Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4299
Title: The case for action on socioeconomic differences in overweight and obesity among Australian adults: modelling the disease burden and healthcare costs
Authors: Gearon, Emma
Backholer, Kathryn
Lal, Anita
Nusselder, Wilma
Peeters, Anna
Keywords: socioeconomic factors
obesity
body mass index
epidemiology
epidemiological monitoring
costs and cost analysis
Issue Date: Apr-2020
Publisher: Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
Series/Report no.: Prevention;121-128
Abstract: Objective: We aimed to quantify the extent to which socioeconomic differences in body mass index (BMI) drive avoidable deaths, incident disease cases and healthcare costs. Methods: We used population attributable fractions to quantify the annual burden of disease attributable to socioeconomic differences in BMI for Australian adults aged 20 to <85 years in 2016, stratified by quintiles of an area-level indicator of socioeconomic disadvantage (SocioEconomic Index For Areas Indicator of Relative Socioeconomic Disadvantage; SEIFA) and BMI (normal weight, overweight, obese). We estimated direct healthcare costs using annual estimates per person per BMI category. Results: We attributed $AU1.06 billion in direct healthcare costs to socioeconomic differences in BMI in 2016. The greatest number (proportion) of cases and deaths attributable to socioeconomic differences in BMI was observed for type 2 diabetes among women (8,602 total cases [16%], with 3,471 cases [22%] in the most disadvantaged quintile [SEIFA 1]) and all-cause mortality among men (2027 total deaths [4%], with 815 deaths [6%] in SEIFA 1). Conclusions: Socioeconomic differences in BMI substantially contribute to avoidable deaths, disease cases and direct healthcare costs in Australia. Implications for public health: Population-level policies to reduce socioeconomic differences in overweight and obesity must be identified and implemented.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/4299
ISSN: 1753-6405.12970
Appears in Collections:VOL 44 NO 2

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