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The Cost Of Skipping Your Meds

Cost Of Skipping Meds

By The Associated Press   01/ 3/12 04:45 PM ET   AP

-- Not taking medicines as prescribed can have huge costs both for patients and the U.S. healthcare system. Here are some numbers illustrating the problem:

_About 133 million Americans, or about 45 percent of the population, has at least one chronic disease.

_Nearly three in four Americans don't always take medication as directed, and one in three people never even fill their prescriptions.

_Such medication nonadherence is at least a factor in more than one in three medication-related hospital admissions.

_Roughly 125,000 premature deaths a year are blamed on medication nonadherence.

_Extra costs to patients, insurers and government health programs due to medication non-adherence is estimated that at least $290 billion per year.

_Every dollar spent on medication decreases total health costs to patients, insurers and government health programs by about $10.10 for people with high blood pressure, by $8.40 for congestive heart failure patients, by $6.70 for diabetics and by about $3.10 for patients with cholesterol disorders.

_For patients aged 65 and up with serious chronic health problems, not keeping to their prescription regimen can sharply increase total annual healthcare spending (by the patient plus Medicare or other insurer). A 2011 study's of patients insured through CVS Caremark Corp. found these higher annual costs per patient: $7,893 for congestive heart failure, $5,824 for high blood pressure, $5,170 for diabetes and $1,847 for cholesterol problems.

___

Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "Script Your Future" campaign, Health Affairs journal, other research studies.

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-- Not taking medicines as prescribed can have huge costs both for patients and the U.S. healthcare system. Here are some numbers illustrating the problem: _About 133 million Americans, or about 45 ...
-- Not taking medicines as prescribed can have huge costs both for patients and the U.S. healthcare system. Here are some numbers illustrating the problem: _About 133 million Americans, or about 45 ...
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02:09 AM on 01/05/2012
Hell, at the moment,health care threatens to grow to consume the entire economy of not just the United States, but most of the developed world. If you want to use your go to example of Europe, they too face rising health care costs. Check our "Penny Medical" to read articles on how to save money on health insurance.