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Cost-effectiveness of financial incentives for improving diet and health through Medicare and Medicaid: A microsimulation study

BACKGROUND: Economic incentives through health insurance may promote healthier behaviors. Little is known about health and economic impacts of incentivizing diet, a leading risk factor for diabetes and cardiovascular disease (CVD), through Medicare and Medicaid. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A validated mic...

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Autores principales: Lee, Yujin, Mozaffarian, Dariush, Sy, Stephen, Huang, Yue, Liu, Junxiu, Wilde, Parke E., Abrahams-Gessel, Shafika, Jardim, Thiago de Souza Veiga, Gaziano, Thomas A., Micha, Renata
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6424388/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30889188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002761
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author Lee, Yujin
Mozaffarian, Dariush
Sy, Stephen
Huang, Yue
Liu, Junxiu
Wilde, Parke E.
Abrahams-Gessel, Shafika
Jardim, Thiago de Souza Veiga
Gaziano, Thomas A.
Micha, Renata
author_facet Lee, Yujin
Mozaffarian, Dariush
Sy, Stephen
Huang, Yue
Liu, Junxiu
Wilde, Parke E.
Abrahams-Gessel, Shafika
Jardim, Thiago de Souza Veiga
Gaziano, Thomas A.
Micha, Renata
author_sort Lee, Yujin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Economic incentives through health insurance may promote healthier behaviors. Little is known about health and economic impacts of incentivizing diet, a leading risk factor for diabetes and cardiovascular disease (CVD), through Medicare and Medicaid. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A validated microsimulation model (CVD-PREDICT) estimated CVD and diabetes cases prevented, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), health-related costs (formal healthcare, informal healthcare, and lost-productivity costs), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) of two policy scenarios for adults within Medicare and Medicaid, compared to a base case of no new intervention: (1) 30% subsidy on fruits and vegetables (“F&V incentive”) and (2) 30% subsidy on broader healthful foods including F&V, whole grains, nuts/seeds, seafood, and plant oils (“healthy food incentive”). Inputs included national demographic and dietary data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2009–2014, policy effects and diet-disease effects from meta-analyses, and policy and health-related costs from established sources. Overall, 82 million adults (35–80 years old) were on Medicare and/or Medicaid. The mean (SD) age was 68.1 (11.4) years, 56.2% were female, and 25.5% were non-whites. Health and cost impacts were simulated over the lifetime of current Medicare and Medicaid participants (average simulated years = 18.3 years). The F&V incentive was estimated to prevent 1.93 million CVD events, gain 4.64 million QALYs, and save $39.7 billion in formal healthcare costs. For the healthy food incentive, corresponding gains were 3.28 million CVD and 0.12 million diabetes cases prevented, 8.40 million QALYs gained, and $100.2 billion in formal healthcare costs saved, respectively. From a healthcare perspective, both scenarios were cost-effective at 5 years and beyond, with lifetime ICERs of $18,184/QALY (F&V incentive) and $13,194/QALY (healthy food incentive). From a societal perspective including informal healthcare costs and lost productivity, respective ICERs were $14,576/QALY and $9,497/QALY. Results were robust in probabilistic sensitivity analyses and a range of one-way sensitivity and subgroup analyses, including by different durations of the intervention (5, 10, and 20 years and lifetime), food subsidy levels (20%, 50%), insurance groups (Medicare, Medicaid, and dual-eligible), and beneficiary characteristics within each insurance group (age, race/ethnicity, education, income, and Supplemental Nutrition Assistant Program [SNAP] status). Simulation studies such as this one provide quantitative estimates of benefits and uncertainty but cannot directly prove health and economic impacts. CONCLUSIONS: Economic incentives for healthier foods through Medicare and Medicaid could generate substantial health gains and be highly cost-effective.
