Estimates of incidence and costs of intestinal infectious diseases in the United States.
- 1 March 1988
- journal article
- Vol. 103 (2) , 107-15
Abstract
The incidence of acute episodes of intestinal infectious diseases in the United States was estimated through analysis of community-based studies and national interview surveys. Their differing results were reconciled by adjusting the study population age distributions in the community-based studies, by excluding those cases that also showed respiratory symptoms, and by accounting for structural differences in the surveys. The reconciliation process provided an estimate of 99 million acute cases of either vomiting or diarrhea, or both, each year in this country, half of which involved more than a full day of restricted activity. The analysis was limited to cases of acute gastrointestinal diseases with vomiting or diarrhea but without respiratory symptoms. Physicians were consulted for 8.2 million illnesses; 250,000 of these required hospitalization. In 1985, hospitalizations incurred $560 million in medical costs and $200 million in lost productivity. Nonhospitalized cases (7.9 million) for which physicians were consulted incurred $690 million in medical costs and $2.06 billion in lost productivity. More than 90 million cases for which no physician was consulted cost an estimated $19.5 billion in lost productivity. The estimates excluded such costs as death, pain and suffering, lost leisure time, financial losses to food establishments, and legal expenses. According to these estimates, medical costs and lost productivity from acute intestinal infectious diseases amount to a minimum of about $23 billion a year in the United States.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Determination of Specific IgA‐Antibodies to Yersinia Enterocolitica and Their Role In Enteric Infections and Their ComplicationsActa Pathologica Microbiologica Scandinavica Series B: Microbiology, 1985
- Etiology and epidemiology of diarrheal diseases in the United StatesThe American Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Patients with active Crohn's disease have elevated serum antibodies to antigens of seven enteric bacterial pathogensGastroenterology, 1984
- The Tecumseh Study. XII. Enteric Agents in the Community, 1976-1981The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1983
- THE TECUMSEH STUDYAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1980
- An Assessment of Patient-Related Economic Costs in an Outbreak of SalmonellosisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1978
- Shigella Surveillance in the United States, 1975The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1977
- THE TECUMSEH STUDY OF RESPIRATORY ILLNESSAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1971