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Journal ArticleDOI

Social and economic cost of eating disorders in the United States: Evidence to inform policy action

TLDR
In this article, the authors estimated one-year costs of eating disorders in the United States from a societal perspective, including the costs to the U.S. health system, individual and family productivity costs, lost wellbeing, and other societal economic costs.
Abstract
Objective To estimate one-year costs of eating disorders in the United States (U.S.) from a societal perspective, including the costs to the U.S. health system, individual and family productivity costs, lost wellbeing, and other societal economic costs, by setting and payer. Findings will inform needed policy action to mitigate the impact of eating disorders in the U.S. Method Costs of eating disorders were estimated using a bottom-up cost-of-illness methodology, based on the estimated one-year prevalence of eating disorders. Intangible costs of reduced wellbeing were also estimated using disability-adjusted life years. Results Total economic costs associated with eating disorders were estimated to be $64.7 billion (95% CI: $63.5-$66.0 billion) in fiscal year 2018-2019, equivalent to $11,808 per affected person (95% CI: $11,754-$11,863 per affected person). Otherwise Specified Feeding or Eating Disorder accounted for 35% of total economic costs, followed by Binge Eating Disorder (30%), Bulimia Nervosa (18%) and Anorexia Nervosa (17%). The substantial reduction in wellbeing associated with eating disorders was further valued at $326.5 billion (95% CI: $316.8-$336.2 billion). Discussion The impact of eating disorders in the U.S. is substantial when considering both economic costs and reduced wellbeing (nearly $400 billion in fiscal year 2018-2019). Study findings underscore the urgency of identifying effective policy actions to reduce the impact of eating disorders, such as through primary prevention and screening to identify people with emerging or early eating disorders in primary care, schools, and workplaces and ensuring access to early evidence-based treatment.

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Citations
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Epidemiology of binge eating disorder: prevalence, course, comorbidity, and risk factors.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed DSM-5 BED diagnosis in the Fifth Edition of the Diagnostic and Statistic Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) and the Eleventh Revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) and found that up to 23% of individuals with BED had attempted suicide, and virtually all reported lifetime mental health symptoms: 70% mood disorders, 68% substance use disorders, 59% anxiety disorders, 49% borderline personality disorder, and 32% posttraumatic stress disorder.
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Binge eating disorder

TL;DR: Binge eating disorder (BED) is characterized by regular binge eating episodes during which individuals ingest comparably large amounts of food and experience loss of control over their eating behavior as discussed by the authors .
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The Bergen Facebook Addiction Scale: its psychometric properties and invariance among women with eating disorders

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors evaluated the psychometric properties of the Bergen Facebook Addiction Scale (BFAS) among patients with eating disorders (EDs) given lack of validation of Facebook addiction measures in this population.
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MDMA-assisted therapy significantly reduces eating disorder symptoms in a randomized placebo-controlled trial of adults with severe PTSD

TL;DR: In this article , the Eating Attitudes Test 26 (EAT-26) was administered for pre-specified exploratory purposes at baseline and at study termination, and participants with severe PTSD received treatment in a double-blind, placebo-controlled pivotal trial of MDMA-AT.
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Changes in the prevalence and sociodemographic correlates of eating disorder symptoms from 2013 to 2020 among a large national sample of U.S. young adults: A repeated cross-sectional study.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors identify recent temporal changes in the prevalence of different cognitive and behavioral eating disorder (ED) symptoms, current probable EDs, lifetime ED diagnoses, and mental healthcare use among college students across the United States, and determine whether established disparities in ED prevalence and receiving mental healthcare have widened or narrowed over time for marginalized groups within this population.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Direct and indirect costs among patients with binge-eating disorder in the United States

TL;DR: Individuals with BED reported significantly greater economic burden with respect to work productivity loss, level of healthcare resource utilization, and costs compared to non-BED respondents.
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Marginal deadweight loss when the income tax is nonlinear

TL;DR: In this paper, the marginal deadweight loss for variations in nonlinear income taxes was calculated and the bias in results that obtains when the traditional linearization procedure is used was evaluated.
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The Second Wave of Public Policy Advocacy for Eating Disorders: Charting the Course to Maximize Population Impact.

TL;DR: On the cusp of a second wave of policy advocacy, efforts must be broadened to target structural determinants of illness and inequities to maximize clinical impact and diminish suffering.
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Public Finance in a Nutshell: A Cobb Douglas Teaching Tool for General Equilibrium Tax Incidence and Excess Burden

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show how to solve a simple and intuitive computable general equilibrium (CGE) model using first- or second-year graduate students in economics apply their theoretical training.
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