Sleep disorders are very common. The impact of these disorders on a person's long
term health is unclear. The purpose of this project is to determine the cost to the
health care system of patients with untreated sleep disorders and then to determine
the change in cost with diagnosis and treatment.
Hypotheses: Untreated sleep disorder patients (with sleep apnea, narcolepsy,
and insomnia) are heavier consumers of health care services than age and sex
matched controlled subjects and treatment will reduce these costs.
Aims: The applicant will examine healthcare utilization data (and what
patients were being treated for) of a large number of patients five years
before diagnosis and five years after diagnosis and compare them to controls
matched by age, gender, and postal code. The data will be obtained in a
community with unrestricted access to medical care and where all the data is
stored on a central database. To measure the use of medical services the
applicant will analyze all doctors' claims and data from all hospitalization
as well as use of prescription drugs. The applicant will establish whether
treatment of these disorders reduces the consumption of healthcare services in
these patients. The applicant expects to find fewer physicians visits,
particularly for cardiovascular disease, neuro-psychiatric disease and general
medical evaluations and for sleep apnea, fewer hospitalizations, particularly
for cardiovascular disease and respiratory failure.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
behavioral /social science research tagcommunity health servicescost effectivenesshealth care cost /financinghealth care facility information systemhealth care service evaluationhealth care service utilizationhealth services research taghuman datalongitudinal human studynarcolepsysleep apneasleep disorders
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