2017
DOI: 10.1111/acer.13337
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Heterogeneous Costs of Alcohol and Drug Problems Across Cities and Counties in California

Abstract: Background Estimates of economic and social costs related to alcohol and other drug (AOD) use and abuse are usually made at state and national levels. Ecological analyses demonstrate, however, that substantial variations exist in the incidence and prevalence of AOD use and problems including impaired driving, violence, and chronic disease between smaller geopolitical units like counties and cities. This study examines the ranges of these costs across counties and cities in California. Methods We used estimat… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…As is widely done in cost of illness studies and regulatory impact analyses, we also monetized DALYs in order to present health burden in the same metric as healthcare expenses. To calculate the dollar equivalent, we applied the widely cited estimate of the value of a DALY of $235,855 (in 2017 dollars) used in injury and illness cost estimates [30][31][32][33]. Similar to healthcare expenses, we also calculated DALYs and their dollar equivalent per person exposed to ACEs.…”
Section: Estimating Excess Disease Risk Associated With Acesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As is widely done in cost of illness studies and regulatory impact analyses, we also monetized DALYs in order to present health burden in the same metric as healthcare expenses. To calculate the dollar equivalent, we applied the widely cited estimate of the value of a DALY of $235,855 (in 2017 dollars) used in injury and illness cost estimates [30][31][32][33]. Similar to healthcare expenses, we also calculated DALYs and their dollar equivalent per person exposed to ACEs.…”
Section: Estimating Excess Disease Risk Associated With Acesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given estimates of the cost of an alcohol-involved crash amount to $296,127 32,33 (including fatal, injury, and property damage−only crashes), 310 fewer crashes translates to >$91 million. Total funds for each community came to $95,000 per year, some of which went to overhead and other indirect expenses, but using the gross allocation, total funding for 12 cities during the 3year intervention period was approximately $3,420,000.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our analysis pinpoints injury priority areas with high injury prevention resource needs. A study of the spatial pattern of substance abuse costs (page 8) observed “dramatic heterogeneity in problem incidence between cities, neighbourhoods within cities, and social strata in these neighbourhoods.” We find similar differences in injury rates between health services, health regions, health districts within regions, and postcodes within health districts. Incorporating the temporal aspect, further elucidated the geographical similarities and differences in injury rates with the presence of random patterns and evidence of clustering of priority areas over time—a concept that is underused in prevention epidemiology .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%