The impact of poisoning in British Columbia: a cost analysis.

CMAJ Open

BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit (Rajabali, Turcotte, Zheng, Pike), BC Children's Hospital; Department of Emergency Medicine (Purssell), University of British Columbia; BC Drug and Poison Information Centre (Purssell, Buxton); School of Population and Public Health (Buxton), University of British Columbia; Department of Pediatrics (Pike), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC.

Published: February 2023

Background: Poisoning, from substances such as illicit drugs, prescribed and over-the-counter medications, alcohol, pesticides, gases and household cleaners, is the leading cause of injury-related death and the second leading cause for injury-related hospital admission in British Columbia. We examined the health and economic costs of poisoning in BC for 2016, using a societal perspective, to support public health policies aimed at minimizing losses to society.

Methods: Costs by intent, sex and age group were calculated in Canadian dollars using a classification and costing framework based on existing provincial injury data combined with data from the published literature. Direct cost components included fatal poisonings, hospital admissions, emergency department visits, ambulance attendance without transfer to hospital and calls to the British Columbia Drug and Poison Information Centre (BC DPIC) not resulting in ambulance attendance, emergency care or transfer to hospital. Indirect costs, measured as loss of earnings and informal caregiving costs, were also calculated.

Results: We estimate that poisonings in BC totalled $812.5 million in 2016 with $108.9 million in direct health care costs and $703.6 million in indirect costs. Unintentional poisoning injuries accounted for 84% of total costs, 46% of direct costs and 89% of indirect costs. Males accounted for higher proportions of direct costs for all patient dispositions except hospital admissions. Patients aged 25-64 years accounted for higher proportions of direct costs except for calls to BC DPIC, where proportions were highest for children younger than 15 years.

Interpretation: Hospital care expenditures represented the largest direct cost of poisoning, and lost productivity following death represented the largest indirect cost. Quantifying and understanding the financial burden of poisoning has implications not only for government and health care, but also for society, employers, patients and families.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9933990PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.9778/cmajo.20220089DOI Listing

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