The global impact of non-communicable diseases on macro-economic productivity: a systematic review

被引:0
作者
Layal Chaker
Abby Falla
Sven J. van der Lee
Taulant Muka
David Imo
Loes Jaspers
Veronica Colpani
Shanthi Mendis
Rajiv Chowdhury
Wichor M. Bramer
Raha Pazoki
Oscar H. Franco
机构
[1] Erasmus MC,Department of Epidemiology
[2] University Medical Center Rotterdam,Department of Endocrinology
[3] Erasmus MC,Department of Public Health
[4] Erasmus MC,Division of Infectious Disease Control
[5] Municipal Public Health Service (GGD) Rotterdam-Rijnmond,Chronic Diseases Prevention and Management, Department of Chronic Diseases and Health Promotion
[6] World Health Organization,Department of Public Health and Primary Care
[7] University of Cambridge,Medical Library
[8] Erasmus MC,undefined
来源
European Journal of Epidemiology | 2015年 / 30卷
关键词
Noncommunicable diseases; Productivity; Return to work absenteeism; Systematic review;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) have large economic impact at multiple levels. To systematically review the literature investigating the economic impact of NCDs [including coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM), cancer (lung, colon, cervical and breast), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and chronic kidney disease (CKD)] on macro-economic productivity. Systematic search, up to November 6th 2014, of medical databases (Medline, Embase and Google Scholar) without language restrictions. To identify additional publications, we searched the reference lists of retrieved studies and contacted authors in the field. Randomized controlled trials, cohort, case–control, cross-sectional, ecological studies and modelling studies carried out in adults (>18 years old) were included. Two independent reviewers performed all abstract and full text selection. Disagreements were resolved through consensus or consulting a third reviewer. Two independent reviewers extracted data using a predesigned data collection form. Main outcome measure was the impact of the selected NCDs on productivity, measured in DALYs, productivity costs, and labor market participation, including unemployment, return to work and sick leave. From 4542 references, 126 studies met the inclusion criteria, many of which focused on the impact of more than one NCD on productivity. Breast cancer was the most common (n = 45), followed by stroke (n = 31), COPD (n = 24), colon cancer (n = 24), DM (n = 22), lung cancer (n = 16), CVD (n = 15), cervical cancer (n = 7) and CKD (n = 2). Four studies were from the WHO African Region, 52 from the European Region, 53 from the Region of the Americas and 16 from the Western Pacific Region, one from the Eastern Mediterranean Region and none from South East Asia. We found large regional differences in DALYs attributable to NCDs but especially for cervical and lung cancer. Productivity losses in the USA ranged from 88 million US dollars (USD) for COPD to 20.9 billion USD for colon cancer. CHD costs the Australian economy 13.2 billion USD per year. People with DM, COPD and survivors of breast and especially lung cancer are at a higher risk of reduced labor market participation. Overall NCDs generate a large impact on macro-economic productivity in most WHO regions irrespective of continent and income. The absolute global impact in terms of dollars and DALYs remains an elusive challenge due to the wide heterogeneity in the included studies as well as limited information from low- and middle-income countries.
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页码:357 / 395
页数:38
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