4.4 Article

Cost of low back pain in Switzerland in 2005

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages 455-467

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10198-010-0258-y

Keywords

Low back pain; Cost-of-illness; Switzerland; Human capital; Friction cost; Presenteeism

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Low back pain (LBP) is the most prevalent health problem in Switzerland and a leading cause of reduced work performance and disability. This study estimated the total cost of LBP in Switzerland in 2005 from a societal perspective using a bottom-up prevalence-based cost-of-illness approach. The study considers more cost categories than are typically investigated and includes the costs associated with a multitude of LBP sufferers who are not under medical care. The findings are based on a questionnaire completed by a sample of 2,507 German-speaking respondents, of whom 1,253 suffered from LBP in the last 4 weeks; 346 of them were receiving medical treatment for their LBP. Direct costs of LBP were estimated at a,not sign2.6 billion and direct medical costs at 6.1% of the total healthcare expenditure in Switzerland. Productivity losses were estimated at a,not sign4.1 billion with the human capital approach and a,not sign2.2 billion with the friction cost approach. Presenteeism was the single most prominent cost category. The total economic burden of LBP to Swiss society was between 1.6 and 2.3% of GDP.

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