Authors
David R Bickers, Henry W Lim, David Margolis, Martin A Weinstock, Clifford Goodman, Eric Faulkner, Ciara Gould, Eric Gemmen, Tim Dall
Publication date
2006/9/1
Journal
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology
Volume
55
Issue
3
Pages
490-500
Publisher
Mosby
Description
Skin disease is one of the top 15 groups of medical conditions for which prevalence and health care spending increased the most between 1987 and 2000, with approximately 1 of 3 people in the United States with a skin disease at any given time. Even so, a national data profile on skin disease has not been conducted since the late 1970s. This study closes the gap by estimating the prevalence, economic burden, and impact on quality of life for 22 leading categories of skin disease. The estimated annual cost of skin disease in 2004 was $39.3 billion, including $29.1 billion in direct medical costs (costs of health services and products) and $10.2 billion in lost productivity costs (defined as costs related to consumption of medical care, costs associated with impaired ability to work, and lost future earning potential because of premature death). Based on a methodology of willingness to pay for symptom relief, the …
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