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spelling pubmed-64243882019-04-02 Cost-effectiveness of financial incentives for improving diet and health through Medicare and Medicaid: A microsimulation study Lee, Yujin Mozaffarian, Dariush Sy, Stephen Huang, Yue Liu, Junxiu Wilde, Parke E. Abrahams-Gessel, Shafika Jardim, Thiago de Souza Veiga Gaziano, Thomas A. Micha, Renata PLoS Med Research Article BACKGROUND: Economic incentives through health insurance may promote healthier behaviors. Little is known about health and economic impacts of incentivizing diet, a leading risk factor for diabetes and cardiovascular disease (CVD), through Medicare and Medicaid. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A validated microsimulation model (CVD-PREDICT) estimated CVD and diabetes cases prevented, quality-adjusted life years (QALYs), health-related costs (formal healthcare, informal healthcare, and lost-productivity costs), and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) of two policy scenarios for adults within Medicare and Medicaid, compared to a base case of no new intervention: (1) 30% subsidy on fruits and vegetables (“F&V incentive”) and (2) 30% subsidy on broader healthful foods including F&V, whole grains, nuts/seeds, seafood, and plant oils (“healthy food incentive”). Inputs included national demographic and dietary data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2009–2014, policy effects and diet-disease effects from meta-analyses, and policy and health-related costs from established sources. Overall, 82 million adults (35–80 years old) were on Medicare and/or Medicaid. The mean (SD) age was 68.1 (11.4) years, 56.2% were female, and 25.5% were non-whites. Health and cost impacts were simulated over the lifetime of current Medicare and Medicaid participants (average simulated years = 18.3 years). The F&V incentive was estimated to prevent 1.93 million CVD events, gain 4.64 million QALYs, and save $39.7 billion in formal healthcare costs. For the healthy food incentive, corresponding gains were 3.28 million CVD and 0.12 million diabetes cases prevented, 8.40 million QALYs gained, and $100.2 billion in formal healthcare costs saved, respectively. From a healthcare perspective, both scenarios were cost-effective at 5 years and beyond, with lifetime ICERs of $18,184/QALY (F&V incentive) and $13,194/QALY (healthy food incentive). From a societal perspective including informal healthcare costs and lost productivity, respective ICERs were $14,576/QALY and $9,497/QALY. Results were robust in probabilistic sensitivity analyses and a range of one-way sensitivity and subgroup analyses, including by different durations of the intervention (5, 10, and 20 years and lifetime), food subsidy levels (20%, 50%), insurance groups (Medicare, Medicaid, and dual-eligible), and beneficiary characteristics within each insurance group (age, race/ethnicity, education, income, and Supplemental Nutrition Assistant Program [SNAP] status). Simulation studies such as this one provide quantitative estimates of benefits and uncertainty but cannot directly prove health and economic impacts. CONCLUSIONS: Economic incentives for healthier foods through Medicare and Medicaid could generate substantial health gains and be highly cost-effective. Public Library of Science 2019-03-19 /pmc/articles/PMC6424388/ /pubmed/30889188 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002761 Text en © 2019 Lee et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lee, Yujin
Mozaffarian, Dariush
Sy, Stephen
Huang, Yue
Liu, Junxiu
Wilde, Parke E.
Abrahams-Gessel, Shafika
Jardim, Thiago de Souza Veiga
Gaziano, Thomas A.
Micha, Renata
Cost-effectiveness of financial incentives for improving diet and health through Medicare and Medicaid: A microsimulation study
title Cost-effectiveness of financial incentives for improving diet and health through Medicare and Medicaid: A microsimulation study
title_full Cost-effectiveness of financial incentives for improving diet and health through Medicare and Medicaid: A microsimulation study
title_fullStr Cost-effectiveness of financial incentives for improving diet and health through Medicare and Medicaid: A microsimulation study
title_full_unstemmed Cost-effectiveness of financial incentives for improving diet and health through Medicare and Medicaid: A microsimulation study
title_short Cost-effectiveness of financial incentives for improving diet and health through Medicare and Medicaid: A microsimulation study
title_sort cost-effectiveness of financial incentives for improving diet and health through medicare and medicaid: a microsimulation study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6424388/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30889188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002761
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