Abstract
The author aimed to examine the relationship between physical activity levels and individuals' actual medical expenses in South Korea. Of the 250 middle-aged subjects randomly selected by a multi-staged cluser sampling technique, 211 respondents completed questionnaires. Looking only at total monthly spending for physicians and drug costs attributable to the illness, the figures were ₩6810.04 (US$5.34 in 2009) for active persons, ₩17076.11 (US$13.38 in 2009) for acceptable persons, and ₩24835.57 (US$19.46 in 2009) for inactive persons. The mean differences of active persons and inactive persons with regard to total monthly direct medical expenditures were ₩18,025.53 (US$14.12 in 2009), which means that improvement in physical activity levels from inactive to active could lead to a US$14.12 reduction in monthly direct medical expenditures. The findings from this study indicate that a high level of physical activity based on frequency, duration, and intensity has significant effects on the likelihood of decreasing direct medical expenditures. As a consequence, health care and public health policies that promote a high level of physical activity for individuals aged 40 to 80 years would be good for the government to prevent rising medical expenditures in South Korea.Keywords: Health benifits; physical activity level; medical expenditure; middle-aged
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More From: South African Journal for Research in Sport, Physical Education and Recreation
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