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Published in: Osteoporosis International 10/2016

01-10-2016 | Original Article

The current economic burden of illness of osteoporosis in Canada

Authors: R. B. Hopkins, N. Burke, C. Von Keyserlingk, W. D. Leslie, S. N. Morin, J. D. Adachi, A. Papaioannou, L. Bessette, J. P. Brown, L. Pericleous, J. Tarride

Published in: Osteoporosis International | Issue 10/2016

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Abstract

Summary

We estimate the current burden of illness of osteoporosis in Canada is double ($4.6 billion) our previous estimates ($2.3 billion) due to improved data capture of the multiple encounters and services that accompany a fracture: emergency room, admissions to acute and step-down non-acute institutions, rehabilitation, home-assisted or long-term residency support.

Introduction

We previously estimated the economic burden of illness of osteoporosis-attributable fractures in Canada for the year 2008 to be $2.3 billion in the base case and as much as $3.9 billion. The aim of this study is to update the estimate of the economic burden of illness for osteoporosis-attributable fractures for Canada based on newly available home care and long-term care (LTC) data.

Methods

Multiple national databases were used for the fiscal-year ending March 31, 2011 (FY 2010/2011) for acute institutional care, emergency visits, day surgery, secondary admissions for rehabilitation, and complex continuing care, as well as national dispensing data for osteoporosis medications. Gaps in national data were supplemented by provincial and community survey data. Osteoporosis-attributable fractures for Canadians age 50+ were identified by ICD-10-CA codes. Costs were expressed in 2014 dollars.

Results

In FY 2010/2011, the number of osteoporosis-attributable fractures was 131,443 resulting in 64,884 acute care admissions and 983,074 acute hospital days. Acute care costs were $1.5 billion, an 18 % increase since 2008. The cost of LTC was 33.4 times the previous estimate ($31 million versus $1.03 billion) because of improved data capture. The cost for rehabilitation and secondary admissions increased 3.4 fold, while drug costs decreased 19 %. The overall cost of osteoporosis was over $4.6 billion, an increase of 83 % from the 2008 estimate.

Conclusion

Since the 2008 estimate, new Canadian data on home care and LTC are available which provided a better estimate of the burden of osteoporosis in Canada. This suggests that our previous estimates were seriously underestimated.
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Metadata
Title
The current economic burden of illness of osteoporosis in Canada
Authors
R. B. Hopkins
N. Burke
C. Von Keyserlingk
W. D. Leslie
S. N. Morin
J. D. Adachi
A. Papaioannou
L. Bessette
J. P. Brown
L. Pericleous
J. Tarride
Publication date
01-10-2016
Publisher
Springer London
Published in
Osteoporosis International / Issue 10/2016
Print ISSN: 0937-941X
Electronic ISSN: 1433-2965
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00198-016-3631-6

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