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IC Ranks in Top Ten of Most Costly Urologic Diseases

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  • IC Ranks in Top Ten of Most Costly Urologic Diseases

    Thought you'd find this interesting to see how IC ranks, with respect to other urologic conditions, with respect to costs, expenses. I think this is pretty interesting! - Jill

    Urologic Diseases Cost Americans $11 Billion a Year
    Medicare Pays Half


    Bladder, prostate and other urinary tract diseases cost Americans nearly $11 billion a year, according to a new report from the National Institutes of Health. Medicare’s share exceeded $5.4 billion.

    The five most expensive urologic problems — accounting for $9.1 billion — are, in descending order, urinary tract infections, kidney stones, prostate and bladder cancers and benign prostate enlargement, according to the authors of Urologic Diseases in America. The report was published online this spring and will be available in print and on CD in early May.

    “This research sharply illustrates the immense burden of urologic diseases and the importance of studies to preempt disease processes and develop targeted treatments,” said Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D., NIH Director.

    Five years in the making, Urologic Diseases in America stitches together a patchwork of reliable data, both new and previously published, revealing numbers of people affected, treatment patterns and economic cost.

    TOP 10 DISEASES BY COST TOTAL
    Infection (Women & Men) - $3.5 Billion

    Kidney Stones - $2.1 Billion

    Prostate Cancer - $1.3 Billion

    Bladder Cancer - $1.1 Billion

    BPH/Prostate Enlargement - $1.1 Billion

    Urinary Incontinence - $463.1 Million

    Kidney Cancer - $401.4 Million

    Erectile Dysfunction - $327.6 Million

    Prostatitis - $84.4 Million

    Interstitial Cystitis/PBS - $65.9 Million

    “The data have broad implications for quality of care and access to care and helps to inform discussions about health care and research needs,” said UDA coeditor Mark S. Litwin, M.D., M.P.H, a urologist at the David Geffen School of Medicine and School of Public Health at the University of California, Los Angeles.

    Urologic Diseases in America describes more than a dozen diseases of children and adults, among them congenital abnormalities, erectile dysfunction, chronic prostatitis, interstitial cystitis, urinary incontinence and a chapter on sexually transmitted diseases, contributed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Findings include:

    Medical care for nearly 12.8 million urinary tract infections in women alone costs nearly $2.5 billion annually. Adding the cost for men raises the total to $3.5 billion; Medicare’s share was $1.4 billion. Another $96.4 million was spent on 3.3 million prescriptions. More than half of all women will have an infection during their lifetimes. Reporting a trend toward using newer, and more expensive, fluoroquinolones raises concerns about increasing antibiotic resistance said UDA authors. And while only 20 percent of infections are in men, they are more often hospitalized and out of work about twice as long as women.


    While hospitalizations, length of stay and the need for open surgery are declining for kidney stones, medical care still costs $2.1 billion annually, with another $4 million to $14 million spent on prescription drugs. Men are two to three times more likely than women to develop a stone, but more people of all ages and races are getting them: an estimated 5 percent of adults between 1988 and 1994, up from nearly 4 percent between 1976 and 1980. Compared to whites, African Americans and Mexican Americans have a 70 percent and 35 percent lower risk, respectively, of developing a stone.


    Although data for childhood urologic diseases are scarce, urinary problems in children cost at least $75 million dollars a year. Vesicoureteral reflux, the abnormal flow of urine from the bladder up toward the kidneys, affects about 10 percent of all children and makes them prone to urinary tract infections and kidney damage. The cost of hospitalizations for reflux alone rose from $10 million in 1997 to $47 million in 2000; Southern states, defined using U.S. Census Bureau regions, saw the highest rise — 56 percent — attributable to a doubling in the number of cases.
    “Our biggest challenge was finding reliable data in children,” said Christopher Saigal, M.D., M.P.H., Litwin’s coeditor at UCLA and RAND Health. “More research is needed in children.”

    Urologic Diseases in America was funded by NIH’s National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and developed by a team of epidemiologists, health economists, statisticians, programmers and urologists.

    Learn more about urologic diseases at http://kidney.niddk.nih.gov; click on statistics to find Urologic Diseases in America. UDA books and CDs may be ordered from the National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Information Clearinghouse at 1–800–891–5390, [email protected] and at www.catalog.niddk.nih.gov.

    The NIDDK, a component of the NIH, conducts and supports research in diabetes and other endocrine and metabolic diseases; digestive diseases, nutrition, and obesity; and kidney, urologic and hematologic diseases. For more information about NIDDK and its programs, see www.niddk.nih.gov.
    Would you like to talk with someone about your IC struggles? The ICN now offers personal coaching sessions that include myself, Julie Beyer RD on the diet and Dr. Heather Howard on Sexuality. http://www.icnsales.com/icn-personal-coaching/

    Looking for books, magazines & reports on IC? Please visit the ICN Shop at: http://www.icnsales.com: Your ICN subscription & purchases in our shop support these message boards, chats and special events. BECOME AN ICN ANGEL TODAY!

    Please remember that the information on the ICN is provided with the understanding that ICN, its founder, staff, volunteers, and participants are not engaged in rendering medical or professional medical services. We cannot and do not give medical advice. Only your personal physician can do this for you.







  • #2
    Sure I'm responsible for quite a bit of that 65million$! From the oodles of tests it took to be diagnoised to the meds to try to treat it-WOW! I could buy a lot of shoes for that-LOL!

    Comment


    • #3
      Sadly, I wonder how this information will affect an IC patient's chance of getting private (non-group plan) health insurance.

