The health-related social costs of alcohol in Belgium

Abstract Background Alcohol is associated with adverse health effects causing a considerable economic impact to society. A reliable estimate of this economic impact for Belgium is lacking. This is the aim of the study. Methods A prevalence-based approach estimating the direct, indirect and intangibl...

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Main Authors: Nick Verhaeghe, Delfine Lievens, Lieven Annemans, Freya Vander Laenen, Koen Putman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-12-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-017-4974-4
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spelling doaj-08d02746ca7e4a609379c41de7f7adec2020-11-24T21:40:07ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582017-12-0117111110.1186/s12889-017-4974-4The health-related social costs of alcohol in BelgiumNick Verhaeghe0Delfine Lievens1Lieven Annemans2Freya Vander Laenen3Koen Putman4Department of Public Health, Interuniversity Centre for Health Economics Research (I-CHER), Vrije Universiteit BrusselInstitute for International Research on Criminal Policy (IRCP), Ghent UniversityDepartment of Public Health, Interuniversity Centre for Health Economics Research (I-CHER) , Ghent UniversityInstitute for International Research on Criminal Policy (IRCP), Ghent UniversityDepartment of Public Health, Interuniversity Centre for Health Economics Research (I-CHER), Vrije Universiteit BrusselAbstract Background Alcohol is associated with adverse health effects causing a considerable economic impact to society. A reliable estimate of this economic impact for Belgium is lacking. This is the aim of the study. Methods A prevalence-based approach estimating the direct, indirect and intangible costs for the year 2012 was used. Attributional fractions for a series of health effects were derived from literature. The human capital approach was used to estimate indirect costs, while the concept of disability-adjusted life years was used to estimate intangible costs. Sensitivity and scenario analyses were conducted to assess the uncertainty around cost estimates and to evaluate the impact of alternative modelling assumptions. Results In 2012, total alcohol-attributable direct costs were estimated at €906.1 million, of which the majority were due to hospitalization (€743.7 million, 82%). The indirect costs amounted to €642.6 million, of which 62% was caused by premature mortality. Alcohol was responsible for 157,500 disability-adjusted life years representing €6.3 billion intangible costs. Conclusions Despite a number of limitations intrinsic to this kind of research, the study can be considered as the most comprehensive analysis thus far of the health-related social costs of alcohol in Belgium.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-017-4974-4AlcoholCost-of-illnessHealthBelgium
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nick Verhaeghe
Delfine Lievens
Lieven Annemans
Freya Vander Laenen
Koen Putman
spellingShingle Nick Verhaeghe
Delfine Lievens
Lieven Annemans
Freya Vander Laenen
Koen Putman
The health-related social costs of alcohol in Belgium
BMC Public Health
Alcohol
Cost-of-illness
Health
Belgium
author_facet Nick Verhaeghe
Delfine Lievens
Lieven Annemans
Freya Vander Laenen
Koen Putman
author_sort Nick Verhaeghe
title The health-related social costs of alcohol in Belgium
title_short The health-related social costs of alcohol in Belgium
title_full The health-related social costs of alcohol in Belgium
title_fullStr The health-related social costs of alcohol in Belgium
title_full_unstemmed The health-related social costs of alcohol in Belgium
title_sort health-related social costs of alcohol in belgium
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Abstract Background Alcohol is associated with adverse health effects causing a considerable economic impact to society. A reliable estimate of this economic impact for Belgium is lacking. This is the aim of the study. Methods A prevalence-based approach estimating the direct, indirect and intangible costs for the year 2012 was used. Attributional fractions for a series of health effects were derived from literature. The human capital approach was used to estimate indirect costs, while the concept of disability-adjusted life years was used to estimate intangible costs. Sensitivity and scenario analyses were conducted to assess the uncertainty around cost estimates and to evaluate the impact of alternative modelling assumptions. Results In 2012, total alcohol-attributable direct costs were estimated at €906.1 million, of which the majority were due to hospitalization (€743.7 million, 82%). The indirect costs amounted to €642.6 million, of which 62% was caused by premature mortality. Alcohol was responsible for 157,500 disability-adjusted life years representing €6.3 billion intangible costs. Conclusions Despite a number of limitations intrinsic to this kind of research, the study can be considered as the most comprehensive analysis thus far of the health-related social costs of alcohol in Belgium.
topic Alcohol
Cost-of-illness
Health
Belgium
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-017-4974-4
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