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What will the cardiovascular disease slowdown cost? Modelling the impact of CVD trends on dementia, disability, and economic costs in England and Wales from 2020–2029

BACKGROUND: There is uncertainty around the health impact and economic costs of the recent slowing of the historical decline in cardiovascular disease (CVD) incidence and the future impact on dementia and disability. METHODS: Previously validated IMPACT Better Ageing Markov model for England and Wal...

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Autores principales: Collins, Brendan, Bandosz, Piotr, Guzman-Castillo, Maria, Pearson-Stuttard, Jonathan, Stoye, George, McCauley, Jeremy, Ahmadi-Abhari, Sara, Araghi, Marzieh, Shipley, Martin J., Capewell, Simon, French, Eric, Brunner, Eric J., O’Flaherty, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9242440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35767575
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268766
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author Collins, Brendan
Bandosz, Piotr
Guzman-Castillo, Maria
Pearson-Stuttard, Jonathan
Stoye, George
McCauley, Jeremy
Ahmadi-Abhari, Sara
Araghi, Marzieh
Shipley, Martin J.
Capewell, Simon
French, Eric
Brunner, Eric J.
O’Flaherty, Martin
author_facet Collins, Brendan
Bandosz, Piotr
Guzman-Castillo, Maria
Pearson-Stuttard, Jonathan
Stoye, George
McCauley, Jeremy
Ahmadi-Abhari, Sara
Araghi, Marzieh
Shipley, Martin J.
Capewell, Simon
French, Eric
Brunner, Eric J.
O’Flaherty, Martin
author_sort Collins, Brendan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: There is uncertainty around the health impact and economic costs of the recent slowing of the historical decline in cardiovascular disease (CVD) incidence and the future impact on dementia and disability. METHODS: Previously validated IMPACT Better Ageing Markov model for England and Wales, integrating English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) data for 17,906 ELSA participants followed from 1998 to 2012, linked to NHS Hospital Episode Statistics. Counterfactual design comparing two scenarios: Scenario 1. CVD Plateau—age-specific CVD incidence remains at 2011 levels, thus continuing recent trends. Scenario 2. CVD Fall—age-specific CVD incidence goes on declining, following longer-term trends. The main outcome measures were age-related healthcare costs, social care costs, opportunity costs of informal care, and quality adjusted life years (valued at £60,000 per QALY). FINDINGS: The total 10 year cumulative incremental net monetary cost associated with a persistent plateauing of CVD would be approximately £54 billion (95% uncertainty interval £14.3-£96.2 billion), made up of some £13 billion (£8.8-£16.7 billion) healthcare costs, £1.5 billion (-£0.9-£4.0 billion) social care costs, £8 billion (£3.4-£12.8 billion) informal care and £32 billion (£0.3-£67.6 billion) value of lost QALYs. INTERPRETATION: After previous, dramatic falls, CVD incidence has recently plateaued. That slowdown could substantially increase health and social care costs over the next ten years. Healthcare costs are likely to increase more than social care costs in absolute terms, but social care costs will increase more in relative terms. Given the links between COVID-19 and cardiovascular health, effective cardiovascular prevention policies need to be revitalised urgently.
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spelling pubmed-92424402022-06-30 What will the cardiovascular disease slowdown cost? Modelling the impact of CVD trends on dementia, disability, and economic costs in England and Wales from 2020–2029 Collins, Brendan Bandosz, Piotr Guzman-Castillo, Maria Pearson-Stuttard, Jonathan Stoye, George McCauley, Jeremy Ahmadi-Abhari, Sara Araghi, Marzieh Shipley, Martin J. Capewell, Simon French, Eric Brunner, Eric J. O’Flaherty, Martin PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: There is uncertainty around the health impact and economic costs of the recent slowing of the historical decline in cardiovascular disease (CVD) incidence and the future impact on dementia and disability. METHODS: Previously validated IMPACT Better Ageing Markov model for England and Wales, integrating English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) data for 17,906 ELSA participants followed from 1998 to 2012, linked to NHS Hospital Episode Statistics. Counterfactual design comparing two scenarios: Scenario 1. CVD Plateau—age-specific CVD incidence remains at 2011 levels, thus continuing recent trends. Scenario 2. CVD Fall—age-specific CVD incidence goes on declining, following longer-term trends. The main outcome measures were age-related healthcare costs, social care costs, opportunity costs of informal care, and quality adjusted life years (valued at £60,000 per QALY). FINDINGS: The total 10 year cumulative incremental net monetary cost associated with a persistent plateauing of CVD would be approximately £54 billion (95% uncertainty interval £14.3-£96.2 billion), made up of some £13 billion (£8.8-£16.7 billion) healthcare costs, £1.5 billion (-£0.9-£4.0 billion) social care costs, £8 billion (£3.4-£12.8 billion) informal care and £32 billion (£0.3-£67.6 billion) value of lost QALYs. INTERPRETATION: After previous, dramatic falls, CVD incidence has recently plateaued. That slowdown could substantially increase health and social care costs over the next ten years. Healthcare costs are likely to increase more than social care costs in absolute terms, but social care costs will increase more in relative terms. Given the links between COVID-19 and cardiovascular health, effective cardiovascular prevention policies need to be revitalised urgently. Public Library of Science 2022-06-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9242440/ /pubmed/35767575 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268766 Text en © 2022 Collins et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://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
Collins, Brendan
Bandosz, Piotr
Guzman-Castillo, Maria
Pearson-Stuttard, Jonathan
Stoye, George
McCauley, Jeremy
Ahmadi-Abhari, Sara
Araghi, Marzieh
Shipley, Martin J.
Capewell, Simon
French, Eric
Brunner, Eric J.
O’Flaherty, Martin
What will the cardiovascular disease slowdown cost? Modelling the impact of CVD trends on dementia, disability, and economic costs in England and Wales from 2020–2029
title What will the cardiovascular disease slowdown cost? Modelling the impact of CVD trends on dementia, disability, and economic costs in England and Wales from 2020–2029
title_full What will the cardiovascular disease slowdown cost? Modelling the impact of CVD trends on dementia, disability, and economic costs in England and Wales from 2020–2029
title_fullStr What will the cardiovascular disease slowdown cost? Modelling the impact of CVD trends on dementia, disability, and economic costs in England and Wales from 2020–2029
title_full_unstemmed What will the cardiovascular disease slowdown cost? Modelling the impact of CVD trends on dementia, disability, and economic costs in England and Wales from 2020–2029
title_short What will the cardiovascular disease slowdown cost? Modelling the impact of CVD trends on dementia, disability, and economic costs in England and Wales from 2020–2029
title_sort what will the cardiovascular disease slowdown cost? modelling the impact of cvd trends on dementia, disability, and economic costs in england and wales from 2020–2029
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9242440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35767575
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268766
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