Estimated societal costs of stroke in the UK based on a discrete event simulation
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Date
2019-12-17Publisher
Oxford AcademicAuthor
Patel, AnitaBerdunov, Vladislav
Quayyum, Zahidul
King, Derek
Knapp, Martin
Wittenberg, Raphael
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Patel, A., Berdunov, V., Quayyum, Z., King, D., Knapp, M., & Wittenberg, R. (2020). Estimated societal costs of stroke in the UK based on a discrete event simulation. Age and Ageing, 49(2), 270-276. doi:10.1093/ageing/afz162Abstract
Background: there are around 100,000 new stroke cases and over a million people living with its consequences annually in
the UK. This has large impacts on health and social care, unpaid carers and lost productivity. We aimed to estimate associated
costs.
Methods: we estimated 2014/2015 annual mean cost per person and aggregate UK cost of stroke for individuals aged ≥40
from a societal perspective. Health and social care costs in the first and subsequent years after stroke were estimated from
discrete event simulation modelling, with probability of progression and length of receipt of different health and social care
services obtained from routine registry and audit data. Unpaid care hours and lost productivity were obtained from trial data.
UK unit costs were applied to estimate mean costs. Epidemiological estimates of stroke incidence and prevalence were then
applied to estimate aggregate costs for the UK.
Results: mean cost of new-onset stroke is £45,409 (95% CI 42,054-48,763) in the first year after stroke and £24,778 (20,234–
29,322) in subsequent years. Aggregate societal cost of stroke is £26 billion per year, including £8.6 billion for NHS and social
care. The largest component of total cost was unpaid care (61%) and, given high survival, £20.6 billion related to ongoing
care.
Conclusion: the estimated aggregate cost of stroke substantially exceeds previous UK estimates. Since most of the cost is
attributed to unpaid care, interventions aimed at rehabilitation and reducing new and recurrent stroke are likely to yield
substantial benefits to carers and cost savings to society