BMC Health Services Research (Mar 2024)

The economic burden of obesity in 4 south-eastern European countries associated with obesity-related co-morbidities

  • Kostas Athanasakis,
  • Cornelia Bala,
  • Alexander Kokkinos,
  • Gabor Simonyi,
  • Klaudia Hálová Karoliová,
  • Amaury Basse,
  • Miodrag Bogdanovic,
  • Malvin Kang,
  • Kaywei Low,
  • Adrien Gras

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-10840-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Objective To provide an assessment of the cost burden of obesity across a spectrum of obesity-related comorbidities (ORCs) for four countries in South-Eastern Europe (SEE). Methods A micro-costing analysis from the public payer perspective was conducted to estimate direct healthcare costs associated with ten obesity-related comorbidities (ORCs) in Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, and Romania. A survey was administered to obtain healthcare resource use and unit cost data. Cost estimates were validated by local steering committees which comprised at least one public sector clinician and a panel of independent industry experts. Results Chronic kidney disease and cardiovascular diseases were the costliest ORCs across all 4 countries, where annual cost burden per ORC exceeded 1,500 USD per patient per year. In general, costs were driven by the tertiary care resources allocated to address treatment-related adverse events, disease complications, and associated inpatient procedures. Conclusions Our findings confirm that the high prevalence of obesity and its comorbidities result in substantial financial burden to all 4 SEE public payers. By quantifying the burden of obesity from a public healthcare perspective, our study aims to support policy efforts that promote health education and promotion in combating obesity in the region.

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