      But, I guess the good part is maybe this info will result in more research studies on IC?
      Kadi

      -------------------------------------------------------------
      I am not a medical authority nor do I offer medical advice. In all cases, I strongly encourage you to discuss your medical treatment with your personal medical care provider. Only they can, and should, give medical recommendations to you.
      ------------------------------------------------------


      New favorite quote: "God gives us only what we can handle. Apparently God thinks I'm a bad-ass" ~Author Unknown
      Source - Pinterest
      "


      Current treatments:
      -IC diet
      -Elavil 50mg at night
      -Continuous use birth control pills (4-5 periods/year)
      -Heparin/Marcaine/Sodium Bicarb home instills at night 3-4x per week, more often if needed
      -Pyridium if needed,
      -Pain medicine at bedtime daily, as needed during the day several times per week
      -Antibiotic when doing an instillation to prevent UTI
      -Colace & SmartFiber to treat chronic constipation from meds, Fleet enema as needed
      -Dye Free Benadryl 50 mg at bedtime
      -"Your Pace Yoga: Relieving Pelvic Pain" dvd, walking, treadmill at gym
      -Managing stress= VERY important!
      -Fur therapy: Hugging the cat!

      Comment


      • #4
        Wow! unbeliveable.
        hugs Sandra
        "Never Give Up."

        To view pictures of my creative interests and Maine Coon kittens click here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/[email protected]/

        My Photobucket Link:
        http://s237.photobucket.com/albums/f...ramack_photos/

        Comment


        • #5
          I believe it! One of my supervisors told me - kiddingly of course (or at least I hope he meant it that way) that I'm the reason why our health insurance keeps going up!) I told him probably- because when I see the EOB (Explaination of Benefits) statements for my Hydro's every 6 months and everything that goes with them - my mouth just drops. I guess that is why I have to stay with the State of Texas, because if I ever leave for any other job, I wouldn't be able to get decent health insurance, or if I do, I have to wait anywhere from 3-6 months because besides IC I have a heart condition, of course that is under control (had a heart valve replace a few years ago) but I have to go every few weeks for my PT/INR check and regular doctor appointments and tests. Then there are other doctor appointments. Oh well just glad I have insurance.

          Comment


          • #6
            cost

            HA add me in there as a top candidate for thousands and thousands of dollars in medical care as well. Thank god I have insurance too!

            Comment


            • #7
              IC should probably ranked higher then 10th place. Because I believe none of my $$$$ was counted as IC.. but as regular UTI

              Comment


              • #8
                Good point! I went through weeks of appts for "UTI's" I didn't have. And the stats say most of us go through misdiagnosis for years!!!
                Kadi

                -------------------------------------------------------------
                I am not a medical authority nor do I offer medical advice. In all cases, I strongly encourage you to discuss your medical treatment with your personal medical care provider. Only they can, and should, give medical recommendations to you.
                ------------------------------------------------------


                New favorite quote: "God gives us only what we can handle. Apparently God thinks I'm a bad-ass" ~Author Unknown
                Source - Pinterest
                "


                Current treatments:
                -IC diet
                -Elavil 50mg at night
                -Continuous use birth control pills (4-5 periods/year)
                -Heparin/Marcaine/Sodium Bicarb home instills at night 3-4x per week, more often if needed
                -Pyridium if needed,
                -Pain medicine at bedtime daily, as needed during the day several times per week
                -Antibiotic when doing an instillation to prevent UTI
                -Colace & SmartFiber to treat chronic constipation from meds, Fleet enema as needed
                -Dye Free Benadryl 50 mg at bedtime
                -"Your Pace Yoga: Relieving Pelvic Pain" dvd, walking, treadmill at gym
                -Managing stress= VERY important!
                -Fur therapy: Hugging the cat!

                Comment


                • #9
                  I agree with you guys about IC probobly costing even more than they are accounting for, since most of us went years being misdiagnosed. My husband is on the health care committee with his work, (City Govt). They have been looking at new policies. They had stats for the average amounts spent on health care per year. They were also pricing R/x coverage and had people send in anonymous surveys asking how many brand name and generic r/xs they had, trying to make sure coverage under new plans would be comparable to the old plan. He asked me to send in my drug list so he could compare for us too. When he got home, he told me that I am on more meds than ANYBODY in the whole city govt!!! (There are 900 employees!) Also, our yearly costs for my medical care is SEVEN times the average city employee! It is like we are paying for seven people in what we pay for me! How scary is that?

                  I realize that mine is not only IC, but also Lupus and several other things, but most of my medical care is IC, (except my hospitalizations, and they are mostly Lupus related.) But still, I was FLOORED!

                  By the way, this is unrelated, but it happened during all this, and I just had to tell you guys this. When the committee was doing all this, there was this guy sitting beside my husband who represented one of the insurance companies that was bidding. During breaks, they talked and Steve told him about me and that he was personally invested in getting a good plan for everybody, b/c he knew how hard it could be for people b/c of me. The rep told him, "I dont know how you could live with someone sick like that! Why dont you just leave her and get someone healthy? That's what I'd do!" I couldnt believe that #(*$%^$( said that!!! Steve told him, "First of all, you must have never really loved someone, or you would never think of doing that. Secondly, you must have no moral fiber at all if you would leave your wife just because she is sick!" It is amazing that there are people like that out there!

                  Anyway, sorry to get OT, I just had to share what that a$$ said, when the health care thing came up!

                  But, anyway, I DO agree that IC probobly does cost more than several of those things, but I am glad it isnt listed any higher than it is, since it might make insurance companies look at us differently. Just my 2 cents!


                  Hugs,
                  Amy

                  Comment

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