Gastroenterology
Volume 109, Issue 6 , Pages 1736-1741, December 1995

Medical costs in community subjects with irritable bowel syndrome

Division of Gastroenterology and Internal Medicine and Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota, USA

Received 14 February 1995; accepted 31 July 1995.

Abstract 

Costs of management of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) are unknown. The direct medical charges in community subjects with IBS were estimated. An age- and sex-stratified random sample of residents of Olmsted County, Minnesota, ranging in age from 20 to 95 years, was mailed a valid self-report questionnaire. Subjects were categorized as having IBS, having some symptoms but inadequate criteria for IBS, and controls. All charges (in 1992 U.S. dollars) for health services rendered in the year before completing the survey were obtained (except outpatient medications). A total of 88% of subjects with IBS, 86% of subjects with some symptoms of IBS, and 83% of controls incurred direct medical charges during the study year. The odds of incurring charges were 1.6 times greater in subjects with IBS relative to those without symptoms (P < 0.01) adjusting for age, sex, education, marital status, and employment. Overall median charges incurred by subjects with IBS were $742 compared with $429 for controls and $614 for subjects with some symptoms. Among those subjects with nonzero charges, there were significant positive associations with age, higher education, and symptom groups (all P < 0.01) but not sex. The economic impact of IBS is significant. A better understanding of the determinants of these costs is needed so that cost-saving strategies can be implemented.

Abbreviations: IBS

Keywords: irritable bowel syndrome

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 Supported in part by grants AG09440 and AR30582 from the National Institutes of Health.

PII: 0016-5085(95)90738-6

Gastroenterology
Volume 109, Issue 6 , Pages 1736-1741, December 1995