Abstract

BackgroundDifferent countries have set different policies to control and decrease the costs of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Iran was aiming to reduce the economic burden of different disease by a recent reform from named as health transformation plan (HTP). This study aimed to examine the economic burden of CVDs before and after of HTP.MethodsThis cross-sectional study was conducted on 600 patients with CVDs, who were randomly selected from a specialized cardiovascular hospital in the north-west of Iran. Direct and indirect costs of CVDs were calculated using the cost of illness and human capital approaches. Data were collected using a researcher-made checklist obtained from several sources including structured interviews, the Statistical Center of Iran, Iran’s Ministry of Cooperatives, Labor, and Social Welfare, the central bank of Iran, and the data of global burden of disease obtained from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation to estimate direct and mortality costs. All costs were calculated in Iranian Rials (IRR).ResultsTotal costs of CVDs were about 5571 and 6700 billion IRR before and after the HTP, respectively. More than 62% of the total costs of CVDs accounted for premature death before (64.89%) and after (62.01%) the HTP. The total hospitalization costs of CVDs was significantly increased after the HTP (p = 0.038). In both times, surgical services and visiting had the highest and lowest share of hospitalization costs, respectively. The OOP expenditure decreased significantly and reached from 54.2 to 36.7%. All hospitalization costs, except patients’ OOP expenditure, were significantly increased after the HTP about 1.3 times. Direct non-medical costs reached from 2.4 to 3.3 billion before and after the HTP, respectively.ConclusionEconomic burden of CVDs increased in the north-west of Iran after the HTP due to the increase of all direct and indirect costs, except the OOP expenditure. Non-allocation of defined resources, which coincided with the international and national political and economic challenges in Iran, led to unsustainable resources of the HTP. So, no results of this study can be attributed solely to the HTP. Therefore, more detailed studies should be carried out on the reasons for the significant increase in CVDs costs in the region.

Highlights

  • Different countries have set different policies to control and decrease the costs of cardiovascular dis‐ eases (CVDs)

  • Demographic status The results showed that 68.8% and 65.3% of the participants were men before and after the health transformation plan (HTP), respectively

  • The total cost of hospitalization before and after the HTP was 6.51 and 8.47 billion Iranian Rials (IRR), respectively, indicating that it was increased about 1.3 times more

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Summary

Introduction

Different countries have set different policies to control and decrease the costs of cardiovascular dis‐ eases (CVDs). Cardiovascular diseases are the cause of 161,000 deaths in Iran, which accounted for 45.45% of all deaths in the country in 2016. The age of CVDs has dropped and the incidence of CVDs among the population under 70 years has steepened during the last decade and reaching from 569 in 2017 to 484 per 100,000 people [1, 2]. In Iran, this trend has been tangible, and the rate of CVDs has been increased before the age of 60 years [4]. Increasing the rate of CVDs is one of the factors contributing to the increasing costs and economic burden of the disease [5]. One of the north-west provinces of Iran, has the highest rate of CVDs incidence and prevalence around the country. The mortality rate of the disease in Ardabil had been estimated to be 180 cases per 100,000 people in 2017 [6, 7]

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