The Economic Impact of Symptomatic Menopause Among Low-Socioeconomic Women in the United States
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Date
2016
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Abstract
Background: Menopausal symptoms have a significant negative impact on patient's quality of life and increase healthcare costs among women. Methods: This retrospective analysis used data from a U.S. national database (01 January 2008-31 December 2010). Patients with a diagnosis of menopause symptoms or a prescription claim for hormone therapy were matched to control patients. Healthcare resource utilization and costs during the 6-month follow-up period were compared. Generalized linear models were used to adjust for differences in baseline and demographic characteristics between the cohorts. Results: A total of 71,076 patients were included in each cohort. Patients with menopausal symptoms were more likely to have depression and anxiety and incurred significantly higher follow-up healthcare costs ($7237 vs $6739, p < 0.001) and healthcare utilization during the 6-month follow-up period. Conclusion: Patients diagnosed with menopausal symptoms or treated with hormone therapy incurred significantly higher healthcare costs than those without menopausal symptoms or treatment.
Description
Onur Başer (MEF Author)
Keywords
Menopause, Hormone therapy, Outcomes research
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
Citation
Keshishian, A., Wang, Y., Xie, L., & Baser, O. (2016). The economic impact of symptomatic menopause among low-socioeconomic women in the United States. Expert Review of Pharmacoeconomics & Outcomes Research, 16, 2, 305-13.
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Source
Expert Review Of Pharmacoeconomics & Outcomes Research
Volume
16
Issue
2
Start Page
305
End Page
313