AI Article Synopsis

  • The CDC updated their estimates, revealing that 48 million Americans experience foodborne illnesses each year, which affects economic assessments previously based on outdated data.
  • A new study replicated the 2011 CDC model and introduced a more comprehensive cost-of-illness model that considers pain, suffering, and functional disability, in addition to medical costs and productivity losses.
  • The enhanced model estimates the average cost per foodborne illness case at $1,626, leading to an estimated total annual cost of illness ranging between $28.6 billion to $144.6 billion, highlighting the significant economic impact of these illnesses.

Article Abstract

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently revised their estimates for the annual number of foodborne illnesses; 48 million Americans suffer from domestically acquired foodborne illness associated with 31 identified pathogens and a broad category of unspecified agents. Consequently, economic studies based on the previous estimates are now obsolete. This study was conducted to provide improved and updated estimates of the cost of foodborne illness by adding a replication of the 2011 CDC model to existing cost-of-illness models. The basic cost-of-illness model includes economic estimates for medical costs, productivity losses, and illness-related mortality (based on hedonic value-of-statistical-life studies). The enhanced cost-of-illness model replaces the productivity loss estimates with a more inclusive pain, suffering, and functional disability measure based on monetized quality-adjusted life year estimates. Costs are estimated for each pathogen and a broader class of unknown pathogens. The addition of updated cost data and improvements to methodology enhanced the performance of each existing economic model. Uncertainty in these models was characterized using Monte Carlo simulations in @Risk version 5.5. With this model, the average cost per case of foodborne illness was $1,626 (90% credible interval [CI], $607 to $3,073) for the enhanced cost-of-illness model and $1,068 (90% CI, $683 to $1,646) for the basic model. The resulting aggregated annual cost of illness was $77.7 billion (90% CI, $28.6 to $144.6 billion) and $51.0 billion (90% CI, $31.2 to $76.1 billion) for the enhanced and basic models, respectively.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-11-058DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

foodborne illness
16
cost-of-illness model
12
enhanced cost-of-illness
8
billion 90%
8
model
7
estimates
6
foodborne
5
illness
5
economic
4
economic burden
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!