Abstract

This study analyzes the direct medical costs of low physical activity by race/ethnicity and gender. Average health expenditures based on physical activity status for Black non-Hispanics (NH), Asian NHs, and Hispanics were compared to White NHs. Data from the National Health Interview Survey were merged with the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey for years 2000–2010 and 2001–2011, respectively, and weights were applied to ensure generalizability to the larger US population. The sample was restricted to non-pregnant adults between the ages of 25 and 64, with a final sample size of 44,953. The multivariate estimates reveal statistically significant lower annual health care expenditures among physically active men and women in five out of eight racial/ethnic groups relative to their inactive counterparts: on average, for men, $1041 less is spent among White NHs, $905 less is spent for Black NHs and $876 less is spent for Asian NHs. Among women, medical expenditures were $956 per year less among active White non-Hispanics relative to their inactive counterparts, and $815 per year among Hispanics. Essentially, the average reduction in health care expenditures is relatively consistent for five out of the eight groups. The absence of any reduction in average health care expenditures for three of the groups, however, suggests that there may be environmental factors at play for certain groups that mitigate the impact of physical activity on health expenditures.

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