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Assessing the economic costs of unhealthy diets and low physical activity: An evidence review and proposed framework [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 102 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Sep-2017
  • Leidėjas: WHO Regional Office for Europe
  • ISBN-10: 928905042X
  • ISBN-13: 9789289050425
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 102 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Sep-2017
  • Leidėjas: WHO Regional Office for Europe
  • ISBN-10: 928905042X
  • ISBN-13: 9789289050425
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Unhealthy diets and low physical activity contribute to many chronic diseases and disability; they are responsible for some 2 in 5 deaths worldwide and for about 30% of the global disease burden. Yet surprisingly little is known about the economic costs that these risk factors cause, both for health care and society more widely.

This study pulls together the evidence about the economic burden that can be linked to unhealthy diets and low physical activity and explores

- How definitions vary and why this matters
- The complexity of estimating the economic burden and
- How we can arrive at a better way to estimate the costs of an unhealthy diet and low physical activity, using diabetes as an example

The review finds that unhealthy diets and low physical activity predict higher health care expenditure, but estimates vary greatly. Existing studies underestimate the true economic burden because most only look at the costs to the health system. Indirect costs caused by lost productivity may be about twice as high as direct health care costs, together accounting for about 0.5% of national income.

The study also tests the feasibility of using a disease-based approach to estimate the costs of unhealthy diets and low physical activity in Europe, projecting the total economic burden associated with these two risk factors as manifested in new type 2 diabetes cases at 883 million euros in 2020 for France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom alone. The "true" costs will be higher, as unhealthy diets and low physical activity are linked to many more diseases.

The study's findings are a step towards a better understanding of the economic burden that can be associated with two key risk factors for ill health and they will help policymakers in setting priorities and to more effectively promoting healthy diets and physical activity.
Acknowledgements vii
Foreword viii
List of tables, boxes and figures
ix
Summary xi
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(2)
Chapter 2 The economic costs of unhealthy diets and low physical activity: what does the published literature tell us?
3(10)
2.1 Characteristics of reviewed studies
3(2)
2.2 What the evidence tells us: the economic costs of unhealthy diets
5(2)
2.3 What the evidence tells us: the economic costs of low physical activity
7(3)
2.4 Review of the evidence: a summary
10(3)
Chapter 3 Estimating the economic costs of unhealthy diets and low physical activity is complex
13(8)
3.1 Defining the concepts: how can we understand `unhealthy diet' and `low physical activity'?
13(3)
3.2 Costing studies differ in key assumptions, influencing estimates for the economic burden of unhealthy diets and low physical activity
16(2)
3.3 The nature and range of costs considered is likely to underestimate the `true' economic burden of unhealthy diets and physical activity
18(1)
3.4 Conceptual and methodological challenges of estimating the economic costs of unhealthy diets and low physical activity: a summary
19(2)
Chapter 4 Taking available approaches to determining the economic costs of unhealthy diets and low physical activity further: a proof-of-concept approach applied to five European countries
21(22)
4.1 Diabetes as an outcome of unhealthy diets and low physical activity
23(2)
4.2 The principal approach used in this study to estimate the economic costs that can be associated with unhealthy diets and low physical activity
25(15)
4.3 The estimated total economic costs of unhealthy diets and low physical activity related to diabetes and its complications
40(3)
Chapter 5 Discussion and conclusions
43(6)
5.1 Limitations of the costing framework
45(2)
5.2 Implications for future studies
47(2)
References 49(6)
Appendices 55