSW and Victoria in 2005/06 was $20 million. Conclusion: IRIDs are an underrecognised harm resulting from injecting drug use, but the economic burden of IRIDs in Australia are non-negligible. Research is needed to identify cost effective programs to reduce the clinical and economic burden caused by IRIDs, particularly to reduce hospitalisations due to IRIDs. Implications: General practitioners, clinicians and other health workers need to be alert to IRIDs in their injecting drug user clients to prevent progression to more serious disease and consequent elevation of the associated economic costs. © 2009 The Authors.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-138952023-02-22T06:24:17Z The economic burden to the public health system of treating non-viral injecting-related injury and disease in Australia (a cost of illness analysis) Sweeney, R. Conroy, A. Dwyer, Robyn Aitken, C. Objective: We estimated the cost to the public health system of treating Injecting-Related Injuries and Diseases (IRIDs) in the three most populous states in Australia in the 12 months over 2005/06. Methods: We conducted a cost of illness analysis from the perspective of the public health system. Costs of treating IRIDs in the community were estimated from health service utilisation surveys of injecting drug users and physicians (yielding data on Government subsidised physician visits, medicines prescribed and emergency department presentations). Data on admitted hospitalisations in public hospitals due to IRIDs were extracted from State Government databases. Appropriate costs were attached to all Government-borne services and prescriptions to estimate the total cost to the public health system of treating IRIDs in 2005/06 in Queensland, NSW and Victoria. Results: Our estimate of the cost to the public health system of treating IRIDs in Queensland, NSW and Victoria in 2005/06 was $20 million. Conclusion: IRIDs are an underrecognised harm resulting from injecting drug use, but the economic burden of IRIDs in Australia are non-negligible. Research is needed to identify cost effective programs to reduce the clinical and economic burden caused by IRIDs, particularly to reduce hospitalisations due to IRIDs. Implications: General practitioners, clinicians and other health workers need to be alert to IRIDs in their injecting drug user clients to prevent progression to more serious disease and consequent elevation of the associated economic costs. © 2009 The Authors. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13895 10.1111/j.1753-6405.2009.00407.x Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia unknown
spellingShingle Sweeney, R.
Conroy, A.
Dwyer, Robyn
Aitken, C.
The economic burden to the public health system of treating non-viral injecting-related injury and disease in Australia (a cost of illness analysis)
title The economic burden to the public health system of treating non-viral injecting-related injury and disease in Australia (a cost of illness analysis)
title_full The economic burden to the public health system of treating non-viral injecting-related injury and disease in Australia (a cost of illness analysis)
title_fullStr The economic burden to the public health system of treating non-viral injecting-related injury and disease in Australia (a cost of illness analysis)
title_full_unstemmed The economic burden to the public health system of treating non-viral injecting-related injury and disease in Australia (a cost of illness analysis)
title_short The economic burden to the public health system of treating non-viral injecting-related injury and disease in Australia (a cost of illness analysis)
title_sort economic burden to the public health system of treating non-viral injecting-related injury and disease in australia (a cost of illness analysis)
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13895